Late Baroque, Early Classical or…?
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Originally posted by jean View PostWhat do we think Bach would have thought of equal temperament?
In short, Jean, I think Bach would have loved it...but don't tell the Hippsters I said so.
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Originally posted by Tony View PostGetting to know these six extraordinary harpsichord concertos, written by Johann Christian Bach when he was a teenager living with his 'already famous' brother CPE in Berlin after their father had died, was a wonderful voyage of discovery for me, nearly 20 years ago.
It was great to see, in the recording sessions, the faces of the Hanover Band's string players clearly showing astonishment at the sounds of the fiery, passionate and mercurial music of JCB, so very different in style from the suave, elegant, restrained and euphonious works that he was to write only a few years later in London.
As far as I know, he re-captured this 'pre Sturm und Drang' style only once more during his sadly short life ( dying in 1782 aged 46) in the Symphony in G minor Op6/6.
It is very moving to read the late Ernest Warburton's notes on the 'Berlin concerto' in Bb, possibly the earliest of the set, in which JCB may well have been trying to prove to his older brother CPE that he could definitely compose some good music: on page 6 of the autograph MSS of this piece he wrote
"Ich habe dieses Conc. gemacht...ist das nicht schön?"
( English translation:
"I have made this concerto... is it not beautiful?")
By the way, the set is beautifully played and recorded. The very different piano concertos are pure enchantment, and I like the choice of the Broadwood.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostWhile Bach did not (as far as I know) have the theoretical knowledge to propose Equal Temperament (which wasn't formulated officially until much later) he certainly used something approaching it.The way I believe Bach himself explained it to experienced harpsichord tuners by ear, step by step, with (or without!) his diagram:
* We set up the notes of the C major scale first, and then we fit the remaining notes into carefully compromised spots: not like the old style, where you were forced to choose either a sharp or a flat, and have it sound bad as the other one.
* Tune your natural 5ths F-C-G-D-A-E with your everyday process of making all the 5ths (or 4ths) waver with gentle equal quality, and checking that F-A and C-E each end up "a little sharp"; your checkpoint here is that F-A is wide at about 3 per second in the tenor.
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Originally posted by jean View PostWhat do we think Bach would have thought of equal temperament?
* Bach's keyboard temperament : Internal evidence from the Well-Tempered Clavier
Early Music (1979) 7 (2): 236-249
EDIT - sorry, hadn't seen Richard's earlier post
.Last edited by vinteuil; 28-01-16, 10:03.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... Doubtless there has been further scholarly analysis since.
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See Bradley Lehman's article, pages 137-163 (esp from p 154) here :
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Originally posted by doversoul View PostLucky you‼ They are now all download only, except for the box set. Many thanks for mentioning the recordings.
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostAll six CDs are available from here, for under 30 euros. A real bargain.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI've just listened to the six Berlin concertos. Indeed they sound very different in style from JCB's later work. I was a bit surprised however when the F minor concerto began because I previously knew that as a work by CPEB, and it's been recorded several times as such. The liner notes tell a complicated story about various possible attributions (including WFB also!). I feel it stands out suspiciously from the other pieces in the set. Not that this matters particularly!
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Originally posted by Tony View PostWhich concerto in F minor exactly? There are two in the set of six, so, one on each of the two CDs.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostOops. I wasn't paying attention to keys on the first CD. I meant the second one on the second CD. This one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJFwW4DajrE
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Here's some more information on that piece, from cpebach.org which is an ongoing project to make a complete edition of CPEB's works freely available online. It seems the attribution to JCB, while the best current theory, is still not definitively established.
Concerto in F Minor, H 484.2 (Wade, appendix B, X7). This work, evidently by Johann Christian Bach (Warburton C 73) is transmitted in the following sources: D-B, SA 2633 (score in the hand of Carl Friedrich Christian Fasch; attribution: “dall Sign C.F.E. Bach”); D-B, SA 2634 (score in the hand of Johann Carl Samuel Possin; attribution: “da C.P.E. Bach”; three parts written by an unidentified copyist); D-B, Mus. ms. Bach P 680 (score in the hand of an unknown copyist; attribution: “da Wilh. Friedemann Bach”); D-B, Mus. ms. Bach St 482 (set of parts in the hand of an unknown copyist; attribution on the wrapper in the hand of Nichelmann: “dal Sgr. J.C. Bach detto il Milanese riveduto dal Sgr C.P.E. Bach”); D-B, Mus. ms. Bach St 483 (set of parts in the hand of an unknown copyist; attribution: “Del Sigr. C.P.E. Bach”); D-LEb, Go. S. 40 (set of parts in the hand of Johann Christoph Farlau and an anonymous copyist; attribution “da J.C. Bach” added by a third hand);26 D-WRa, Mus. III c:112 (set of parts in the hand of an anonymous copyist; attribution: “C.P.E. Bach”).27 For none of the surviving sources could a direct connection to any of the Bach sons be established. Wilhelm Friedemann and C.P.E. Bach can be ruled out as composers for stylistic reasons. The most detailed attribution (in St 482) has been ascribed to Nichelmann; it seems to be based on firsthand biographical information. J.C. Bach’s authorship is also supported by the source in D-LEb, as well as by the stylistic profile of the work, which is close to other compositions from his Berlin period (1750–55).28
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