Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[2] Bach led the Thomanerchor in the first performance of the cantata on 25 December 1724. [2] [4] He performed the cantata again four more times on 25 December, in 1731, in 1732 or 1733, and twice in the 1740s, [4] even after his Christmas Oratorio had been first performed in 1734 for which he also used two stanzas of the same chorale. [6] [7]
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 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.
transcribed by Benedetto Montebello for 2 guitars, modified by the performers Kawamura, Sachiko 2013 St. Bartholomew's, Brighton Claudio piano Zhu, Xiao-Mei: 2014 St. Thomas Church, Leipzig: Accentus piano (video DVD) Vogt, Lars: March 2014: Deutschlandfunk Kammermusiksaal, Köln, Germany: Ondine ODE 1273-2: piano Dahl, Carsten: 2014 (recorded ...
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.
In the late 1980s four new editions of the sonatas appeared, including the Urtext edition of Laurence Dreyfus for C.F. Peters; in a long accompanying text Dreyfus presented detailed arguments for the works to be dated to Bach's period in Leipzig. [2] In a subsequent study of Bach's chamber music, Wolff (1985) came to the same conclusion and ...
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.
Suite No. 1 in G minor; Suite No. 2 in G major; Suite No. 3 in E minor; Suite No. 4 in D major; They are thought to have been written before 1730. Surviving keyboard music: Fantasia in C minor (originally thought to have been composed by J.S. Bach as BWV 919) [5] Chaconne in A major; Chaconne in B-flat major; Chaconne in G major; Chorales for organ