Originally posted by RichardB
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Something for a Friday: All of Bach
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostPerhaps it's time to bring up once more Mauricio Kagel's claim that "not many people believe in God any more but every musician believes in J S Bach".
I don't find myself immediately attracted to the sound of organ music in general, but the problem is that so much wonderful music has been written for the instrument (and not just by Bach of course) that often I feel I just have to get myself over that threshold somehow, and usually I find it's worthwhile. I think a lot of aversion to organ music has to do with the drab associations it conjures up. For example, my OH, having been brought up in an Orthodox environment where churches don't contain organs, is happy to listen to any amount of organ music, viewing it instead as something rather exotic and special. Last time I was in Leipzig a few years ago I attended a choral/organ concert at the Thomaskirche; I didn't have any choice about the date so it happened not to involve any Bach, but I have to say I was something akin to transported by the performance of L'Ascension that formed the programme's climax.
I have L'Ascension lined up for listening later.
I've never felt the organ was a drab instrument, though I'm just as likely to associate it with Larry Young as I am with Bach.
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10.12.21 Joseph K
Bach Violin Sonata in F minor BWV 1018
I'll be having another listen to the Mass in B minor later, JK. Trying to keep up with the schedule!
I thought the sonata sounded different from my expectation of a composition of this kind by Bach. I felt some harmonies were unexpected - sort of 'modern' for the time. This had the effect for me of losing the run of the music in the faster movements, and I'll go back to them again. But the first Largo was all I would have expected, and the combination of violin and harpsichord, as well as being novel, was perfect for what in Irish traditional music is a Slow Air, as adored by players and singers.
I was listening earlier to a Slow Air, which activity no doubt somehow crept into my current post, and if you like you can hear it on Irish Friday where I am about to post it.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostI've never felt the organ was a drab instrument, though I'm just as likely to associate it with Larry Young as I am with Bach.
That video of the Mass in G minor is excellent, thanks for the tip there, I've always liked those small masses, they're assembled out of movements of other works of course, but then so is a lot of the B minor Mass too.
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Originally posted by Padraig View Post10.12.21 Joseph K
Bach Violin Sonata in F minor BWV 1018
I'll be having another listen to the Mass in B minor later, JK. Trying to keep up with the schedule!
I thought the sonata sounded different from my expectation of a composition of this kind by Bach. I felt some harmonies were unexpected - sort of 'modern' for the time. This had the effect for me of losing the run of the music in the faster movements, and I'll go back to them again. But the first Largo was all I would have expected, and the combination of violin and harpsichord, as well as being novel, was perfect for what in Irish traditional music is a Slow Air, as adored by players and singers.
I was listening earlier to a Slow Air, which activity no doubt somehow crept into my current post, and if you like you can hear it on Irish Friday where I am about to post it.
Originally posted by RichardB View PostI've never really thought of the electric organ as being the same kind of thing at all! - for me the drabness is to do with church services rather than the sound of the instrument, although there's also the way the church acoustic can tend to blur details I would rather be hearing. The first organ recording that made me immediately love the sound of the instrument was Olivier Latry's Messiaen set.
That video of the Mass in G minor is excellent, thanks for the tip there, I've always liked those small masses, they're assembled out of movements of other works of course, but then so is a lot of the B minor Mass too.
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Originally posted by Padraig View Post10.12.21 Joseph K
Bach Violin Sonata in F minor BWV 1018
I'll be having another listen to the Mass in B minor later, JK. Trying to keep up with the schedule!
I thought the sonata sounded different from my expectation of a composition of this kind by Bach. I felt some harmonies were unexpected - sort of 'modern' for the time. This had the effect for me of losing the run of the music in the faster movements, and I'll go back to them again. But the first Largo was all I would have expected, and the combination of violin and harpsichord, as well as being novel, was perfect for what in Irish traditional music is a Slow Air, as adored by players and singers.
I was listening earlier to a Slow Air, which activity no doubt somehow crept into my current post, and if you like you can hear it on Irish Friday where I am about to post it.
As far as whether it feels modern or not, Bach’s music IS modern! And yes, violin and harpsichord is nice but it’s not easy to balance. There’s a danger that it becomes the violinist’s show, which is not a good idea in quite a few of the movements of the sonatas. I think these sonatas work really well with violin and organ.Last edited by Mandryka; 19-12-21, 17:11.
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Originally posted by Mandryka View PostAnd yes, violin and harpsichord is nice but it’s not easy to balance. There’s a danger that it becomes the violinist’s show, which is not a good idea in quite a few of the movements of the sonatas. I think these sonatas work really well with violin and organ.
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Originally posted by Mandryka View Postviolin and harpsichord is nice but it’s not easy to balance.
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This is a really interesting piece of music. The opening section is a fairly bog standard fugue in a style which was becoming fashionable in the middle of the 18th century. The middle section lets the counterpoint go completely wild, this is an old style, dissonance relished, counterpoint takes the upper hand in the music's construction, and the harmonies follow. And then the final section -- everything becomes totally harmonious again, and it's so much richer and more interesting than the opening A part. The last part is Bach saying he can do the modern style better than anyone; the middle section is Bach saying that he can do the old style better than anyone. The opening section is Bach saying that this is how not to write music.
Very nice performance.
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