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BACH motif

In music, the BACH motif is the motif, a succession of notes important or characteristic to a piece, B flat, A, C, B natural. In German musical nomenclature, in which the note B natural is named H and the B flat named B, it forms Johann Sebastian Bach's family name. One of the most frequently occurring examples of a musical cryptogram, the motif has been used by countless composers, especially after the Bach Revival in the first half of the 19th century.

The BACH motif
"b–a–c–h is beginning and end of all music" (Max Reger 1912)

Origin

Johann Gottfried Walther's Musicalisches Lexikon (1732) contains the only biographical sketch of Johann Sebastian Bach published during the composer's lifetime. There the motif is mentioned thus:[1]

...all those who carried the name [Bach] were as far as known committed to music, which may be explained by the fact that even the letters b a c h in this order form a melody. (This peculiarity was discovered by Mr. Bach of Leipzig.)

This reference work thus indicates Bach as the inventor of the motif.

Usage in compositions

In a comprehensive study published in the catalogue for the 1985 exhibition "300 Jahre Johann Sebastian Bach" ("300 years of Johann Sebastian Bach") in Stuttgart, Germany, Ulrich Prinz lists 409 works by 330 composers from the 17th to the 20th century using the BACH motif.[2] A similar list is available in Malcolm Boyd's volume on Bach: it also contains some 400 works.[3][page needed]

Johann Sebastian Bach

Johann Sebastian Bach used the motif in a number of works, most famously as a fugue subject in the last Contrapunctus of The Art of Fugue. The motif also appears in other pieces.[4] Later commentators wrote: "The figure occurs so often in Bach's bass lines that it cannot have been accidental."[5]

Instances of B–A–C–H appearing in Johann Sebastian Bach's compositions and arrangements:

  • Fugue from his BWV 898
  • Brandenburg Concerto No. 2, BWV 1047 (the continuo part at bar 109)
  • Gigue from his English Suite No. 6 for keyboard
  • The subject of the Sinfonia in F minor BWV 795 "incorporates"[6] a version of the motif. This five-note version appears transposed: a'–g' (rest) g'–b'–a'. Eventually, in measure 17, the piece makes its way to a passage in which the five-note version of the motif starts on B: as B–A–(rest)–A–C–H.
  • His arrangement of a motet for SSATB singers
 
Bach's E minor arrangement of the same passage: B–A–C–H appears in the alto voice
 
B–A–C–H (and its inversion) in the last bars of the Augmentation Canon of BWV 769
  • Near the end of Contrapunctus IV of The Art of Fugue:[7]
 
B–A–C–H in the tenor part of the last bars of Contrapunctus IV of The Art of Fugue
  • As first four notes of the third and last subject of the final unfinished fugue of The Art of Fugue:[8]
 
B–A–C–H opening the third and last subject of the unfinished fugue of The Art of Fugue

Hans Heinrich Eggebrecht goes as far as to reconstruct Bach's putative intentions as an expression of Lutheran thought, imagining Bach to be saying, "I am identified with the tonic and it is my desire to reach it ... Like you I am human. I am in need of salvation; I am certain in the hope of salvation, and have been saved by grace,"[9] through his use of the motif rather than a standard changing tone figure (B–A–C–B) in the final measures of the fourth fugue of The Art of Fugue.[8][10][11]

Other composers

 
BACH motif followed by transposed version from Schumann's Sechs Fugen über den Namen B–A–C–H, Op. 60, No. 4, mm. 1–3[12]
Note that C and H are transposed down, leaving the spelling unaffected but changing the melodic contour.
 
Schumann, Sechs Fugen for organ, Op. 60, No. 5, mm. 1–4
The motif may be used in different ways: here it is only the beginning of an extended melody.[13]
 
Charles Ives, 3-Page Sonata (1905), first mvt., first fugal complex
The BACH motif from The Art of Fugue Contrapunctus XIXc is the "1st Theme'/fugue subject" of Ives' combined sonata-allegro and fugal procedures.[14]
 
Webern's String Quartet, Op. 28, tone row, composed of three tetrachords: P I RI, with P = the BACH motif, I = it inverted, and RI = it inverted and backwards.[citation needed]

The motif was used as a fugue subject by Bach's son Johann Christian, and by his pupil Johann Ludwig Krebs. It also appears in a work by Georg Philipp Telemann.[15]

The motif's wide popularity came only after the start of the Bach Revival in the first half of the 19th century.[4] A few mid-19th century works that feature the motif prominently are:

Composers found that the motif could be easily incorporated not only into the advanced harmonic writing of the 19th century, but also into the totally chromatic idiom of the Second Viennese School; so it was used by Arnold Schoenberg, Anton Webern, and their disciples and followers. A few 20th-century works that feature the motif prominently are:

In the 21st century, composers continue writing works using the motif, frequently in homage to Johann Sebastian Bach.[4]

References

  1. ^ Johann Gottfried Walther Musicalisches Lexicon oder Musicalische Bibliothec, p. 64. Leipzig, W. Deer. 1732.
  2. ^ Ulrich Prinz, Joachim Dorfmüller and Konrad Küster (1985). Die Tonfolge B–A–C–H in Kompositionen des 17. bis 20. Jahrhunderts: ein Verzeichnis, in: 300 Jahre Sebastian Bach (exhibition catalogue), pp. 389–419. ISBN 3-7952-0459-3
  3. ^ Malcolm Boyd (1999). Bach. Oxford University Press. 2006 edition: ISBN 0-19-530771-2.
  4. ^ a b c d Boyd, Malcolm (2001). "B–A–C–H". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-56159-239-5.
  5. ^ Marshall, Robert (2003). Eighteenth-Century Keyboard Music, p. 201 and p. 224n18. ISBN 0-415-96642-6. See Godt 1979.
  6. ^ Schulenberg, David (2006). The Keyboard Music of J.S. Bach, p. 197. ISBN 0-415-97399-6.
  7. ^ Cumming 2000, p. 256.
  8. ^ a b Brandstätter 1990.
  9. ^ Eggebrecht 1985, p. 15 (in German), or Eggebrecht 1993, p. 8 (translated), cited in Brandstätter 1990, p. 163, Kivy 2000, p. 380, and Cumming 2000, p. 256.
  10. ^ Kivy 2000, "The Solution", pp. 380–381.
  11. ^ Cumming 2000, pp. 256–257.
  12. ^ a b Christopher Alan Reynolds (2003). Motives for Allusion: Context and Content in Nineteenth-Century Music, p. 31. ISBN 0-674-01037-X.
  13. ^ Daverio, John (1997). Robert Schumann: Herald of a "New Poetic Age", p. 309. ISBN 0-19-509180-9.
  14. ^ Crist, Stephen (2002). Bach Perspectives: Vol. 5: Bach in America, p. 175. ISBN 0-252-02788-4. "The reference could not be more clear."
  15. ^ Jones, Ben. "B–A–C–H motif in Oboe Concerto, TWV 51:D6 (Telemann, Georg Philipp)". IMSLP. Retrieved 1 October 2019. there is a clear B.A.C.H. motif at the beginning of the Adagio
  16. ^ a b Platt, Heather Anne (2003). Johannes Brahms, p. 243. ISBN 0-8153-3850-3.
  17. ^ Arnold, Ben (2002). The Liszt Companion, p. 173. ISBN 0-313-30689-3.
  18. ^ Stein, Erwin (ed.). 1987. Arnold Schoenberg letters, p. 206. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-06009-8
  19. ^ Bailey, Kathryn. 2006. The Twelve-note Music of Anton Webern: Old Forms In a New Language, p. 24. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-54796-3
  20. ^ Orledge, Robert (1989). Charles Koechlin (1867-1950) : his life and works. Chur, Switzerland: Harwood Academic Publishers. ISBN 3-7186-4898-9. OCLC 18833927.
  21. ^ a b c Fearn, Raymond (2003). The Music of Luigi Dallapiccola. 2005: ISBN 1-58046-078-X.
  22. ^ Schmelz, Peter J (2009). Such Freedom, If Only Musical: Unofficial Soviet Music During the Thaw. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 255.
  23. ^ Schmelz, Peter J. (2009). Such Freedom, If Only Musical, p. 255–256. ISBN 0-19-534193-7.
  24. ^ Ivashkin, Alexander (2009) Liner notes to BIS complete symphony cycle, BIS-CD-1767-68

Sources

  • Brandstätter, Ursula [in German] (1990). "Hans Heinrich Eggebrechts deutung der 'Kunst der Fuge' von J. S. Bach" [Hans Heinrich Eggebrecht's interpretation of 'The Art of Fugue' by J. S. Bach]. Musik im Spiegel der Sprache: Theorie und Analyse des Sprechens über Musik [Music reflected in language: theory and analysis of the discourse about music] (in German) (eBook ed.). Springer (published 2017). pp. 163–180. ISBN 9783476044600.
  • Cumming, Naomi (2000). "8. Culturally Embedded Signs", subsection "2. Skeptical Issues", part "a. Humpty Dumpty and the New Musicology". The Sonic Self: Musical Subjectivity and Signification. Indiana University Press. pp. 254–258. ISBN 0253337542.
  • Eggebrecht, Hans Heinrich (1985) [1984]. Bachs Kunst der Fuge: Erscheinung und Deutung (in German) (4th ed.). Noetzel (published 1998). ISBN 379590725X.
  • Eggebrecht, Hans Heinrich (1993). J.S. Bach's The Art of Fugue: The Work and Its Interpretation. Translated by Prater, Jeffrey L. Iowa State University Press. ISBN 0813814898.
  • Kivy, Peter (2000). "'Absolute Music' and the 'New Musicology'". In Greer, David; Rumbold, Ian [at Wikidata]; King, Jonathan (eds.). Musicology and Sister Disciplines: Past, Present, Future. Oxford University Press. pp. 378–388. ISBN 0198167342.
  • Orledge, Robert. Charles Koechlin (1867-1950) His Life and Works. Harwood Academic Publishers pp. 197-198. ISBN 3-7186-0609-7.

Further reading

  • Seyoung Jeong (2009). Four Modern Piano Compositions Incorporating the B–A–C–H Motive. ISBN 3-8364-9768-9.
  • Schuyler Watrous Robinson (1972). The B–A–C–H Motive in German Keyboard Compositions from the Time of J.S. Bach to the Present (thesis, University of Illinois)

External links

bach, motif, bach, redirects, here, other, uses, bach, disambiguation, music, motif, succession, notes, important, characteristic, piece, flat, natural, german, musical, nomenclature, which, note, natural, named, flat, named, forms, johann, sebastian, bach, fa. BACH redirects here For other uses see Bach disambiguation In music the BACH motif is the motif a succession of notes important or characteristic to a piece B flat A C B natural In German musical nomenclature in which the note B natural is named H and the B flat named B it forms Johann Sebastian Bach s family name One of the most frequently occurring examples of a musical cryptogram the motif has been used by countless composers especially after the Bach Revival in the first half of the 19th century source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The BACH motif b a c h is beginning and end of all music Max Reger 1912 Contents 1 Origin 2 Usage in compositions 2 1 Johann Sebastian Bach 2 2 Other composers 3 References 4 Sources 5 Further reading 6 External linksOrigin EditJohann Gottfried Walther s Musicalisches Lexikon 1732 contains the only biographical sketch of Johann Sebastian Bach published during the composer s lifetime There the motif is mentioned thus 1 all those who carried the name Bach were as far as known committed to music which may be explained by the fact that even the letters b a c h in this order form a melody This peculiarity was discovered by Mr Bach of Leipzig This reference work thus indicates Bach as the inventor of the motif Usage in compositions EditIn a comprehensive study published in the catalogue for the 1985 exhibition 300 Jahre Johann Sebastian Bach 300 years of Johann Sebastian Bach in Stuttgart Germany Ulrich Prinz lists 409 works by 330 composers from the 17th to the 20th century using the BACH motif 2 A similar list is available in Malcolm Boyd s volume on Bach it also contains some 400 works 3 page needed Johann Sebastian Bach Edit Johann Sebastian Bach used the motif in a number of works most famously as a fugue subject in the last Contrapunctus of The Art of Fugue The motif also appears in other pieces 4 Later commentators wrote The figure occurs so often in Bach s bass lines that it cannot have been accidental 5 Instances of B A C H appearing in Johann Sebastian Bach s compositions and arrangements Fugue from his BWV 898 Brandenburg Concerto No 2 BWV 1047 the continuo part at bar 109 Gigue from his English Suite No 6 for keyboard The subject of the Sinfonia in F minor BWV 795 incorporates 6 a version of the motif This five note version appears transposed a g rest g b a Eventually in measure 17 the piece makes its way to a passage in which the five note version of the motif starts on B as B A rest A C H His arrangement of a motet for SSATB singers Excerpt of the Tristis est anima mea motet attributed to Kuhnau F minor Bach s E minor arrangement of the same passage B A C H appears in the alto voice Near the end of the Augmentation Canon of Bach s Canonic Variations on Vom Himmel hoch da komm ich her BWV 769 4 B A C H and its inversion in the last bars of the Augmentation Canon of BWV 769 Near the end of Contrapunctus IV of The Art of Fugue 7 B A C H in the tenor part of the last bars of Contrapunctus IV of The Art of Fugue As first four notes of the third and last subject of the final unfinished fugue of The Art of Fugue 8 B A C H opening the third and last subject of the unfinished fugue of The Art of Fugue Hans Heinrich Eggebrecht goes as far as to reconstruct Bach s putative intentions as an expression of Lutheran thought imagining Bach to be saying I am identified with the tonic and it is my desire to reach it Like you I am human I am in need of salvation I am certain in the hope of salvation and have been saved by grace 9 through his use of the motif rather than a standard changing tone figure B A C B in the final measures of the fourth fugue of The Art of Fugue 8 10 11 Other composers Edit BACH motif followed by transposed version from Schumann s Sechs Fugen uber den Namen B A C H Op 60 No 4 mm 1 3 12 source source source Note that C and H are transposed down leaving the spelling unaffected but changing the melodic contour Schumann Sechs Fugen for organ Op 60 No 5 mm 1 4 source source source The motif may be used in different ways here it is only the beginning of an extended melody 13 Charles Ives 3 Page Sonata 1905 first mvt first fugal complex source source source The BACH motif from The Art of Fugue Contrapunctus XIXc is the 1st Theme fugue subject of Ives combined sonata allegro and fugal procedures 14 source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Webern s String Quartet Op 28 tone row composed of three tetrachords P I RI with P the BACH motif I it inverted and RI it inverted and backwards citation needed The motif was used as a fugue subject by Bach s son Johann Christian and by his pupil Johann Ludwig Krebs It also appears in a work by Georg Philipp Telemann 15 The motif s wide popularity came only after the start of the Bach Revival in the first half of the 19th century 4 A few mid 19th century works that feature the motif prominently are 1845 Robert Schumann Sechs Fugen uber den Namen Bach for organ pedal piano or harmonium Op 60 12 16 1855 Franz Liszt Fantasy and Fugue on the Theme B A C H for organ later revised 1870 and arranged 1871 for piano 17 1856 Johannes Brahms Fugue in A flat minor for organ WoO 8 16 1878 Nicolai Rimsky Korsakov Valse Intermezzo Scherzo Nocturne Prelude et Fugue Six Variations sur le theme B A C HComposers found that the motif could be easily incorporated not only into the advanced harmonic writing of the 19th century but also into the totally chromatic idiom of the Second Viennese School so it was used by Arnold Schoenberg Anton Webern and their disciples and followers A few 20th century works that feature the motif prominently are 1926 28 Arnold Schoenberg Variations for Orchestra Op 31 18 1937 38 Anton Webern String Quartet the tone row is based on the BACH motif 19 1942 Charles Koechlin Offrande musicale sur le nom de Bach Op 187 20 1951 55 Luigi Dallapiccola 1951 55 Canti di liberazione 21 page needed 1952 Quaderno musicale di Annalibera for piano 21 page needed 1954 Variazioni Variations 1942 orchestral version of Quaderno musicale di Annalibera 21 page needed 1966 Krzysztof Penderecki St Luke Passion 1968 81 Alfred Schnittke 1968 The Glass Harmonica soundtrack repeated motif 22 Quasi Una Sonata repeated motif borrowed from The Glass Harmonica one reviewer noting that B A C H is the victor of the composition 23 1981 Symphony No 3 used alongside the monograms of several other composers 24 1974 Jon Lord and Eberhard Schoener Continuo On B A C H on the album Windows 1992 Ron Nelson Passacaglia Homage on B A C H for wind ensembleIn the 21st century composers continue writing works using the motif frequently in homage to Johann Sebastian Bach 4 References Edit Johann Gottfried Walther Musicalisches Lexicon oder Musicalische Bibliothec p 64 Leipzig W Deer 1732 Ulrich Prinz Joachim Dorfmuller and Konrad Kuster 1985 Die Tonfolge B A C H in Kompositionen des 17 bis 20 Jahrhunderts ein Verzeichnis in 300 Jahre Sebastian Bach exhibition catalogue pp 389 419 ISBN 3 7952 0459 3 Malcolm Boyd 1999 Bach Oxford University Press 2006 edition ISBN 0 19 530771 2 a b c d Boyd Malcolm 2001 B A C H In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 Marshall Robert 2003 Eighteenth Century Keyboard Music p 201 and p 224n18 ISBN 0 415 96642 6 See Godt 1979 Schulenberg David 2006 The Keyboard Music of J S Bach p 197 ISBN 0 415 97399 6 Cumming 2000 p 256 a b Brandstatter 1990 Eggebrecht 1985 p 15 in German or Eggebrecht 1993 p 8 translated cited in Brandstatter 1990 p 163 Kivy 2000 p 380 and Cumming 2000 p 256 Kivy 2000 The Solution pp 380 381 Cumming 2000 pp 256 257 a b Christopher Alan Reynolds 2003 Motives for Allusion Context and Content in Nineteenth Century Music p 31 ISBN 0 674 01037 X Daverio John 1997 Robert Schumann Herald of a New Poetic Age p 309 ISBN 0 19 509180 9 Crist Stephen 2002 Bach Perspectives Vol 5 Bach in America p 175 ISBN 0 252 02788 4 The reference could not be more clear Jones Ben B A C H motif in Oboe Concerto TWV 51 D6 Telemann Georg Philipp IMSLP Retrieved 1 October 2019 there is a clear B A C H motif at the beginning of the Adagio a b Platt Heather Anne 2003 Johannes Brahms p 243 ISBN 0 8153 3850 3 Arnold Ben 2002 The Liszt Companion p 173 ISBN 0 313 30689 3 Stein Erwin ed 1987 Arnold Schoenberg letters p 206 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 06009 8 Bailey Kathryn 2006 The Twelve note Music of Anton Webern Old Forms In a New Language p 24 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 54796 3 Orledge Robert 1989 Charles Koechlin 1867 1950 his life and works Chur Switzerland Harwood Academic Publishers ISBN 3 7186 4898 9 OCLC 18833927 a b c Fearn Raymond 2003 The Music of Luigi Dallapiccola 2005 ISBN 1 58046 078 X Schmelz Peter J 2009 Such Freedom If Only Musical Unofficial Soviet Music During the Thaw Oxford University Press USA p 255 Schmelz Peter J 2009 Such Freedom If Only Musical p 255 256 ISBN 0 19 534193 7 Ivashkin Alexander 2009 Liner notes to BIS complete symphony cycle BIS CD 1767 68Sources EditBrandstatter Ursula in German 1990 Hans Heinrich Eggebrechts deutung der Kunst der Fuge von J S Bach Hans Heinrich Eggebrecht s interpretation of The Art of Fugue by J S Bach Musik im Spiegel der Sprache Theorie und Analyse des Sprechens uber Musik Music reflected in language theory and analysis of the discourse about music in German eBook ed Springer published 2017 pp 163 180 ISBN 9783476044600 Cumming Naomi 2000 8 Culturally Embedded Signs subsection 2 Skeptical Issues part a Humpty Dumpty and the New Musicology The Sonic Self Musical Subjectivity and Signification Indiana University Press pp 254 258 ISBN 0253337542 Eggebrecht Hans Heinrich 1985 1984 Bachs Kunst der Fuge Erscheinung und Deutung in German 4th ed Noetzel published 1998 ISBN 379590725X Eggebrecht Hans Heinrich 1993 J S Bach s The Art of Fugue The Work and Its Interpretation Translated by Prater Jeffrey L Iowa State University Press ISBN 0813814898 Kivy Peter 2000 Absolute Music and the New Musicology In Greer David Rumbold Ian at Wikidata King Jonathan eds Musicology and Sister Disciplines Past Present Future Oxford University Press pp 378 388 ISBN 0198167342 Orledge Robert Charles Koechlin 1867 1950 His Life and Works Harwood Academic Publishers pp 197 198 ISBN 3 7186 0609 7 Further reading EditSeyoung Jeong 2009 Four Modern Piano Compositions Incorporating the B A C H Motive ISBN 3 8364 9768 9 Schuyler Watrous Robinson 1972 The B A C H Motive in German Keyboard Compositions from the Time of J S Bach to the Present thesis University of Illinois External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to BACH motif List of compositions with the theme B A C H Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title BACH motif amp oldid 1150703185, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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