The symphony in its final form has four
movements: Unlike Villa-Lobos's two preceding symphonies and the following one, the Third Symphony does not use
cyclic techniques internally, though there is a
neighbour-note motive found in all four movements. More unusually, several themes from this symphony recur in the
Fourth Symphony, creating cyclic relationships between these two independent works. Although Villa-Lobos took great care in the construction of the first movement, its form is by no means clear cut. If it is viewed as a traditional
sonata-allegro, then there is very little
development in the middle section. In the
recapitulation, Villa-Lobos seeks to create contrasting colouration from the way the thematic material was originally presented in the exposition. For example, in the opening bars, the first theme is given to the woodwinds (later joined by horns and cornet), and the strings accompany with a semiquaver figure; in the recapitulation, the second violins and violas have the theme, accompanied by the semiquaver figure in clarinet and bassoon. The movement can also be seen as a sort of modified
rondo form (ABCDA'B' plus coda), in which the D section is essentially episodic. However, the two occurrences of the refrain (A) are in the
dominant and
supertonic keys of G and D, and the overall tonic key, C, is reached only in the concluding
coda. The main theme of the second movement was inspired by the scherzo of
Tchaikovsky's
Sixth Symphony. ==References==