Dorian
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Oddly enough, although Bach's was the most commonly played organ music in my days of school chapel and church attendance, I've never come across that particular work. JS Bach was one of those composers who churned out more that it seems an average lifetime of music appreciation can take in. The quantities are just staggering. Chopin is another.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI hoiked out my copy of the so-called Dorian Toccata and Fugue and gave it a whirl in remembrance of the Bermudan victims.
Performer & Album Info - 13:15Toccata - 0:15 / Fugue - 5:10Please donate to Gerubach's Scrolling BACH Project by going to http://www.gerubach.com
(That's not me playing...I can manage about two-thirds that speed these days!)
Is this the case for other pieces by Bach also? Maybe the clue is in the name - Dorian!
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Biber often missed out a flat in the key sig (Missa Sancti Henrici [?] speaking from memory here.) It was common in late renaissance early Baroque...and here I have to hand Grandi's O Porta Caeli andand Gabrieli's Omnes Gentes. A really early example is Pygott's Quid Petis O Fili, which I'm about to sing this w/e...so have to rush! More examples to follow when I fall over them.....
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