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  2. Partita for keyboard No. 2, BWV 826 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partita_for_keyboard_No._2...

    The Partita for keyboard No. 2 in C minor, BWV 826, is a suite of six movements written for the harpsichord by Johann Sebastian Bach. It was announced in 1727, [ 1 ] issued individually, and then published as Bach's Clavier-Übung I in 1731.

  3. Long Distance Walkers Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Distance_Walkers...

    Challenge events are marshalled: participants must call in at clipper points or checkpoints to get a tally card punched to show they are following the route. [ 10 ] The annual "Hundred" [ 11 ] is the LDWA's flagship event and has been recognised as the longest-running 100-mile ultramarathon in the world, [ 12 ] although it is not a race.

  4. Fantasia and Fugue in C minor, BWV 537 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fantasia_and_Fugue_in_C...

    The combined length of the fantasia and the fugue is about eight minutes; [6] the fantasia is written in 6/4 time, while the fugue is in 2/2. The fantasia of the piece is quite lush and very ornate, consisting of two unequal halves that both feature the same two basic musical ideas, an imitative dotted-rhythm tune, and a leaping eighth-note form, which is also in imitation, initiated by the ...

  5. List of symphonies in C minor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_symphonies_in_C_minor

    Symphony No. 5, Op. 71 (1892-97, orchestration of his lost String Sextet in C sharp minor) Joseph Martin Kraus: Symphony in C minor, VB 142 (a reworking of the Symphony in C-sharp minor, VB 140) Symphonie funèbre in C minor; Franz Krommer: Symphony No. 4, Op. 102 (1819–20) [13] Joseph Küffner: Symphony No. 4, Op. 141 (published 1823) Franz ...

  6. Fantasia and Fugue in C minor, BWV 906 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fantasia_and_Fugue_in_C...

    Fantasia and Fugue in C minor, BWV 906, is a keyboard piece, likely unfinished, composed by Johann Sebastian Bach sometime during his tenure in Leipzig (1723–1750). The work survives in two autograph scores, one with the fantasia alone, and the other, believed to have been penned around 1738 in which the fugue is incomplete. [ 2 ]

  7. Prelude in C minor, BWV 999 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prelude_in_C_minor,_BWV_999

    In measure 11, a Secondary leading-tone chord is employed (namely, a diminished F ♯ seventh chord) to modulate and lead the ear to G minor, the dominant of the original key. Aside from a turn to G major but with a flattened 6th (mm. 34–38 and 42–43), and the reemergence of C minor (mm. 39–41), G minor tonality dominates

  8. Descending tetrachord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Descending_tetrachord

    Phrygian half cadence: i-v6-iv6-V in c minor (bassline: c -b ♭-a ♭-g) Play ⓘ. In music theory , the descending tetrachord is a series of four notes from a scale , or tetrachord , arranged in order from highest to lowest, or descending order.

  9. Fantasia No. 2 (Mozart) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fantasia_No._2_(Mozart)

    Fantasia No. 2 in C minor, K. 396/385f (German: Fragment einer Fantasie in c) is a fragment of a violin sonata composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in Vienna in August or September 1782. Its tempo marking is adagio. The fragment consists of 27 bars, the violin part entering at bar 23.