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The Sonata in G major for two flutes and basso continuo, BWV 1039, is a trio sonata by Johann Sebastian Bach. It is a version, for a different instrumentation, of the Gamba Sonata, BWV 1027 . The first, second and fourth movement of these sonatas also exist as a trio sonata for organ.
BWV 1020 – Sonata in G minor for violin (or flute) and harpsichord (now attributed to Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach – H 542.5) [3] BWV 1021 – Sonata in G major for violin and basso continuo; BWV 1022 – Sonata in F major for violin and harpsichord (doubtful, possibly by C. P. E. Bach) [3] BWV 1023 – Sonata in E minor for violin and basso ...
Nevertheless, there are examples of retrograde motion in the music of J.S. Bach, Haydn and Beethoven. Bach’s Musical Offering includes a two-voice canon in which the second voice performs the melodic line of first voice backwards: Bach Canon 2 from Musical offering Bach, two part canon from 'The Musical Offering.' The lower part is an exact ...
The minuet in G major by Christian Petzold is commonly attributed to Johann Sebastian Bach, although the piece was identified in the 1970s as a movement from a harpsichord suite by Petzold. The misconception stems from Notebook for Anna Magdalena Bach, a book of sheet music by various composers (mostly Bach) in which the minuet is found. [191]
Harrison Birtwistle arranged a number of Bach organ works as Bach Measures, for chamber orchestra (1996) Edward Elgar transcribed Bach's Fantasia and Fugue in C minor BWV 537 for orchestra; Sergei Rachmaninoff made a transcription of the Violin Partita in E major, BWV 1006, including the following movements: prelude, gavotte and gigue.
Exact dates (e.g. for most cantatas) usually indicate the assumed date of first (public) performance. When the date is followed by an abbreviation in brackets (e.g. JSB for Johann Sebastian Bach) it indicates the date of that person's involvement with the composition as composer, scribe or publisher. 4 Name
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach: Symphony in G major, Wq.173 / H648 (1741) [7] Symphony in G major, Wq.180 / H655 (1758, rev. later) Symphony in G major, Wq.182:1 / H657 (1773) [8] 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
Martin Hruschka plays the Fugue in G minor on the de Graaf organ at the Emmauskirche Berlin-Kreuzberg (live recording) The Great Fantasia and Fugue in G minor, BWV 542, is an organ prelude and fugue by Johann Sebastian Bach. It acquired that name to distinguish it from the earlier Little Fugue in G minor, which is shorter.