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Prince Johann Ernst of Saxe-Weimar

Johann Ernst of Saxe-Weimar (German: Johann Ernst von Sachsen-Weimar)[1] (25 December 1696 – 1 August 1715) was a German prince, son by his second marriage of Johann Ernst III, Duke of Saxe-Weimar. Despite his early death he is remembered as a collector and commissioner of music and as a composer, some of whose concertos were arranged for harpsichord or organ by Johann Sebastian Bach, who was court organist in Weimar at the time.[2]

Prince Johann Ernst
The Red Castle in Weimar where Johann Ernst lived with his brother Duke Ernst August I
Born(1696-12-25)25 December 1696
Weimar
Died1 August 1715(1715-08-01) (aged 18)
Frankfurt
HouseHouse of Wettin
FatherJohann Ernst III, Duke of Saxe-Weimar
MotherCharlotte Dorothea Sophia of Hesse-Homburg
ReligionLutheranism

Life edit

Johann Ernst was born in Weimar, the fourth son and sixth child of Johann Ernst III, Duke of Saxe-Weimar, and second child of the Duke's second wife, Charlotte Dorothea Sophia of Hesse-Homburg. As a young child the prince took violin lessons from G.C. Eilenstein, who was a court musician.[3]

He studied at the University of Utrecht between February 1711 and July 1713. It is thought that Johann Ernst furthered his understanding of music at this time. From Utrecht, he could visit such centres as Amsterdam and Düsseldorf and it is known that he had copies of Italian music sent back to Weimar. (Household bills for the year from 1 June following his return record the cost of copying, binding and shelving music.[4]) In particular, it is thought that he might have encountered Vivaldi's opus 3 set of violin concertos. The prince's interest in collecting music was sufficiently well known that P. D. Kräuter, when requesting leave of absence to study with Bach in Weimar, mentioned the French and Italian music that the prince was expected to introduce there. Kräuter also praised Johann Ernst's virtuosity as a violinist.[5]

On his return from university, Johann Ernst took lessons in composition with a focus on concertos from the local church organist Johann Gottfried Walther, a cousin of Bach. Walther had previously given the prince keyboard lessons and had given him his Praecepta der musicalischen Composition (Precepts of Musical Composition) as a twelfth birthday present.[3]

During his life, Walther transcribed seventy-eight concertos for keyboard. Bach also produced a number of virtuoso organ (BWV 592–6) and harpsichord (BWV 972–987) arrangements. These included some of the prince's own works (BWV 592, 592a, 595, 982, 984 and 987) as well as works by German and Italian composers, including Georg Philipp Telemann (BWV 985) and Vivaldi (BWV 972, 973 etc.). The Bach transcriptions were created roughly during the period July 1713–July 1714 between Johann Ernst's return from Utrecht and the prince's final departure from Weimar. There is some scholarly debate on Johann Ernst's role in the creation of these arrangements, whether he commissioned some from one or both of the musicians or whether Bach, in particular, was studying some of the works collected by the prince for their own sake. There are suggestions that on a visit to Amsterdam in February 1713 the Prince may have heard the blind organist J. J. de Graff, who is known to have played keyboard arrangements of other composers' concertos.[4] In any case, Bach's encounter with the prince's collection, and especially the Italian music it contained, had a profound influence on the development of the composer's musical style.[5][6]

As well as influencing Bach, Johann Ernst completed at least nineteen instrumental works of his own before his death at age eighteen. These works show the influence of Italian music more than that of German models such as Bach.[3][7][8]

Johann Ernst died in Frankfurt after a long illness resulting from a leg infection, possibly a metastatic sarcoma, which, despite the intensive care of his heart-broken mother and medical treatments in Schwalbach, spread to the abdominal area. He was buried, not in Weimar, but in Homburg (Bad Homburg vor der Höhe) in the vault of his mother's family, the Landgraves of Hesse-Homburg.[9] A period of mourning was declared in Weimar from 11 August to 9 November 1715. Music was banned, including in church, resulting in an interruption in Bach's attempt to build an annual cycle of cantatas.[4]

Following his death, six of the prince's concertos were sent to Telemann, who edited and published them in 1718.[8] He himself had already started to have them set before his death. Telemann's own first publication, a 1715 set of six violin sonatas, had been dedicated to Johann Ernst.[3]

Compositions edit

According to Walther's Lexicon, published in 1732, Johann Ernst composed 19 instrumental pieces in a period of nine months, shortly before his death, when Walther was teaching him composition.[10] Eight violin concertos are extant in their original instrumentation. Bach transcribed three of these: Op. 1 Nos. 1 and 4 and the Concerto a 8 in G major. Another concerto by Johann Ernst is only known through Bach's transcriptions in C major. No original has been identified for BWV 983: it was possibly transcribed by Bach from a concerto by Johann Ernst. The model for BWV 977 is equally lost: also in this case a possible attribution of the lost original to Johann Ernst is uncertain.

Violin Concerto Op. 1 No. 1 in B-flat major edit

Violin Concerto in B-flat major, Op. 1 No. 1, for violino principale and strings (violin I & II, viola, harpsichord):

  1. Allegro
  2. Adagio – Allegro
  3. Un Poco Presto
  • Printed editions: Telemann 1718; Bergmann 2013 (Vol. 1)
  • Recordings: l'Oiseau-Lyre 1989; Thorofon 1997; cpo 2015

Adaptations:

  • Concerto in B-flat major for unaccompanied harpsichord, BWV 982, transcribed by Johann Sebastian Bach
    • Manuscripts: D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 280
    • Printed editions: Naumann 1894 (p. 135)
    • Recordings: Thorofon 1997; cpo 2015

Violin Concerto Op. 1 No. 2 in A minor edit

Violin Concerto in A minor, Op. 1 No. 2, for violino principale and strings (violin I & II, viola, harpsichord or cello):

  1. Allegro
  2. Largo
  3. Andante
  • Printed editions: Telemann 1718; Hortschansky 2001; Bergmann 2013 (Vol. 1)
  • Recordings: cpo 2015

Violin Concerto Op. 1 No. 3 in E minor edit

Violin Concerto in E minor, Op. 1 No. 3, for violino principale and strings (violin I & II, viola, harpsichord or cello):

  1. Vivace
  2. Pastorella
  3. Presto
  • Printed editions: Telemann 1718; Bergmann 2013 (Vol. 1)
  • Recordings: cpo 2015

Violin Concerto Op. 1 No. 4 in D minor edit

Violin Concerto in D minor, Op. 1 No. 4, for violino principale and strings (violin I & II, viola, harpsichord or cello):

  1. Adagio – Presto – Adagio – Presto – Adagio
  2. Allegro
  3. Adagio – Vivace
  • Printed editions: Telemann 1718; Bergmann 2013 (Vol. 2)
  • Recordings: cpo 2015

Adaptations:

  • Concerto in D minor for unaccompanied harpsichord, BWV 987, transcribed by Johann Sebastian Bach
    • Manuscripts: D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 804 (Fascicle 34)
    • Printed editions: Naumann 1894 (p. 165)
    • Recordings: cpo 2015

Violin Concerto Op. 1 No. 5 in E major edit

Violin Concerto in E major, Op. 1 No. 5, for violino principale and strings (violin I & II, viola, harpsichord or cello):

  1. [without tempo indication]
  2. Siciliana
  3. Allegro
  • Printed editions: Telemann 1718; Bergmann 2013 (Vol. 2)
  • Recordings: cpo 2015

Violin Concerto Op. 1 No. 6 in G minor edit

Violin Concerto in G minor, Op. 1 No. 6, for violino principale and strings (violin I & II, viola, harpsichord or cello):

  1. Vivace
  2. Recitativo
  3. Allegro
  • Printed editions: Telemann 1718; Bergmann 2013 (Vol. 2)
  • Recordings: cpo 2015

Violin Concerto a 8 in G major edit

Violin Concerto in G major for violino principale, violin I & II obligato, violin I & II ripieno, viola, cello and harpsichord:

  1. Allegro assai
  2. Adagio
  3. Presto e staccato
  • Manuscripts: D-ROu Mus.Saec.XVIII:66|3|9; D-WRz Mus IVf:19
  • Printed editions: Hérengt & Kimura 2016
  • Recordings: Thorofon 1997; cpo 2015

Adaptations:

  • Organ Concerto in G major, BWV 592, transcribed by Johann Sebastian Bach
    • Manuscripts: D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 280; D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 400a; D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 804 (Fascicle 31); D-LEb Peters Ms. 11
    • Printed editions: Naumann 1891 (p. 149)
    • Recordings: Thorofon 1997
  • Concerto in G major for unaccompanied harpsichord, BWV 592a, transcribed by Johann Sebastian Bach
    • Manuscripts: D-LEm Poel. mus. Ms. 29
    • Printed editions: Naumann 1894 (p. 282)
    • Recordings: cpo 2015

Violin Concerto a 6 in G major edit

Violin Concerto in G major for violino principale, violin I & II, viola, bass and continuo, a.k.a. RV Anh. 12:

  1. Adagio
  2. Allegro
  3. Adagio
  4. Allegro
  • Manuscripts: D-ROu Mus.Saec.XVIII:61|7|b
  • Printed editions: Hérengt & Kimura 2016
  • Recordings: cpo 2015

Original of Concerto in C major, BWV 984 and 595 edit

Instrumentation and key of the model for BWV 984 and 595 are unknown.

Adaptations:

  • Concerto in C major for unaccompanied harpsichord, BWV 984, transcribed by Johann Sebastian Bach:
    1. [no tempo indication]
    2. Adagio e affettoso
    3. Allegro assai
    • Manuscripts: D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 804 (Fascicle 52); D-LEb Peters Ms. 8 (Fascicle 28); D-LEm Poel. mus. Ms. 29
    • Printed editions: Naumann 1894 (p. 148)
  • Organ Concerto in C major, BWV 595, transcribed by Johann Sebastian Bach:
    1. [no tempo indication] (first movement only)
    • Manuscripts: D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 286
    • Printed editions: Naumann 1891 (p. 196)
  • Concerto in C major for 2 Violins (reconstructed from BWV 595 and 984)
    • Recordings: Haenssler 2007

Trumpet Sonata in D major edit

Sonata in D major for trumpet, two violins and continuo (attribution uncertain):

  1. Vivace
  2. Largo
  3. Allegro
  4. Adagio
  5. Menuet
  • Recordings: Edel 1998; Kamprad 1999

Manuscripts edit

  • D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 280 at Berlin State Library (BWV 592 and 973–982; RISM 467300717; D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 280 at Bach Digital website)
  • D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 286 at Berlin State Library (RISM 467300057): Fascicle 6 (BWV 595) at Bach Digital website
  • D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 400a at Berlin State Library (BWV 592; RISM 467300035; D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 400a at Bach Digital website)
  • D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 804 at Berlin State Library (RISM 467300254): Fascicles 31 (BWV 592), 34 (BWV 987), 35 (BWV 983), 52 (BWV 984) and 56 (BWV 977) at Bach Digital website
  • D-LEb Peters Ms. 8 at Stadtbibliothek Leipzig [de]/Bach Archive: Fascicle 28 (BWV 984) at Bach Digital website
  • D-LEb Peters Ms. 11 at Stadtbibliothek Leipzig [de]/Bach Archive: (BWV 592; D-LEb Peters Ms. 11 at Bach Digital website)
  • D-LEm Poel. mus. Ms. 29 at Stadtbibliothek Leipzig [de] (BWV 592a and 983–984; D-LEm Poel. mus. Ms. 29 at Bach Digital website)
  • D-ROu Mus.Saec.XVII:51|3|9|a at Rostock university library (Concerto for two violins in B-flat major; RISM 200045535)
  • D-ROu Mus.Saec.XVII:51|4|1 at Rostock university library (Violin Concerto in D minor; RISM 200045539)
  • D-ROu Mus.Saec.XVII:51|4|2 at Rostock university library (Concerto in A minor; RISM 200045538)
  • D-ROu Mus.Saec.XVIII:61|7|a at Rostock university library (Violin Concerto in E minor, RV Anh. 11, attributed to Johann Ernst; RISM 200045537)
  • D-ROu Mus.Saec.XVIII:61|7|b at Rostock university library (Violin Concerto a 6 in G major, RV Anh. 12, attributed to Johann Ernst; RISM 200045536)
  • D-ROu Mus.Saec.XVIII:66|3|9 at Rostock university library (Violin Concerto a 8 in G major; RISM 200045534)
  • D-WRz Mus IVf:19 at Herzogin Anna Amalia Bibliothek (Violin Concerto a 8 in G major; RISM 200045540)

Printed editions edit

  • (Telemann 1718) Georg Philipp Telemann, editor. Six | CONCERTS | à | Un Violon concertant, | deux Violons, une Taille, et | Clavecin ou Basse de Viole, | de feu | SAS Monseigneur le Prince | JEAN ERNESTE | Duc de Saxe-Weimar, | Opera Ima. M. Kloss et M. Sellius, 1718 (RISM 00000990032612)
  • (Naumann 1891) Ernst Naumann, editor. Bach-Gesellschaft Ausgabe, Vol. 38: Orgelwerke, Band 3. Breitkopf & Härtel, 1891
  • (Naumann 1894) Ernst Naumann, editor. Bach-Gesellschaft Ausgabe, Vol. 42: Clavierwerke, Band 5. Breitkopf & Härtel, 1894
  • (Hortschansky 2001) Klaus Hortschansky, editor. Musik in der Residenzstadt Weimar. Leipzig: Hofmeister, 2001
  • (Bergmann 2013) Hans Bergmann, editor. Johann Ernst Prinz von Sachsen-Weimar: 6 Violinkonzerte Op. 1, Vol. 1 (Concerto I-III) and Vol. 2 (Concerto IV-VI). Offenburg, 2013
  • (Hérengt & Kimura 2016) Hélène Hérengt and Mihoko Kimura, editors. Johann Ernst Prinz von Sachsen-Weimar: Zwei Violinkonzerte. Offenburg, 2016

Recordings edit

Apart from several performances of the Bach transcriptions, recordings featuring music by Johann Ernst include:

  • (l'Oiseau-Lyre 1989) Stanley Ritchie, violin; The Bach Ensemble; Joshua Rifkin, conductor. Violin concertos at the court of Weimar. L'Oiseau-Lyre 421 442-2, 1989
  • (Thorofon 1997) Simon Standage, violin; Ludger Rémy, harpsichord; Sebastian Knebel, organ; Weimar Baroque Ensemble. Weimarer Transkriptionen. Thorofon CTH2371-72, 1997
  • (Edel 1998) Ludwig Güttler, trumpet; Virtuosi Saxoniae; Friedrich Kircheis, harpsichord. Ludwig Güttler in Weimar. Edel, 1998.
  • (Kamprad 1999) Felix Friedrich, Organ; Mathias Schmutzler, Trumpet. Festive concert for trumpet and organ. Altenburg: Klaus-Jürgen Kamprad publishing house, 1999
  • (Haenssler 2007) Freiburg Musica Poetica Ensemble; Hans Bergmann, conductor. Cantata, Concerto & Sonata. Haenssler Classic CD98.408, 2007
  • (cpo 2015) Anne Schumann, violin; Ensemble "Fürsten-Musik"; Sebastian Knebel, harpsichord. Johann Ernst von Sachsen-Weimar: The Complete Violin Concertos; J. S. Bach: Harpsichord Transcriptions. cpo 777 998-2, 2015[11]

Ancestors edit

References edit

  1. ^ He is occasionally referred to as Johann Ernst IV (for example, in the Allgemeine Encyclopädie der Wissenschaften und Künste, Leipzig 1842, II./21., p. 260: article by J S Ersch), implying that he succeeded his father as co-ruler of Saxe-Weimar with his half-brother Ernst August I, both under the regency of their uncle Wilhelm Ernst; this is not well-evidenced.
  2. ^ "Johann Ernst von Sachsen-Weimar (Composer, Bach's Pupil) - Short Biography".
  3. ^ a b c d Sarah E. Hanks, "Johann Ernst, Prince of Weimar", In Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/14348 (accessed October 29, 2009).
  4. ^ a b c Christoph Wolff et al.Biography of Bach 2014-12-11 at the Wayback Machine, Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians
  5. ^ a b Peter F. Williams (1980)The Organ Music of J.S. Bach I: BWV 525-598, 802-805 etc., Cambridge University Press pp.283-5
  6. ^ John Butt, The Cambridge Companion to Bach p.141.
  7. ^ John Greene Review of Haenssler Classic CD98.408. Classics Today.com
  8. ^ a b Information on recording - BACH, J.S.: Organ Transcriptions Naxos Classics UPC: 730099593625, Naxos Records
  9. ^ Allgemeine Encyclopädie der Wissenschaften und Künste, 1842
  10. ^ Johann Gottfried Walther Musicalisches Lexicon oder Musicalische Bibliothec. Leipzig: W. Deer, 1732, p. 331
  11. ^ Charlotte Gardner. "JOHANN ERNST Complete Violin Concertos" in Gramophone, March 2016

Sources edit

  • Butt, John (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Bach. Cambridge Companions to Music. Cambridge University Press. (digitised)
  • Ersch, J.S., 1842, in: Allgemeine Encyclopädie der Wissenschaften und Künste, Leipzig 1842, II./21., p. 260 (digitised) (in German)
  • Williams, Peter F., 1980: The Organ Music of J.S. Bach I: BWV 525-598, 802-805 etc., pp. 283–5. Cambridge University Press (digitised)

External links edit

prince, johann, ernst, saxe, weimar, johann, ernst, saxe, weimar, german, johann, ernst, sachsen, weimar, december, 1696, august, 1715, german, prince, second, marriage, johann, ernst, duke, saxe, weimar, despite, early, death, remembered, collector, commissio. Johann Ernst of Saxe Weimar German Johann Ernst von Sachsen Weimar 1 25 December 1696 1 August 1715 was a German prince son by his second marriage of Johann Ernst III Duke of Saxe Weimar Despite his early death he is remembered as a collector and commissioner of music and as a composer some of whose concertos were arranged for harpsichord or organ by Johann Sebastian Bach who was court organist in Weimar at the time 2 Prince Johann ErnstThe Red Castle in Weimar where Johann Ernst lived with his brother Duke Ernst August IBorn 1696 12 25 25 December 1696WeimarDied1 August 1715 1715 08 01 aged 18 FrankfurtHouseHouse of WettinFatherJohann Ernst III Duke of Saxe WeimarMotherCharlotte Dorothea Sophia of Hesse HomburgReligionLutheranism Contents 1 Life 2 Compositions 2 1 Violin Concerto Op 1 No 1 in B flat major 2 2 Violin Concerto Op 1 No 2 in A minor 2 3 Violin Concerto Op 1 No 3 in E minor 2 4 Violin Concerto Op 1 No 4 in D minor 2 5 Violin Concerto Op 1 No 5 in E major 2 6 Violin Concerto Op 1 No 6 in G minor 2 7 Violin Concerto a 8 in G major 2 8 Violin Concerto a 6 in G major 2 9 Original of Concerto in C major BWV 984 and 595 2 10 Trumpet Sonata in D major 3 Manuscripts 4 Printed editions 5 Recordings 6 Ancestors 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksLife editJohann Ernst was born in Weimar the fourth son and sixth child of Johann Ernst III Duke of Saxe Weimar and second child of the Duke s second wife Charlotte Dorothea Sophia of Hesse Homburg As a young child the prince took violin lessons from G C Eilenstein who was a court musician 3 He studied at the University of Utrecht between February 1711 and July 1713 It is thought that Johann Ernst furthered his understanding of music at this time From Utrecht he could visit such centres as Amsterdam and Dusseldorf and it is known that he had copies of Italian music sent back to Weimar Household bills for the year from 1 June following his return record the cost of copying binding and shelving music 4 In particular it is thought that he might have encountered Vivaldi s opus 3 set of violin concertos The prince s interest in collecting music was sufficiently well known that P D Krauter when requesting leave of absence to study with Bach in Weimar mentioned the French and Italian music that the prince was expected to introduce there Krauter also praised Johann Ernst s virtuosity as a violinist 5 On his return from university Johann Ernst took lessons in composition with a focus on concertos from the local church organist Johann Gottfried Walther a cousin of Bach Walther had previously given the prince keyboard lessons and had given him his Praecepta der musicalischen Composition Precepts of Musical Composition as a twelfth birthday present 3 During his life Walther transcribed seventy eight concertos for keyboard Bach also produced a number of virtuoso organ BWV 592 6 and harpsichord BWV 972 987 arrangements These included some of the prince s own works BWV 592 592a 595 982 984 and 987 as well as works by German and Italian composers including Georg Philipp Telemann BWV 985 and Vivaldi BWV 972 973 etc The Bach transcriptions were created roughly during the period July 1713 July 1714 between Johann Ernst s return from Utrecht and the prince s final departure from Weimar There is some scholarly debate on Johann Ernst s role in the creation of these arrangements whether he commissioned some from one or both of the musicians or whether Bach in particular was studying some of the works collected by the prince for their own sake There are suggestions that on a visit to Amsterdam in February 1713 the Prince may have heard the blind organist J J de Graff who is known to have played keyboard arrangements of other composers concertos 4 In any case Bach s encounter with the prince s collection and especially the Italian music it contained had a profound influence on the development of the composer s musical style 5 6 As well as influencing Bach Johann Ernst completed at least nineteen instrumental works of his own before his death at age eighteen These works show the influence of Italian music more than that of German models such as Bach 3 7 8 Johann Ernst died in Frankfurt after a long illness resulting from a leg infection possibly a metastatic sarcoma which despite the intensive care of his heart broken mother and medical treatments in Schwalbach spread to the abdominal area He was buried not in Weimar but in Homburg Bad Homburg vor der Hohe in the vault of his mother s family the Landgraves of Hesse Homburg 9 A period of mourning was declared in Weimar from 11 August to 9 November 1715 Music was banned including in church resulting in an interruption in Bach s attempt to build an annual cycle of cantatas 4 Following his death six of the prince s concertos were sent to Telemann who edited and published them in 1718 8 He himself had already started to have them set before his death Telemann s own first publication a 1715 set of six violin sonatas had been dedicated to Johann Ernst 3 Compositions editThis section relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this section by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Prince Johann Ernst of Saxe Weimar news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message According to Walther s Lexicon published in 1732 Johann Ernst composed 19 instrumental pieces in a period of nine months shortly before his death when Walther was teaching him composition 10 Eight violin concertos are extant in their original instrumentation Bach transcribed three of these Op 1 Nos 1 and 4 and the Concerto a 8 in G major Another concerto by Johann Ernst is only known through Bach s transcriptions in C major No original has been identified for BWV 983 it was possibly transcribed by Bach from a concerto by Johann Ernst The model for BWV 977 is equally lost also in this case a possible attribution of the lost original to Johann Ernst is uncertain Violin Concerto Op 1 No 1 in B flat major edit Violin Concerto in B flat major Op 1 No 1 for violino principale and strings violin I amp II viola harpsichord Allegro Adagio Allegro Un Poco PrestoPrinted editions Telemann 1718 Bergmann 2013 Vol 1 Recordings l Oiseau Lyre 1989 Thorofon 1997 cpo 2015Adaptations Concerto in B flat major for unaccompanied harpsichord BWV 982 transcribed by Johann Sebastian Bach Manuscripts D B Mus ms Bach P 280 Printed editions Naumann 1894 p 135 Recordings Thorofon 1997 cpo 2015Violin Concerto Op 1 No 2 in A minor edit Violin Concerto in A minor Op 1 No 2 for violino principale and strings violin I amp II viola harpsichord or cello Allegro Largo AndantePrinted editions Telemann 1718 Hortschansky 2001 Bergmann 2013 Vol 1 Recordings cpo 2015Violin Concerto Op 1 No 3 in E minor edit Violin Concerto in E minor Op 1 No 3 for violino principale and strings violin I amp II viola harpsichord or cello Vivace Pastorella PrestoPrinted editions Telemann 1718 Bergmann 2013 Vol 1 Recordings cpo 2015Violin Concerto Op 1 No 4 in D minor edit Violin Concerto in D minor Op 1 No 4 for violino principale and strings violin I amp II viola harpsichord or cello Adagio Presto Adagio Presto Adagio Allegro Adagio VivacePrinted editions Telemann 1718 Bergmann 2013 Vol 2 Recordings cpo 2015Adaptations Concerto in D minor for unaccompanied harpsichord BWV 987 transcribed by Johann Sebastian Bach Manuscripts D B Mus ms Bach P 804 Fascicle 34 Printed editions Naumann 1894 p 165 Recordings cpo 2015Violin Concerto Op 1 No 5 in E major edit Violin Concerto in E major Op 1 No 5 for violino principale and strings violin I amp II viola harpsichord or cello without tempo indication Siciliana AllegroPrinted editions Telemann 1718 Bergmann 2013 Vol 2 Recordings cpo 2015Violin Concerto Op 1 No 6 in G minor edit Violin Concerto in G minor Op 1 No 6 for violino principale and strings violin I amp II viola harpsichord or cello Vivace Recitativo AllegroPrinted editions Telemann 1718 Bergmann 2013 Vol 2 Recordings cpo 2015Violin Concerto a 8 in G major edit Violin Concerto in G major for violino principale violin I amp II obligato violin I amp II ripieno viola cello and harpsichord Allegro assai Adagio Presto e staccatoManuscripts D ROu Mus Saec XVIII 66 3 9 D WRz Mus IVf 19 Printed editions Herengt amp Kimura 2016 Recordings Thorofon 1997 cpo 2015Adaptations Organ Concerto in G major BWV 592 transcribed by Johann Sebastian Bach Manuscripts D B Mus ms Bach P 280 D B Mus ms Bach P 400a D B Mus ms Bach P 804 Fascicle 31 D LEb Peters Ms 11 Printed editions Naumann 1891 p 149 Recordings Thorofon 1997 Concerto in G major for unaccompanied harpsichord BWV 592a transcribed by Johann Sebastian Bach Manuscripts D LEm Poel mus Ms 29 Printed editions Naumann 1894 p 282 Recordings cpo 2015Violin Concerto a 6 in G major edit Violin Concerto in G major for violino principale violin I amp II viola bass and continuo a k a RV Anh 12 Adagio Allegro Adagio AllegroManuscripts D ROu Mus Saec XVIII 61 7 b Printed editions Herengt amp Kimura 2016 Recordings cpo 2015Original of Concerto in C major BWV 984 and 595 edit Instrumentation and key of the model for BWV 984 and 595 are unknown Adaptations Concerto in C major for unaccompanied harpsichord BWV 984 transcribed by Johann Sebastian Bach no tempo indication Adagio e affettoso Allegro assaiManuscripts D B Mus ms Bach P 804 Fascicle 52 D LEb Peters Ms 8 Fascicle 28 D LEm Poel mus Ms 29 Printed editions Naumann 1894 p 148 Organ Concerto in C major BWV 595 transcribed by Johann Sebastian Bach no tempo indication first movement only Manuscripts D B Mus ms Bach P 286 Printed editions Naumann 1891 p 196 Concerto in C major for 2 Violins reconstructed from BWV 595 and 984 Recordings Haenssler 2007Trumpet Sonata in D major edit Sonata in D major for trumpet two violins and continuo attribution uncertain Vivace Largo Allegro Adagio MenuetRecordings Edel 1998 Kamprad 1999Manuscripts editD B Mus ms Bach P 280 at Berlin State Library BWV 592 and 973 982 RISM 467300717 D B Mus ms Bach P 280 at Bach Digital website D B Mus ms Bach P 286 at Berlin State Library RISM 467300057 Fascicle 6 BWV 595 at Bach Digital website D B Mus ms Bach P 400a at Berlin State Library BWV 592 RISM 467300035 D B Mus ms Bach P 400a at Bach Digital website D B Mus ms Bach P 804 at Berlin State Library RISM 467300254 Fascicles 31 BWV 592 34 BWV 987 35 BWV 983 52 BWV 984 and 56 BWV 977 at Bach Digital website D LEb Peters Ms 8 at Stadtbibliothek Leipzig de Bach Archive Fascicle 28 BWV 984 at Bach Digital website D LEb Peters Ms 11 at Stadtbibliothek Leipzig de Bach Archive BWV 592 D LEb Peters Ms 11 at Bach Digital website D LEm Poel mus Ms 29 at Stadtbibliothek Leipzig de BWV 592a and 983 984 D LEm Poel mus Ms 29 at Bach Digital website D ROu Mus Saec XVII 51 3 9 a at Rostock university library Concerto for two violins in B flat major RISM 200045535 D ROu Mus Saec XVII 51 4 1 at Rostock university library Violin Concerto in D minor RISM 200045539 D ROu Mus Saec XVII 51 4 2 at Rostock university library Concerto in A minor RISM 200045538 D ROu Mus Saec XVIII 61 7 a at Rostock university library Violin Concerto in E minor RV Anh 11 attributed to Johann Ernst RISM 200045537 D ROu Mus Saec XVIII 61 7 b at Rostock university library Violin Concerto a 6 in G major RV Anh 12 attributed to Johann Ernst RISM 200045536 D ROu Mus Saec XVIII 66 3 9 at Rostock university library Violin Concerto a 8 in G major RISM 200045534 D WRz Mus IVf 19 at Herzogin Anna Amalia Bibliothek Violin Concerto a 8 in G major RISM 200045540 Printed editions edit Telemann 1718 Georg Philipp Telemann editor Six CONCERTS a Un Violon concertant deux Violons une Taille et Clavecin ou Basse de Viole de feu SAS Monseigneur le Prince JEAN ERNESTE Duc de Saxe Weimar Opera Ima M Kloss et M Sellius 1718 RISM 00000990032612 Naumann 1891 Ernst Naumann editor Bach Gesellschaft Ausgabe Vol 38 Orgelwerke Band 3 Breitkopf amp Hartel 1891 Naumann 1894 Ernst Naumann editor Bach Gesellschaft Ausgabe Vol 42 Clavierwerke Band 5 Breitkopf amp Hartel 1894 Hortschansky 2001 Klaus Hortschansky editor Musik in der Residenzstadt Weimar Leipzig Hofmeister 2001 Bergmann 2013 Hans Bergmann editor Johann Ernst Prinz von Sachsen Weimar 6 Violinkonzerte Op 1 Vol 1 Concerto I III and Vol 2 Concerto IV VI Offenburg 2013 Herengt amp Kimura 2016 Helene Herengt and Mihoko Kimura editors Johann Ernst Prinz von Sachsen Weimar Zwei Violinkonzerte Offenburg 2016Recordings editApart from several performances of the Bach transcriptions recordings featuring music by Johann Ernst include l Oiseau Lyre 1989 Stanley Ritchie violin The Bach Ensemble Joshua Rifkin conductor Violin concertos at the court of Weimar L Oiseau Lyre 421 442 2 1989 Thorofon 1997 Simon Standage violin Ludger Remy harpsichord Sebastian Knebel organ Weimar Baroque Ensemble Weimarer Transkriptionen Thorofon CTH2371 72 1997 Edel 1998 Ludwig Guttler trumpet Virtuosi Saxoniae Friedrich Kircheis harpsichord Ludwig Guttler in Weimar Edel 1998 Kamprad 1999 Felix Friedrich Organ Mathias Schmutzler Trumpet Festive concert for trumpet and organ Altenburg Klaus Jurgen Kamprad publishing house 1999 Haenssler 2007 Freiburg Musica Poetica Ensemble Hans Bergmann conductor Cantata Concerto amp Sonata Haenssler Classic CD98 408 2007 cpo 2015 Anne Schumann violin Ensemble Fursten Musik Sebastian Knebel harpsichord Johann Ernst von Sachsen Weimar The Complete Violin Concertos J S Bach Harpsichord Transcriptions cpo 777 998 2 2015 11 Ancestors editAncestors of Prince Johann Ernst of Saxe Weimar16 John II Duke of Saxe Weimar8 William Duke of Saxe Weimar17 Dorothea Maria of Anhalt4 John Ernest II Duke of Saxe Weimar18 John George I Prince of Anhalt Dessau9 Eleonore Dorothea of Anhalt Dessau19 Countess Palatine Dorothea of Simmern2 John Ernest III Duke of Saxe Weimar20 Alexander Duke of Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg10 John Christian Duke of Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg21 Dorothea of Schwarzburg Sondershausen5 Christine Elisabeth of Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg22 Anton II Count of Oldenburg Delmenhorst11 Anna of Oldenburg Delmenhorst23 Sibylle Elisabeth of Brunswick Dannenberg1 Prince Johann Ernst of Saxe Weimar24 George I Landgrave of Hesse Darmstadt12 Frederick I Landgrave of Hesse Homburg25 Magdalene of Lippe6 Frederick II Landgrave of Hesse Homburg26 Count Christopher of Leiningen Westerburg13 Margaret Elisabeth of Leiningen Westerburg27 Anna Maria Ungnad Baroness of Weissenwolff3 Charlotte Dorothea Sofie of Hesse Homburg28 Wilhelm Kettler Duke of Corland14 Jacob Kettler Duke of Corland29 Duchess Sophie of Prussia7 Louise Elisabeth of Courland30 George William Elector of Brandenburg15 Margravine Louise Charlotte of Brandenburg31 Elizabeth Charlotte of the PalatinateReferences edit He is occasionally referred to as Johann Ernst IV for example in the Allgemeine Encyclopadie der Wissenschaften und Kunste Leipzig 1842 II 21 p 260 article by J S Ersch implying that he succeeded his father as co ruler of Saxe Weimar with his half brother Ernst August I both under the regency of their uncle Wilhelm Ernst this is not well evidenced Johann Ernst von Sachsen Weimar Composer Bach s Pupil Short Biography a b c d Sarah E Hanks Johann Ernst Prince of Weimar In Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online http www oxfordmusiconline com subscriber article grove music 14348 accessed October 29 2009 a b c Christoph Wolff et al Biography of Bach Archived 2014 12 11 at the Wayback Machine Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians a b Peter F Williams 1980 The Organ Music of J S Bach I BWV 525 598 802 805 etc Cambridge University Press pp 283 5 John Butt The Cambridge Companion to Bach p 141 John Greene Review of Haenssler Classic CD98 408 Classics Today com a b Information on recording BACH J S Organ Transcriptions Naxos Classics UPC 730099593625 Naxos Records Allgemeine Encyclopadie der Wissenschaften und Kunste 1842 Johann Gottfried Walther Musicalisches Lexicon oder Musicalische Bibliothec Leipzig W Deer 1732 p 331 Charlotte Gardner JOHANN ERNST Complete Violin Concertos in Gramophone March 2016Sources editButt John ed The Cambridge Companion to Bach Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge University Press digitised Ersch J S 1842 in Allgemeine Encyclopadie der Wissenschaften und Kunste Leipzig 1842 II 21 p 260 digitised in German Williams Peter F 1980 The Organ Music of J S Bach I BWV 525 598 802 805 etc pp 283 5 Cambridge University Press digitised External links editViolin Concerto in C major Violin Concerto in G major by Johann Ernst Prinz von Sachsen Weimar Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Organ Concerto in C major BWV 595 16 Konzerte nach verschiedenen Meistern BWV 972 987 transcriptions by Johann Sebastian Bach Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Johann Ernst Prinz von Sachsen Weimar Concerti Nr 1 8 fur Violine Streicher Bc at www wbr anneschumann wbr info audio samples Violin Concerto Op 1 No 3 second movement Violin Concerto Op 1 No 4 first movement Violin Concerto Op 1 No 6 first movement Violin Concerto a 6 in G major first movement BWV 592a BWV 984 movements 1 2 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prince Johann Ernst of Saxe Weimar amp oldid 1144519627, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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