Something for a Friday: All of Bach

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  • Joseph K
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    Cantata - O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort BWV 60 - Sato

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  • seabright
    replied
    I think Andrew Davis's own imaginative orchestration of the Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor deserves another hearing on Radio 3 ...

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  • Padraig
    replied


    Your starter.

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  • Mandryka
    replied
    Originally posted by Padraig View Post

    The football fans were stunned to silence by this.
    That was click bait. There's something very meat and potatoes about Schornsheim which I rather like. No nonsense with her.

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  • Padraig
    replied
    I have missed the last three offerings. Didn't notice any reminders, though. Here they are:

    Cello Suite No 3 in c major
    A different young cellist for each movement.

    WTC 2 No 5 in D major
    Christine Schornsheim

    WTC 2 No 6 in D minor
    Christine Schornsheim The football fans were stunned to silence by this.

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  • Joseph K
    replied
    Originally posted by Padraig View Post
    I did too JK. I've bookmarked it for listening again. I think it's one way to present The Art of Fugue which suits this ensemble very well, giving the parts to various combinations of voices. I have not yet come to the end and I'm hoping that I'm in for a surprise. It has already been a pleasant change from the several versions I once had and on looking at my collection I see that I have kept only one - Rachel Podger with Brecon Baroque.


    Glad you liked it, Padraig

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  • RichardB
    replied
    Actually the recording of the Art of Fugue I listen to most is the one by the Keller Quartet, which is not at all HIPP... I understand that Bach would certainly have performed it on a keyboard instrument, but I'm interested in being able to hear the individual voices as clearly as possible, and for me that means having each voice played by a different instrument. The Kellers play everything so beautifully and of course far from romantically. The version on the video makes me feel a bit queasy but I'm glad I've heard it!

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  • Padraig
    replied
    Originally posted by Joseph K View Post
    Well, I enjoyed it - though last night I only listened to the first three (not all involve voices).
    I did too JK. I've bookmarked it for listening again. I think it's one way to present The Art of Fugue which suits this ensemble very well, giving the parts to various combinations of voices. I have not yet come to the end and I'm hoping that I'm in for a surprise. It has already been a pleasant change from the several versions I once had and on looking at my collection I see that I have kept only one - Rachel Podger with Brecon Baroque.

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  • Joseph K
    replied
    Well, I enjoyed it - though last night I only listened to the first three (not all involve voices).

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  • Mandryka
    replied
    Originally posted by Joseph K View Post
    How about this for unconventional instrumentation?

    The horror! The horror! Even this is better than that





    We don’t know which instrument it was written for
    Leonhardt argued very well that it was written for keyboard -- the argument turns on things like the sort of stretches in the score -- he actually argued that it was written for harpsichord but I've never understood that step.

    We don’t know . . . whether Bach intended the music as material for practice or performance
    If he didn't intend it for performance, it's hard to imagine why Bach would have added so many elaborations to the first version of the augmentation canon, included articulation and ornamentation indications in both the autograph and the first edition, included a cadenza in cpt8 and the opportunity for a cadenza in cpt 10, rearranged the three part mirror fugue as the more easily playable Fuga a 2 Clav.

    The order of the 18 sections is unclear
    But not the first 12, which are numbered.

    we don’t know whether the piece was ever completed.
    Humph
    Last edited by Mandryka; 17-09-22, 14:51.

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  • Joseph K
    replied
    How about this for unconventional instrumentation?

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  • Mandryka
    replied
    The business of whether to use the thumb playing scales, mentioned in the notes to the 5th partita. Does anyone know whether it makes a difference you can hear?

    By the way, there are many many organ pieces called preambulum, including baroque ones from the likes of Tunder and Buxtehude and Scheidemann and Weckmann and Lubeck and Scheidt - some of them quite substantial. It's true that JSB seems to have used the word for what are possibly teaching pieces -- like in the WF Bach little keyboard book. Maybe all those baroque preambula by Scheidemann etc were primarily teaching pieces too.

    I think that Elina Albach plays really nicely -- I especially enjoyed the fluid phrasing and the way she plays the counterpoint in the sarabande.
    Last edited by Mandryka; 21-08-22, 17:55.

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  • Padraig
    replied
    Originally posted by seabright View Post
    Belated thanks, and much appreciated. Wonderful arrangement.

    Something equally wonderful for this Bach Friday:

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  • seabright
    replied

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  • Joseph K
    replied


    You're welcome, Padraig.

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