CPE Bach From 23 May
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Doversoul: I've only heard bits of the Gershwin this week, but have appreciated the biog info.
Here's the CPE Bach header:
Imagine being JS Bach's son, growing up in a gigantic shadow with a great weight of expectation on your shoulders, and trying to earn a living as a composer. These days, almost inevitably, the career of Carl Philip Emmanuel, Johann Sebastian's second son - and those of the other Bach children - are almost entirely obscured by the reputation of their father. But CPE Bach is the man of whom Mozart said, "he is the father, we are the children. Those of us who know anything at all learned it from him".
This week, Donald Macleod discovers that there's more to CPE Bach than his famous name. In Monday's programme, CPE finds a job at the court of the famously belligerent Frederick the Great of Prussia. When Frederick wasn't busy annexing parts of Europe, he liked nothing better than to play the flute, so an important part of CPE Bach's duties was to provide pieces for the king to perform, and to accompany him when he did. Music in the programme includes the Concerto for Flute in D minor, and an organ sonata written for Frederick's equally musical sister, Anna Amalia.
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I am enjoying this run of programmes immensely. Thus far, the music has been still very much in the Baroque style CPE Bach inherited from his dad, and there has been little sign of the dramatic change in idiom to come, and which I await with baited breath. As one who is folrever fascinated by the points at which marked change in the language of music takes place - Monteverdi and the transition from polyphopny to homphony; that from late romatnicism to modernism etc - I feel COTW devotes less time these days to the formal aspects of music than it once did, going more for the biographical. But it is fascinating to hear how he defended his father when judgements were made as to the superiority of Handel's abilities in the area of fugue, having previously imagined CPE would have brushed the matter aside as of no longer importance.
S-A
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Yes - very enjoyable so far. I think there was evidence in the first programme of a Sturm und Drang quality in the wonderful Flute Concerto in D minor, with its tempestuous last movement - as if CPE wanted to shock his flute-playing patron Frederick the Great ("if you call yourself Great, play that!") The Magnificat which we heard today is also a lovely work.
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thanks for an excellent week of programmes .... already a fan of CPE i found myself bouncing around the room at the discoveries of pieces new to me ... exactly what R3 does supremely well ...According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Postthanks for an excellent week of programmes .... already a fan of CPE i found myself bouncing around the room at the discoveries of pieces new to me ... exactly what R3 does supremely well ...
The Double Concerto for harpsichord, fortepiano and orchestra: what an enlightening and exciting work to conclude this excellent programme!! Radio3 at its best.
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Originally posted by doversoul View Post
The Double Concerto for harpsichord, fortepiano and orchestra: what an enlightening and exciting work to conclude this excellent programme!! Radio3 at its best.
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