Ok, so I’d like to state that while I’m taking a sort of leadership role here I do not mean to be perceived as all knowing. While I may know a bit more than some other participants I intend this to be a learning experience for myself also. As such, what I’m posting here, is not just off the top of my head, I’ll also be collecting information (Yay for GOOGLE!!!) – please correct me if I post anything that is wrong, and add information if you feel you can, either from your own knowledge or through research.
Minuet – (ref.
https://www.thefreedictionary.com/minuet)
n.
1. (Performing Arts / Dancing) a stately court dance of the 17th and 18th centuries in triple time
2. (Music / Classical Music) a piece of music composed for or in the rhythm of this dance, sometimes as a movement in a suite, sonata, or symphony
It should also be noted that the form of the minuet in music is not fixed throughout history, it changed and developed, and was the forerunner of the scherzo.
I’m going to start around bach’s time for this task. When the form was binary – which later developed into a rounded binary or ternary type feel. The binary form could be described as two sections, A and B. I’m going to give a bit more detail though. Also, just consider this as a guide not a rule, I’m not here to tell anyone how to be creative. There is no right or wrong, there is just certain conventions that tell us the form/style.
Section A
Consists of 16 bars – There is a four bar phrase, which may often include a 2 bar sequence that is repeated in a different chord/mode. Check out the famous bach (or not bach) minuet in G to see what I mean about a repeated sequence. There is then another 4 bar phrase that likely ends on the dominant chord, this leads into a repeat of the first 8 bars, often with an alteration to the last 1-2 bars.
Thus, section A could be broken up into A – A(altered) – 16 bars total.
For the purpose of learning perhaps someone else could describe what happens in section B, you’ll need to look at several different minuets, there are ofcourse a few simple and famous ones in bach’s notebook for anna magdelena. You can also find examples in his French sweets, in haydn sonatas, Mozart has a number aswell – and ofcourse you can find your own examples.
…
There is also a “minuet rhythm”

^this was on Wikipedia
Now I can’t find a single example (I haven’t looked to hard) that follows this exactly – but there is a feel of accentuated first beats that is fairly consistent, along with 4 bar phrases always coming to a clear resolution (often that appropriately leads to the next) and a new one beginning. What must be considered really is that there is a dance for which this music is intended so the rhythm must fit the dance. You can find some videos of this on youtube to get an idea, and observe the variations that are used in the literature to get an idea of whats acceptable.
Now I propose that we all write atleast the first 8 or 16 bars of a minuet (this may be enough for some, others may do more if they like) – I also realise that I haven’t given enough information to really explain how to do this, but I feel I need to reference actual examples to do that and I cant get that organised right now, hopefully I’ll be able to soon.
AJ
EDIT: oh dear - I seem to have written "sweets" instead of suites. Facepalm.
Also -
https://www.mtosmt.org/issues/mto.05.11.2/mto.05.11.2.eckert.pdf - I havent read this yet, but for anyone that really wants to nail this there's probably a lot of good info in there, and it'll save me writing it all out

...its a look into mozart, with reference to a composition textbook. Worksheets included. Good find.