TRIO SONATA


Meaning of TRIO SONATA in English

Principal chamber music genre of the Baroque era.

Despite its name, it requires four performers: two melody instruments and continuo (usually a keyboard instrument and a bass instrument). It arose early in the 17th century as an instrumental version of the Italian vocal-duet ensemble. The two upper instruments, usually violins, generally wove their melodic, quasi-vocal lines high above the accompanying parts. Two standard forms emerged after 1750: the sonata da chiesa , or church sonata, standardized as a four-movement form (in slow-fast-slow-fast order); and the suite -like sonata da camera , or chamber sonata. By 1770 the genre had been abandoned in favour of the solo sonata.

Britannica Concise Encyclopedia.      Краткая энциклопедия Британика.