Originally posted by MrGongGong
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The ' Cello Suites Were Written by Mrs. NOT Mr. Bach.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostNot exactly a reasoned argument there. As I understand it the only one of the Suites to still be found in JSB's hand is the ornamented transcription of the 5th (for lute). Even that could just possibly have been an arrangement of a work by someone other than JSB himself. Think I'll give Anner Bylsma's arrangements for violoncello piccolo of BWV 1003, 1006 and 1013 a spin after Rob Cowan's programme. They are stylistically so very different from/to/than/against* BWV 1007 to 1012.
* "different against" was apparently briefly in vogue during the 17th Century.
It's not supposed to be a reasoned argument. So tell me who is this other genius that just happened to be around writing masterworks?
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostSo tell me who is this other genius that just happened to be around writing masterworks? If I was to say Robert Schumann's works were really written by Clara just think how hard that is to prove.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post- grateful thanks to ahinton for posting the link to the Ruth Tatlow article, which might have saved me the bother. No wonder they gave her such short shrift.
The idea of Anna Magdalena as a composer appeals to a modern sense of gender equality and to the widespread desire to raise the status of misrepresented women of the past (RT p2)
Just in case, for those who missed the link:
I find it rather depressing to think that this was offered by BBC4.
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i found the programme interesting and, from time to time, thought-provoking. I had to keep telling myself how much people believe what they want to believe, and then seek out arguments to back this. However, this works both ways.
The thing that has interested me for a long time is the apparent neglect of Anna Magdelena by the Bach children after her husband's death. Perhaps the children of Maria Barbara would have had less sympathy for their step-mother, but surely there was a modicum of humanity amongst her own children?
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Just watching this. It is a load of conjectural hogwash isn't it?!
"...so she may well have committed suicide" ...
And the Tatlow article provides interesting and mildly shocking... counterpoint. That grossly misleading section in the documentary about being banned from the Leipzig Archiv is disreputable programme-making; and there are all the hallmarks of desperate attempts to forge a silk purse from a sow's ear. The loaded but ultimately meaningless phrases ("so it now seems possible that..." ..."this has huge implications"....); the stitching together of lots of disparate comments and clips and scattergun subjects (cello suites, Jarvis's dad was a copper, the first Mrs Bach might have committed suicide, 'we were banned from the Archive', etc etc) - as well as the slightly bewildering criss-crossing of the planet (what did the grinning Aussie goon in the room full of fine art add?!) plus some wildly differing soundlevels.
The only reasonably satisfying contribution came from Ruth Tatlow (and credit to Jarvis, I agree, for getting her involved - although her input seemed to be set up just for Jarvis to attempt to knock down); the linguistic implications of the words 'écrite', 'composée' etc were interesting. And there were other pockets of interest - I didn't know about the five missing bars from an early version of the Prelude No 1 from 'the 48'...; the facial reconstruction; John Butt talking about the instrument for which the "Cello" suites were written.
But by the end, I reached the position of basically not crediting a word said by the buffoon with the bouffant hair and the bowtie.
I wonder if Ms Beamish (and BBC4) are regretting having anything to do with this tosh."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostJust watching this. It is a load of conjectural hogwash isn't it?!
Originally posted by Caliban View Post"...so she may well have committed suicide" ...
Originally posted by Caliban View PostAnd the Tatlow article provides interesting and mildly shocking... counterpoint.
Originally posted by Caliban View PostThat grossly misleading section in the documentary about being banned from the Leipzig Archiv is disreputable programme-making
Originally posted by Caliban View Postand there are all the hallmarks of desperate attempts to forge a silk purse from a sow's ear.
Originally posted by Caliban View PostThe loaded but ultimately meaningless phrases ("so it now seems possible that..." ..."this has huge implications"....); the stitching together of lots of disparate comments and clips and scattergun subjects (cello suites, Jarvis's dad was a copper, the first Mrs Bach might have committed suicide, 'we were banned from the Archive', etc etc) - as well as the slightly bewildering criss-crossing of the planet (what did the grinning Aussie goon in the room full of fine art add?!) plus some wildly differing soundlevels.
Originally posted by Caliban View PostThe only reasonably satisfying contribution came from Ruth Tatlow (and credit to Jarvis, I agree, for getting her involved - although her input seemed to be set up just for Jarvis to attempt to knock down); the linguistic implications of the words 'écrite', 'composée' etc were interesting. And there were other pockets of interest - I didn't know about the five missing bars from an early version of the Prelude No 1 from 'the 48'...; the facial reconstruction; John Butt talking about the instrument for which the "Cello" suites were written.
Originally posted by Caliban View PostBut by the end, I reached the position of basically not crediting a word said by the buffoon with the bouffant hair and the bowtie.
Originally posted by Caliban View PostI wonder if Ms Beamish (and BBC4) are regretting having anything to do with this tosh.Last edited by ahinton; 22-03-15, 17:26.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostOne of Beamish's voice-overs
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Poststated that it was Jarvis himself who insisted that she get the views of Ruth Tatlow - which I think was the most respectable contribution to the programme he made.
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostSo much else was surmise and conjecture ("it could have been", "it might well have been") - leading to the suggestion that Maria Barbara committed suicide because of her husband's infidelity. The evidence being that, as there is no evidence anything could have happened - Jarvis has missed a trick: why not have JS and Anna Magdalena murdering Maria Barbara? There's a three-week ITV miniseries starring Martin Clunes there - with Daniel Radcliffe as the young constable who defies the orders of his superiors to investigate this suspicious death in the household of a man with a history of violence and a prison record!)
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWhat happened to the portrait of Anna Magdalena after her death? We don't know (repeated three times) - so let's suggest that the family destroyed it - and, if they destroyed it, they must have really hated her, so that's evidence that she wrote the 'cello suites
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBach's daughter Catharina Dorothea must have hated having to call AM "mother" (evidence for this?) becuase she was 15 and AM was only a few years older, and you know what 15-year-olds are like. Any evidence for this conjecture? Nothing given in the programme - but Jarvis had previously (and rightly) been very pleased with himself for discovering evidence to show that Anna Magdalena had been a "member" of the Bach household since she was 12 (and Catharina 7) - the children would have known her and grown up with her; the equally evidence-lacking conjecture could be formed that the two were excellent friends and that Catharina "must/might/could have" gone frequently throughout her childhood to get comfort from AM when her father's grumpy moods (which JEGger's BBC4 documentary last year "proved"!) upset her.
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWhat I missed was forensic evidence of Anna Magdalena's handwriting (in the sort of detail that Bach's "signature" was illustrated) - what exactly are those "fingerprints" that show that she is the writer (to use a word that Jarvis also tripped over) - that would have been a fascinating documentary in itself
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostA pity; I so enjoyed his readings of the William books ...Last edited by ahinton; 22-03-15, 18:26.
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