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Bach's G minor fugue is "insistent and pathetic". [ citation needed ] The subject also appears in his funeral cantata Gottes Zeit ist die allerbeste Zeit (God's time is the very best time). [ 1 ] The subject of the fugue employs a minor 6th leap in the first measure, then resolves it with a more conventional stepwise motion.
The Prelude and Fugue in G-sharp minor, BWV 887, is the eighteenth prelude and fugue in the second volume of The Well-Tempered Clavier by Johann Sebastian Bach. It was written in 1738. It was written in 1738.
W C6 \ Symphony Op. 3 No.6 in G major W C7a \ Symphony Op. 6 No.1 in G major W C7b \ Symphony in G major W C8 \ Symphony Op. 6 No.2 in D major W C9 \ Symphony Op. 6 No.3 in E-flat major W C10 \ Symphony Op. 6 No.4 in B-flat major W C11 \ Symphony Op. 6 No.5 in E-flat major W C12 \ Symphony Op. 6 No.6 in G minor W C13 \ Symphony Op. 8 No.2 in G ...
One of the last pieces he entered, likely around the time when moving to Bitterfeld (1735–1736), was a Suite by Petzold containing, together with eight other movements, the G major/G minor combined Minuet, otherwise only known as Nos. 4 and 5 of Anna Magdalena Bach's second notebook.
The two major primary sources for this collection of Preludes and Fugues are the "London Original" (LO) manuscript, dated between 1739 and 1742, with scribes including Bach, his wife Anna Magdalena and his oldest son Wilhelm Friedeman, which is the basis for Version A of WTC 2, [34] and for Version B, that is the version published by the 19th ...
Start of Minuet in G major, BWV Anh. 114: [31] The two Minuets in G major and G minor, Nos. 4–5 in the second Notebook, BWV Anh. 114 and 115, were composed by Christian Petzold. Because their former attribution to Bach is spurious they appear in Anh. III of the Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis. [32]
BWV 576 – Fugue in G major (doubtful) [10] BWV 577 – Fugue in G major à la Gigue (doubtful) [11] BWV 578 – Fugue in G minor ("Little") BWV 579 – Fugue in B minor (on a theme by Corelli, from Op. 3, No. 4) BWV 580 – Fugue in D major (doubtful) [12] BWV 581 – Fugue in G major (not by Bach, composed by Gottfried August Homilius)
Symphony in G major, Wq.183:4 / H666 (1775) [9] Symphony in G major, Kast 69 / H 667 (1751?, collaborative work with Count Ferdinand of Lobkowitz; lost) Johann Christian Bach