I've also heard of the Type 1 or Exposition Recap Sonata Form being referred to as Truncated Sonata Form(in relation to the Type 3 or Textbook Sonata Form) and Sonatina Form(in relation to the fact that many Sonatina Allegros use this more compact form, with little more than a modulatory bridge between Exposition and Recapitulation). My go to example of the Type 1 Sonata and certainly one of the examples I'll be using in my music theory book once I get to Sonata Form(I'm quite a ways away still, deep into the harmony section at modulations(after which I have common chord progressions in classical music and then the entire form section from the tiny(Motifs and Phrases) to the huge(Sonata Form) and including what a canon is and what a fugue is) is Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata Movement I, not just cause I like giving examples from Beethoven's output, but also cause a) it's in an atypical place(you don't typically see first movements as slow movements and b) it's not a Sonatina.
That’s why I prefer to call it Type 1 rather than slow mvt form, overture form, Exp/Recap form, etc. you find it all kinds of places that aren’t slow movements or overtures. And one also finds a lot of sonatinas with development sections. Thanks for your comment!
I've also heard of the Type 1 or Exposition Recap Sonata Form being referred to as Truncated Sonata Form(in relation to the Type 3 or Textbook Sonata Form) and Sonatina Form(in relation to the fact that many Sonatina Allegros use this more compact form, with little more than a modulatory bridge between Exposition and Recapitulation). My go to example of the Type 1 Sonata and certainly one of the examples I'll be using in my music theory book once I get to Sonata Form(I'm quite a ways away still, deep into the harmony section at modulations(after which I have common chord progressions in classical music and then the entire form section from the tiny(Motifs and Phrases) to the huge(Sonata Form) and including what a canon is and what a fugue is) is Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata Movement I, not just cause I like giving examples from Beethoven's output, but also cause a) it's in an atypical place(you don't typically see first movements as slow movements and b) it's not a Sonatina.
That’s why I prefer to call it Type 1 rather than slow mvt form, overture form, Exp/Recap form, etc. you find it all kinds of places that aren’t slow movements or overtures. And one also finds a lot of sonatinas with development sections. Thanks for your comment!