fbpx
Wikipedia

Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin (Bach)

The sonatas and partitas for solo violin (BWV 1001–1006) are a set of six works composed by Johann Sebastian Bach. They are sometimes referred to in English as the sonatas and partias for solo violin in accordance with Bach's headings in the autograph manuscript: "Partia" (plural "Partien") was commonly used in German-speaking regions during Bach's time, whereas the Italian "partita" was introduced to this set in the 1879 Bach Gesellschaft edition, having become standard by that time.[1][page needed] The set consists of three sonatas da chiesa in four movements and three partitas (or partias) in dance-form movements. The 2nd Partita is widely known for its Chaconne, considered one of the most masterly and expressive works ever written for solo violin.[2]

Title page of the autograph manuscript of BWV 1001–1006, dated 1720

The set was completed by 1720 but was not published until 1802 by Nikolaus Simrock in Bonn. Even after publication, it was largely ignored until the celebrated violinist Joseph Joachim started performing these works. Today, Bach's Sonatas and Partitas are an essential part of the violin repertoire, and they are frequently performed and recorded.

The Sei Solo a Violino senza Basso accompagnato (Six Solos for Violin Without Bass Accompaniment), as Bach titled them, firmly established the technical capability of the violin as a solo instrument. The pieces often served as archetypes for solo violin pieces by later generations of composers, including Eugène Ysaÿe and Béla Bartók.

History of composition

The surviving autograph manuscript of the sonatas and partitas was made by Bach in 1720 in Köthen, where he was Kapellmeister. As Christoph Wolff comments, the paucity of sources for instrumental compositions prior to Bach's period in Leipzig makes it difficult to establish a precise chronology; nevertheless, a copy made by the Weimar organist Johann Gottfried Walther in 1714 of the Fugue in G minor for violin and continuo, BWV 1026, which has violinistic writing similar to that in BWV 1001–1006, provides support for the commonly held view that the collection could have been reworked from pieces originally composed in Weimar. Bach could have begun composition as early as 1703 during his first Weimar years, having met Johann Paul von Westhoff, a violinist and composer who published a number of works for unaccompanied violin. Nevertheless, composition probably began by 1717, at the onset of Bach's tenure in Köthen.[citation needed]

The goal of producing a polyphonic texture governed by the rules of counterpoint also indicates the influence of the first surviving works of this kind for solo violin, Westhoff's partitas for solo violin composed in 1696. The virtuoso violinist Westhoff served as court musician in Dresden from 1674 to 1697 and in Weimar from 1699 until his death in 1705, so Bach would have known him for two years.[3][4] The repertoire for solo violin was actively growing at the time: Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber's celebrated solo passacaglia appeared c.1676; Westhoff's collections of solo violin music were published in 1682 and 1696; Johann Joseph Vilsmayr's Artificiosus Concentus pro Camera in 1715, and Johann Georg Pisendel's solo violin sonata was composed around 1716; and finally, Georg Philipp Telemann published 12 Fantasias for solo violin in 1735.

First performance

It is not known whether these violin solos were performed during Bach's lifetime or, if they were, who the performer was. Johann Georg Pisendel and Jean-Baptiste Volumier, both talented violinists in the Dresden court, have been suggested as possible performers, as was Joseph Spiess, leader of the orchestra in Köthen. Friedrich Wilhelm Rust, who would later become part of the Bach family circle in Leipzig, also became a likely candidate.[5] Bach himself was an able violinist from his youth, and his familiarity with the violin and its literature shows in the composition of the set and the very detailed autograph manuscript. According to his son Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, "in his youth, and until the approach of old age, he played the violin cleanly and powerfully".

Manuscripts and published editions

Upon Bach's death in 1750, the original manuscript passed into the possession, possibly through his second wife Anna Magdalena, of Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach. It was inherited by the last male descendant of J. C. F. Bach, Wilhelm Friedrich Ernst Bach, who passed it on to his sister Christina Louisa Bach (1762–1852).

Four other early manuscripts also exist. One, originally identified as an authentic Bach autograph from his Leipzig period, is now identified as being a copy dating from 1727–32 by Bach's second wife Anna Magdalena Bach, and is the companion to her copy of the six suites Bach wrote for solo cello.

A copy deriving from circa 1723 and 1726 was completed by two unknown scribes of Bach's inner circle. Peter Wollny believes one of the copyists may well have been Georg Gottfried Wagner [de], a violinist who played a prominent role in Bach's church performances. This source was copied from the original autograph manuscript and also includes a number of editorial markings, which may reflect Bach's own musical and technical intentions for these compositions. It was discovered in 1814 by music collector Georg Poelchau [de] in Saint Petersburg, apparently amongst a stack of papers destined to be used as butter-wrappings. Poelchau believed this copy was of Bach's own hand, but this was later proven false. Despite this, the belief that the original autograph manuscript was nearly used as butter-wrappings continued through the 20th century. Indeed, Ivan Galamian's 1971 edition of the Sonatas and Partitas included a brief foreword by Paul Affelder which erroneously claims the original autograph manuscript was destined for butter-wrappings.[citation needed]

Another copy, dated July 3, 1726 (the date is on the final page), made by one of Bach's admirers Johann Peter Kellner, is well preserved, despite the fact that the B minor Partita was missing from the set and that there are numerous deviations and omissions. These differences may have come from an earlier source or composing copy, and not necessarily copying errors on Kellner's part. This view is supported by Zoltán Szabó. The three manuscripts are in the Berlin State Museum and have been in the possession of the Bach-Gesellschaft since 1879, through the efforts of Alfred Dörffel. Two other eighteenth century manuscripts, both by unidentified copyists, have also survived.

The first edition was printed in 1802 by Nikolaus Simrock of Bonn. It is clear from errors in it that it was not made with reference to Bach's own manuscript, and it has many mistakes that were frequently repeated in later editions of the 19th century.

Performers

Virtually every great violin performer has recorded the Sonatas and Partitas, often multiple times, as in the case of Joseph Szigeti, Nathan Milstein, Yehudi Menuhin, Henryk Szeryng, Hilary Hahn and other distinguished players. Strikingly, David Oistrakh, the towering performer of the violin, is not known to have recorded the complete set of Sonatas and Partitas. One of the most famous performers of the Sonatas and Partitas was the violinist and composer George Enescu, who considered this work as "The Himalayas of violinists" and recorded all the sonatas and partitas in the late 1940s. One of his students (Serge Blanc) collected the notes of his master Enescu regarding sonority, phrasing, tempo, fingering and expression, in a now freely distributed document.[6]

Musical structure

The sonatas each consist of four movements, in the typical slow-fast-slow-fast pattern of the sonata da chiesa. The first two movements of each sonata are a prelude and a fugue. The third (slow) movement is lyrical, while the final movement shares the similar musical structure as a typical binary suite movement. Unlike the sonatas, the partitas are of more unorthodox design. Although still making use of the usual baroque style of allemande, courante, sarabande, and gigue, with some omissions and the addition of galanteries, new elements were introduced into each partita to provide variety.

Alternative scoring

Aside from the surviving transcriptions BWV 964 and 968, two different sources also indicate that Bach and his circle performed the Sonatas and Partitas on keyboard instruments, rather than on the violin. Music theorist, instrument maker and organ player Jakob Adlung writes (Anleitung zu der musikalischen Gelahrtheit, Erfurt, 1758), regarding the keyboard works by Bach – ”They are actually violini soli senza basso, 3 Sonatas and 3 Partitas, which are well suited for performance on the keyboard”.[7] Johann Friedrich Agricola, who co-wrote Bach's obituary, reports that ”Their composer often played them himself on the clavichord, and added so much harmonies to them, as he found necessary”.[8]

The pieces and their movements

Sonata No. 1 in G minor, BWV 1001

  1. Adagio
  2. Fuga (Allegro)
  3. Siciliana
  4. Presto

Though the key signature of the manuscript suggests D minor, such was a notational convention in the Baroque period, and therefore does not necessarily imply that the piece is in the Dorian mode. The second movement, the fugue, would later be reworked for the organ (in the Prelude and Fugue, BWV 539) and the lute (Fugue, BWV 1000), with the latter being two bars longer than the violin version.

Partita No. 1 in B minor, BWV 1002

 
Opening adagio from BWV 1001 in autograph manuscript, 1720
  1. Allemanda – Double
  2. Corrente – Double (Presto)
  3. Sarabande – Double
  4. Tempo di Borea – Double

This partita substitutes a bourrée (marked Tempo di Borea) for the gigue. Each movement is followed by a variation (double in French).

Sonata No. 2 in A minor, BWV 1003

  1. Grave
  2. Fuga
  3. Andante
  4. Allegro

Partita No. 2 in D minor, BWV 1004

  1. Allemanda
  2. Corrente
  3. Sarabanda
  4. Giga
  5. Ciaccona

In the original manuscript, Bach marked 'Segue la Corrente' at the end of Allemanda. The monumental Chaconne, the last and most famous movement of the suite, was regarded as "the greatest structure for solo violin that exists" by Yehudi Menuhin.[9] It involves a set of variations based on a simple phrase repeated in harmonic progression in the bass line (ground bass).

Sonata No. 3 in C major, BWV 1005

  1. Adagio
  2. Fuga
  3. Largo
  4. Allegro assai

The opening movement of the work introduced a peaceful, slow stacking up of notes, a technique once thought to be impossible on bowed instruments. The fugue is the most complex and extensive of the three, with the subject derived from the chorale Komm, heiliger Geist, Herre Gott. Bach employs many contrapuntal techniques, including a stretto, an inversion, as well as diverse examples of double counterpoint.

Partita No. 3 in E major, BWV 1006

 
Partia Tza
3
á Violino Solo senza Basso
, the heading on the first page of the autograph manuscript of the opening Preludio in Partita No. 3 in E major, BWV 1006.
  1. Preludio
  2. Loure
  3. Gavotte en rondeau
  4. Menuet I
  5. Menuet II
  6. Bourrée
  7. Gigue

Selected arrangements and transcriptions

  • J. S. Bach, Transcription for keyboard, organ and lute of various movements, some of them later attributed to Bach's pupils. The pieces for keyboard appear in the Miscellaneous Keyboard Works, Bach Gesellschaft Edition, 1853 (reissued by Dover Publications).
    • Fugue in D minor, BWV 539/ii (BWV 1001/ii) for organ
    • Fugue in G minor, BWV 1000 (BWV 1001/ii) for lute
    • Suite in E major, BWV 1006a (BWV 1006) for lute or keyboard
    • Sonata in D minor, BWV 964 (BWV 1003, doubtful) for keyboard
    • Adagio in G major, BWV 968 (from BWV 1005, doubtful) for keyboard
  • Chaconne, BWV 1004.
  • Preludio, BWV 1006
    • J. S. Bach, Sinfonia in BWV 29, a reworking of the Preludio from BWV 1006 for obbligato organ, trumpets, oboes and strings
    • Various arrangements for organ of the sinfonia, including the versions by Alexandre Guilmant, Marcel Dupré and Friedemann Winklhofer (Hans Sikorski)
  • British lutenist Nigel North transcribed the entire sequence for lute, as well as Bach's Cello Suites and recorded them on four CDs for Linn Records (volumes 1 to 4, respectively CKD 013, CKD 029, CKD 049, CKD 055)

ى==Selected recordings==

Classical violin

Baroque violin

Violoncello

Keyboard

Mandolin

Notes

  1. ^ Ledbetter 2009
  2. ^ Menuhin, Yehudi (2001). Unfinished Journey (new ed.). London: Pimlico. p. 236. ISBN 978-0-7126-6809-5.
  3. ^ Wolff 2002, p. 133
  4. ^ Bach 2001, p. VIII
  5. ^ Rust's grandson, Wilhelm Rust, eventually became one of the editors of the Bach-Gesellschaft.
  6. ^ "Sonatas & Partitas : Educational Edition".
  7. ^ Schulze 1972, p. 124.
  8. ^ Schulze 1972, pp. 292, 293.
  9. ^ Menuhin, Yehudi (1976). Unfinished Journey. p. 236.[full citation needed]
  10. ^ https://www.grammy.com/awards/hall-of-fame-award

References

  • Bach, J. S. (2001), Günter Haußwald; Peter Wollny (eds.), Three Sonatas and three Partitas for Solo Violin, BWV 1001–1006 (Urtext), Bärenreiter, ISMN 979-0-006-46489-0. Preface by Peter Wollny, pages VIII–XII.
  • Ledbetter, David (2009), Unaccompanied Bach, Performing the Solo Works, Yale University Press
  • Schulze, Hans-Joachim (1972). Bach-Dokumente, Dokumente zum Nachwirken Bachs. 1750–1800. Vol. III. Kassel: Bärenreiter. ISBN 3761802498.
  • Wolff, Christoph (2002), Johann Sebastian Bach: The Learned Musician, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-924884-2

Further reading

  • Márta Ábrahám [hu] and Barnabás Dukay [hu] published a book (2017) about Bach's Chaconne: Excerpts from Eternity – The Purification of Time and Character, the Fulfilment of Love and Cooperation with the Celestial Will in Johann Sebastian Bach's Ciaccona for Violin. ISBN 978-963-12-8720-2
  • Bach, J. S. (2014), Peter Wollny (ed.), Kammermusik mit Violine BWV 1001–1006, 1021, 1023, 1014–1019 (Urtext), Johann Sebastian Bach. Neue Ausgabe sämtlicher Werke. Revidierte Edition (NBArev), vol. 3, Bärenreiter, ISMN 9790006556328, Part of the preface
  • Bachmann, Alberto (1925) An Encyclopedia of the violin, Da Capo, ISBN 0-306-80004-7.
  • Brown, Clive (2011), The Evolution of Annotated String Editions, University of Leeds
  • Breig, Werner (1997), "The Instrumental Music", in John Butt (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Bach, pp. 123–135, ISBN 9781139002158
  • Buelow, George J. (2004), "Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750)", A History of Baroque Music, Indiana University Press, pp. 503–558, ISBN 0253343658
  • Fabian, Dorottya (2005), "Towards a Performance History of Bach's Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin: Preliminary Investigations", Essays in Honor of László Somfai: Studies in the Sources and the Interpretation of Music, Scarecrow Press, pp. 87–108
  • Geck, Martin (2006), "The Sonatas and Suites", Johann Sebastian Bach: Life and Work, translated by John Hargraves, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, pp. 579–607, ISBN 0151006482
  • Jones, Richard D. P. (2013), The Creative Development of Johann Sebastian Bach, Volume II: 1717–1750: Music to Delight the Spirit, Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780199696284
  • Katz, Mark (2006), The Violin: A Research and Information Guide, Routledge, ISBN 1135576963
  • Ledbetter, David (2015), "Music reviews: J. S. Bach's chamber music for violin, edited by Peter Wollny", Notes, 72 (2): 415–419, doi:10.1353/not.2015.0134, S2CID 194293060
  • Lester, Joel (1999), Bach's works for solo violin: style, structure, performance, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-512097-4
  • Menuhin, Yehudi; Primrose, William (1976), Violin and Viola, MacDonald and Jane's, ISBN 0-356-04716-4
  • Siegele, Ulrich (2006), "Taktzahlen als Ordnungsfaktor in Suiten- und Sonatensammlungen von J. S. Bach: Mit einem Anhang zu den Kanonischen Veränderungen über "Vom Himmel hoch"", Archiv für Musikwissenschaft, 63 (3): 215–240, JSTOR 25162366
  • Spitta, Philipp (1884), Johann Sebastian Bach; his work and influence on the music of Germany, 1685–1750, vol. 2, translated by Clara Bell; John Alexander Fuller Maitland, Novello
  • Stowell, Robin (1992), "The Sonata", in Robin Stowell (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to the Violin, Cambridge University Press, pp. 122–142, ISBN 0521399238
  • Tatlow, Ruth (2015), Bach's Numbers: Compositional Proportion and Significance, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-1107088603
  • Williams, Peter (2016), Bach: A Musical Biography, Cambridge University Press, pp. 322–325, ISBN 978-1107139251
  • Wolff, Christoph (1994), "Bach's Leipzig Chamber Music", Bach: Essays on His Life and Work, Harvard University Press, p. 263, ISBN 0674059263 (a reprint of a 1985 publication in Early Music)

External links

  • Sonatas and partitas for solo violin: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
  • Digitised copy of autograph manuscript (1720) at the Bach Archive, Leipzig.
  • Free sheet music of all six works from Cantorion.org
  • MIDI Sequences of Bach's Violin Sonatas/Partitas
  • Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin Vito Paternoster – MP3 Creative Commons Recording, played on cello
  • Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin (Bach) at the Mutopia Project
  • Discussion of recording history
  • Recordings of the Sonatas and Partitas in the 1950s at Enesco's Profile at The Remington Site
  • Free Bach Violin Sheet Music With bowing and fingering instructions.
  • Music for Glass Orchestra by Grace Andreacchi, a novel that contains an extensive analysis of the Sonatas and partitas for Solo Violin.
  • Bach's Chaconne in D minor for solo violin: An application through analysis by Larry Solomon
  • Violinist and author Arnold Steinhardt discusses his lifelong quest to master the chaconne; interesting interview, good links
  • In the BBC Discovering Music: Listening Library

sonatas, partitas, solo, violin, bach, sonatas, partitas, solo, violin, 1001, 1006, works, composed, johann, sebastian, bach, they, sometimes, referred, english, sonatas, partias, solo, violin, accordance, with, bach, headings, autograph, manuscript, partia, p. The sonatas and partitas for solo violin BWV 1001 1006 are a set of six works composed by Johann Sebastian Bach They are sometimes referred to in English as the sonatas and partias for solo violin in accordance with Bach s headings in the autograph manuscript Partia plural Partien was commonly used in German speaking regions during Bach s time whereas the Italian partita was introduced to this set in the 1879 Bach Gesellschaft edition having become standard by that time 1 page needed The set consists of three sonatas da chiesa in four movements and three partitas or partias in dance form movements The 2nd Partita is widely known for its Chaconne considered one of the most masterly and expressive works ever written for solo violin 2 Title page of the autograph manuscript of BWV 1001 1006 dated 1720 The set was completed by 1720 but was not published until 1802 by Nikolaus Simrock in Bonn Even after publication it was largely ignored until the celebrated violinist Joseph Joachim started performing these works Today Bach s Sonatas and Partitas are an essential part of the violin repertoire and they are frequently performed and recorded The Sei Solo a Violino senza Basso accompagnato Six Solos for Violin Without Bass Accompaniment as Bach titled them firmly established the technical capability of the violin as a solo instrument The pieces often served as archetypes for solo violin pieces by later generations of composers including Eugene Ysaye and Bela Bartok Contents 1 History of composition 1 1 First performance 2 Manuscripts and published editions 3 Performers 4 Musical structure 5 Alternative scoring 6 The pieces and their movements 6 1 Sonata No 1 in G minor BWV 1001 6 2 Partita No 1 in B minor BWV 1002 6 3 Sonata No 2 in A minor BWV 1003 6 4 Partita No 2 in D minor BWV 1004 6 5 Sonata No 3 in C major BWV 1005 6 6 Partita No 3 in E major BWV 1006 7 Selected arrangements and transcriptions 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory of composition EditThe surviving autograph manuscript of the sonatas and partitas was made by Bach in 1720 in Kothen where he was Kapellmeister As Christoph Wolff comments the paucity of sources for instrumental compositions prior to Bach s period in Leipzig makes it difficult to establish a precise chronology nevertheless a copy made by the Weimar organist Johann Gottfried Walther in 1714 of the Fugue in G minor for violin and continuo BWV 1026 which has violinistic writing similar to that in BWV 1001 1006 provides support for the commonly held view that the collection could have been reworked from pieces originally composed in Weimar Bach could have begun composition as early as 1703 during his first Weimar years having met Johann Paul von Westhoff a violinist and composer who published a number of works for unaccompanied violin Nevertheless composition probably began by 1717 at the onset of Bach s tenure in Kothen citation needed The goal of producing a polyphonic texture governed by the rules of counterpoint also indicates the influence of the first surviving works of this kind for solo violin Westhoff s partitas for solo violin composed in 1696 The virtuoso violinist Westhoff served as court musician in Dresden from 1674 to 1697 and in Weimar from 1699 until his death in 1705 so Bach would have known him for two years 3 4 The repertoire for solo violin was actively growing at the time Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber s celebrated solo passacaglia appeared c 1676 Westhoff s collections of solo violin music were published in 1682 and 1696 Johann Joseph Vilsmayr s Artificiosus Concentus pro Camera in 1715 and Johann Georg Pisendel s solo violin sonata was composed around 1716 and finally Georg Philipp Telemann published 12 Fantasias for solo violin in 1735 First performance Edit It is not known whether these violin solos were performed during Bach s lifetime or if they were who the performer was Johann Georg Pisendel and Jean Baptiste Volumier both talented violinists in the Dresden court have been suggested as possible performers as was Joseph Spiess leader of the orchestra in Kothen Friedrich Wilhelm Rust who would later become part of the Bach family circle in Leipzig also became a likely candidate 5 Bach himself was an able violinist from his youth and his familiarity with the violin and its literature shows in the composition of the set and the very detailed autograph manuscript According to his son Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach in his youth and until the approach of old age he played the violin cleanly and powerfully Manuscripts and published editions EditUpon Bach s death in 1750 the original manuscript passed into the possession possibly through his second wife Anna Magdalena of Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach It was inherited by the last male descendant of J C F Bach Wilhelm Friedrich Ernst Bach who passed it on to his sister Christina Louisa Bach 1762 1852 Four other early manuscripts also exist One originally identified as an authentic Bach autograph from his Leipzig period is now identified as being a copy dating from 1727 32 by Bach s second wife Anna Magdalena Bach and is the companion to her copy of the six suites Bach wrote for solo cello A copy deriving from circa 1723 and 1726 was completed by two unknown scribes of Bach s inner circle Peter Wollny believes one of the copyists may well have been Georg Gottfried Wagner de a violinist who played a prominent role in Bach s church performances This source was copied from the original autograph manuscript and also includes a number of editorial markings which may reflect Bach s own musical and technical intentions for these compositions It was discovered in 1814 by music collector Georg Poelchau de in Saint Petersburg apparently amongst a stack of papers destined to be used as butter wrappings Poelchau believed this copy was of Bach s own hand but this was later proven false Despite this the belief that the original autograph manuscript was nearly used as butter wrappings continued through the 20th century Indeed Ivan Galamian s 1971 edition of the Sonatas and Partitas included a brief foreword by Paul Affelder which erroneously claims the original autograph manuscript was destined for butter wrappings citation needed Another copy dated July 3 1726 the date is on the final page made by one of Bach s admirers Johann Peter Kellner is well preserved despite the fact that the B minor Partita was missing from the set and that there are numerous deviations and omissions These differences may have come from an earlier source or composing copy and not necessarily copying errors on Kellner s part This view is supported by Zoltan Szabo The three manuscripts are in the Berlin State Museum and have been in the possession of the Bach Gesellschaft since 1879 through the efforts of Alfred Dorffel Two other eighteenth century manuscripts both by unidentified copyists have also survived The first edition was printed in 1802 by Nikolaus Simrock of Bonn It is clear from errors in it that it was not made with reference to Bach s own manuscript and it has many mistakes that were frequently repeated in later editions of the 19th century Performers EditVirtually every great violin performer has recorded the Sonatas and Partitas often multiple times as in the case of Joseph Szigeti Nathan Milstein Yehudi Menuhin Henryk Szeryng Hilary Hahn and other distinguished players Strikingly David Oistrakh the towering performer of the violin is not known to have recorded the complete set of Sonatas and Partitas One of the most famous performers of the Sonatas and Partitas was the violinist and composer George Enescu who considered this work as The Himalayas of violinists and recorded all the sonatas and partitas in the late 1940s One of his students Serge Blanc collected the notes of his master Enescu regarding sonority phrasing tempo fingering and expression in a now freely distributed document 6 Musical structure EditThe sonatas each consist of four movements in the typical slow fast slow fast pattern of the sonata da chiesa The first two movements of each sonata are a prelude and a fugue The third slow movement is lyrical while the final movement shares the similar musical structure as a typical binary suite movement Unlike the sonatas the partitas are of more unorthodox design Although still making use of the usual baroque style of allemande courante sarabande and gigue with some omissions and the addition of galanteries new elements were introduced into each partita to provide variety Alternative scoring EditAside from the surviving transcriptions BWV 964 and 968 two different sources also indicate that Bach and his circle performed the Sonatas and Partitas on keyboard instruments rather than on the violin Music theorist instrument maker and organ player Jakob Adlung writes Anleitung zu der musikalischen Gelahrtheit Erfurt 1758 regarding the keyboard works by Bach They are actually violini soli senza basso 3 Sonatas and 3 Partitas which are well suited for performance on the keyboard 7 Johann Friedrich Agricola who co wrote Bach s obituary reports that Their composer often played them himself on the clavichord and added so much harmonies to them as he found necessary 8 The pieces and their movements EditSonata No 1 in G minor BWV 1001 Edit AdagioFuga Allegro SicilianaPresto Though the key signature of the manuscript suggests D minor such was a notational convention in the Baroque period and therefore does not necessarily imply that the piece is in the Dorian mode The second movement the fugue would later be reworked for the organ in the Prelude and Fugue BWV 539 and the lute Fugue BWV 1000 with the latter being two bars longer than the violin version Partita No 1 in B minor BWV 1002 Edit Opening adagio from BWV 1001 in autograph manuscript 1720 Main article Partita No 1 in B minor BWV 1002 Allemanda DoubleCorrente Double Presto Sarabande DoubleTempo di Borea Double This partita substitutes a bourree marked Tempo di Borea for the gigue Each movement is followed by a variation double in French Sonata No 2 in A minor BWV 1003 Edit GraveFugaAndanteAllegro Partita No 2 in D minor BWV 1004 Edit Main article Partita No 2 in D minor BWV 1004 AllemandaCorrenteSarabandaGigaCiaccona In the original manuscript Bach marked Segue la Corrente at the end of Allemanda The monumental Chaconne the last and most famous movement of the suite was regarded as the greatest structure for solo violin that exists by Yehudi Menuhin 9 It involves a set of variations based on a simple phrase repeated in harmonic progression in the bass line ground bass Sonata No 3 in C major BWV 1005 Edit AdagioFugaLargoAllegro assai The opening movement of the work introduced a peaceful slow stacking up of notes a technique once thought to be impossible on bowed instruments The fugue is the most complex and extensive of the three with the subject derived from the chorale Komm heiliger Geist Herre Gott Bach employs many contrapuntal techniques including a stretto an inversion as well as diverse examples of double counterpoint Partita No 3 in E major BWV 1006 Edit Partia Tza3 a Violino Solo senza Basso the heading on the first page of the autograph manuscript of the opening Preludio in Partita No 3 in E major BWV 1006 Main article Partita No 3 in E major BWV 1006 PreludioLoureGavotte en rondeauMenuet IMenuet IIBourreeGigueSelected arrangements and transcriptions EditJ S Bach Transcription for keyboard organ and lute of various movements some of them later attributed to Bach s pupils The pieces for keyboard appear in the Miscellaneous Keyboard Works Bach Gesellschaft Edition 1853 reissued by Dover Publications Fugue in D minor BWV 539 ii BWV 1001 ii for organ Fugue in G minor BWV 1000 BWV 1001 ii for lute Suite in E major BWV 1006a BWV 1006 for lute or keyboard Sonata in D minor BWV 964 BWV 1003 doubtful for keyboard Adagio in G major BWV 968 from BWV 1005 doubtful for keyboard Chaconne BWV 1004 Johannes Brahms piano left hand Ferruccio Busoni piano solo William Thomas Best organ Henri Messerer organ Matthias Keller organ Carus Verlag 2011 Arno Landmann organ Simrock Verlag Preludio BWV 1006 J S Bach Sinfonia in BWV 29 a reworking of the Preludio from BWV 1006 for obbligato organ trumpets oboes and strings Various arrangements for organ of the sinfonia including the versions by Alexandre Guilmant Marcel Dupre and Friedemann Winklhofer Hans Sikorski British lutenist Nigel North transcribed the entire sequence for lute as well as Bach s Cello Suites and recorded them on four CDs for Linn Records volumes 1 to 4 respectively CKD 013 CKD 029 CKD 049 CKD 055 ى Selected recordings Classical violin Joseph Szigeti 1931 selected for the NARAS Hall of Fame 10 and 1956 Yehudi Menuhin 1934 1944 and 1957 and 1975 George Enescu 1948 Jascha Heifetz 1952 Henryk Szeryng 1954 and 1967 Emil Telmanyi 1954 Nathan Milstein 1956 and 1973 Arthur Grumiaux 1961 included on the Voyager Golden Record Gidon Kremer 1980 and 2005 Oscar Shumsky 1983 Shlomo Mintz 1984 Itzhak Perlman 1988 Ida Haendel 1995 Salvatore Accardo 1996 Vanessa Mae 1996 Dmitry Sitkovetsky 1997 James Ehnes 2000 Christian Tetzlaff 1993 2006 and 2017 Viktoria Mullova 2009 Isabelle Faust 2010 2012 Gil Shaham 2014 Kyung Wha Chung 2016 Julia Fischer 2017 Re release Hilary Hahn 1997 and 2018 Milan Pala 2018Baroque violin Sergiu Luca 1977 Sigiswald Kuijken 1981 Jaap Schroder 1984 1985 Lucy van Dael 1996 Rachel Podger 1997 1999 Elizabeth Wallfisch 1997 Monica Huggett 1997 Ingrid Matthews 2000 Helene Schmitt 2004 John Holloway 2006 Alina Ibragimova 2009 Stanley Ritchie 2013 Giuliano Carmignola 2018Violoncello Tanya Anisimova 2001Keyboard Robert Hill 1999Mandolin Chris Thile 2013 Avi Avital 2019Notes Edit Ledbetter 2009 Menuhin Yehudi 2001 Unfinished Journey new ed London Pimlico p 236 ISBN 978 0 7126 6809 5 Wolff 2002 p 133 Bach 2001 p VIII Rust s grandson Wilhelm Rust eventually became one of the editors of the Bach Gesellschaft Sonatas amp Partitas Educational Edition Schulze 1972 p 124 Schulze 1972 pp 292 293 Menuhin Yehudi 1976 Unfinished Journey p 236 full citation needed https www grammy com awards hall of fame awardReferences EditBach J S 2001 Gunter Hausswald Peter Wollny eds Three Sonatas and three Partitas for Solo Violin BWV 1001 1006 Urtext Barenreiter ISMN 979 0 006 46489 0 Preface by Peter Wollny pages VIII XII Ledbetter David 2009 Unaccompanied Bach Performing the Solo Works Yale University Press Schulze Hans Joachim 1972 Bach Dokumente Dokumente zum Nachwirken Bachs 1750 1800 Vol III Kassel Barenreiter ISBN 3761802498 Wolff Christoph 2002 Johann Sebastian Bach The Learned Musician Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 924884 2Further reading EditMarta Abraham hu and Barnabas Dukay hu published a book 2017 about Bach s Chaconne Excerpts from Eternity The Purification of Time and Character the Fulfilment of Love and Cooperation with the Celestial Will in Johann Sebastian Bach s Ciaccona for Violin ISBN 978 963 12 8720 2 Bach J S 2014 Peter Wollny ed Kammermusik mit Violine BWV 1001 1006 1021 1023 1014 1019 Urtext Johann Sebastian Bach Neue Ausgabe samtlicher Werke Revidierte Edition NBArev vol 3 Barenreiter ISMN 9790006556328 Part of the preface Bachmann Alberto 1925 An Encyclopedia of the violin Da Capo ISBN 0 306 80004 7 Brown Clive 2011 The Evolution of Annotated String Editions University of Leeds Breig Werner 1997 The Instrumental Music in John Butt ed The Cambridge Companion to Bach pp 123 135 ISBN 9781139002158 Buelow George J 2004 Johann Sebastian Bach 1685 1750 A History of Baroque Music Indiana University Press pp 503 558 ISBN 0253343658 Fabian Dorottya 2005 Towards a Performance History of Bach s Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin Preliminary Investigations Essays in Honor of Laszlo Somfai Studies in the Sources and the Interpretation of Music Scarecrow Press pp 87 108 Geck Martin 2006 The Sonatas and Suites Johann Sebastian Bach Life and Work translated by John Hargraves Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 579 607 ISBN 0151006482 Jones Richard D P 2013 The Creative Development of Johann Sebastian Bach Volume II 1717 1750 Music to Delight the Spirit Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199696284 Katz Mark 2006 The Violin A Research and Information Guide Routledge ISBN 1135576963 Ledbetter David 2015 Music reviews J S Bach s chamber music for violin edited by Peter Wollny Notes 72 2 415 419 doi 10 1353 not 2015 0134 S2CID 194293060 Lester Joel 1999 Bach s works for solo violin style structure performance Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512097 4 Menuhin Yehudi Primrose William 1976 Violin and Viola MacDonald and Jane s ISBN 0 356 04716 4 Siegele Ulrich 2006 Taktzahlen als Ordnungsfaktor in Suiten und Sonatensammlungen von J S Bach Mit einem Anhang zu den Kanonischen Veranderungen uber Vom Himmel hoch Archiv fur Musikwissenschaft 63 3 215 240 JSTOR 25162366 Spitta Philipp 1884 Johann Sebastian Bach his work and influence on the music of Germany 1685 1750 vol 2 translated by Clara Bell John Alexander Fuller Maitland Novello Stowell Robin 1992 The Sonata in Robin Stowell ed The Cambridge Companion to the Violin Cambridge University Press pp 122 142 ISBN 0521399238 Tatlow Ruth 2015 Bach s Numbers Compositional Proportion and Significance Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107088603 Williams Peter 2016 Bach A Musical Biography Cambridge University Press pp 322 325 ISBN 978 1107139251 Wolff Christoph 1994 Bach s Leipzig Chamber Music Bach Essays on His Life and Work Harvard University Press p 263 ISBN 0674059263 a reprint of a 1985 publication in Early Music External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sonatas and partitas for solo violin Sonatas and partitas for solo violin Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Digitised copy of autograph manuscript 1720 at the Bach Archive Leipzig Free sheet music of all six works from Cantorion org MIDI Sequences of Bach s Violin Sonatas Partitas Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin Vito Paternoster MP3 Creative Commons Recording played on cello Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin Bach at the Mutopia Project Violinists talk about their approach to Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin From liner notes of a Benedict Cruft recording Discussion of recording history Recordings of the Sonatas and Partitas in the 1950s at Enesco s Profile at The Remington Site Discussion of publishing history and Second Sonata Free Bach Violin Sheet Music With bowing and fingering instructions Music for Glass Orchestra by Grace Andreacchi a novel that contains an extensive analysis of the Sonatas and partitas for Solo Violin Bach s Chaconne in D minor for solo violin An application through analysis by Larry Solomon Violinist and author Arnold Steinhardt discusses his lifelong quest to master the chaconne interesting interview good links In the BBC Discovering Music Listening Library Portal Classical music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin Bach amp oldid 1139777253, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.