Definition. Tail — a concluding section appended to the end of a movement or piece, providing final closure.
Coda is Italian for ‘tail’. In musical form it refers to a concluding section appended to the end of a movement or piece — the ‘tail’ that brings the music to definitive close. The coda extends or rounds off the final cadence, often introducing new material or recapitulating earlier themes.
In sonata form, the coda follows the recapitulation. Its function is to provide additional closure beyond what the recapitulation alone could give — reinforcing the home key, summarizing key thematic elements, building to a final climax. Beethoven was particularly fond of long, dramatic codas; the Eroica Symphony’s first movement coda is essentially a second development.
The coda is also indicated by a notational symbol (𝄌, the coda sign) — a circle with a cross. When the score directs ‘D.C. al coda’ or ‘D.S. al coda’, the performer plays from the beginning (or sign) until reaching ‘to coda’, then jumps to the coda symbol and plays the coda section to the end.
Italian, ‘tail’, from Latin cauda (‘tail’).
Treat the coda as a culminating gesture. The performance should build toward it; the coda itself should feel like definitive closure. In ABA forms, the coda often reprises the A material in a final, conclusive way.
Tail — a concluding section appended to the end of a movement or piece, providing final closure.
Italian, ‘tail’, from Latin cauda (‘tail’).
Treat the coda as a culminating gesture. The performance should build toward it; the coda itself should feel like definitive closure. In ABA forms, the coda often reprises the A material in a final, conclusive way.
Related terms include: Codetta, Fine, D.S. al Coda, D.C. al Fine.
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