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Composer:
Johann Sebastian Bach (31 March 1685 -- 28 July 1750)
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Performers:
Robert Kohnen (harpsichord),
Barthold Kuijken (flute),
Sigiswald Kuijken (violin),
Wieland Kuijken (viola da gamba)
- Year of recording:
1994
The Musical Offering {
Musikalisches Opfer}, for keyboard and chamber instruments,
BWV 1079, written in 1747.
00:00 - 01. Ricercare à 3
06:38 - 02.
Canon perpetuus super thema regimum
07:45 - 03. Canons diversi. Canon à 2 "Canon Cancrizans" (
Crab Canon)
09:01 - 04. Canons diversi. Canon à 2 "Violini in unisono"
09:51 - 05. Canons diversi. Canon à 2 "Canon per motum contrarium"
10:53 - 06. Canons diversi. Canon à 2 "Canon per augmentationem, contrario motu"
12:39 - 07. Canons diversi. Canon à 2 "Canon circularis per tonos"
15:46 - 08.
Fuga Canonica in Epidiapente
18:19 - 09. Ricercare à 6
25:09 - 10. Canon à 2 "Quaerando invenietis"
26:33 - 11. Canon à 4
28:47 - 12.
Sonata sopr'il Soggetto Reale:
Largo
34:59 - 13. Sonata sopr'il Soggetto Reale:
Allegro
40:26 - 14. Sonata sopr'il Soggetto Reale:
Andante
43:47 - 15. Sonata sopr'il Soggetto Reale: Allegro
46:38 - 16. Canon Perpetuo [per justi intervali]
Bach's The Musical Offering consists of 16 movements and is about 50 minutes in duration, resulting from a challenge to develop a theme played for the composer by
Frederick the Great. The meeting took place on 7 May 1747, and Bach's son,
Carl Philipp
Emmanuel, who often accompanied
Frederick in performances of chamber music, arranged for the two men to meet. By then,
J.S. Bach, "the old
Bach of
Leipzig," was considered as a writer of old-fashioned music, but his improvising skills were still legendary. Frederick, the
King of Prussia, did not approve of overly complicated music, clearly preferring the fashionable galant style to the complicated fugues of high
Baroque music. In an apparent attempt to confound the old master, the monarch offered an awkward chromatic subject for the elderly composer to improvise upon, and was amazed by Bach's handling of this "
Royal Theme." Afterward, the improviser insisted that he still had not done the theme justice, and that he would endeavor to do so.
Later that year, The Musical Offering appeared in print, dedicated to Frederick the Great, and published at the composer's own expense. It demonstrates the full arsenal of the
Baroque composer of fugues and does it with more fluency than any other composer of the time would have been able to provide. Of course, it takes into account the monarch's passion for flute playing and offers a prominent part for the instrument.
Unfortunately, this gesture of respect and reverence more or less backfired. The flute part is fiendishly difficult, and there is no allowance for the monarch's clear preference for galant music; it is as Baroque as anything else Bach wrote, except where he takes galant ideas and makes them more Baroque. For example, instead of performing a simple "sigh" gesture in the flute sonata movement, a descending interval that sounds like a sigh, Bach sequences it in different pitches until it is as difficult and Baroque as anything as he had written before.
Galant music is meant to be simple, a return to melody over harmony, and is the first step toward the
Classical music of
Haydn and Mozart. Furthering the conflict between Bach's offering and
Frederick's goodwill was the theological inferences imbedded in the music. Much of it is in a holy code that was clearly derivative of church music and Frederick, a man of the enlightenment, had little use for anything liturgical
. In the centuries that divide the composer's world-view and the current millennium, the many Lutheran inferences of the music have lost the impact they once had.
The Musical Offering can be compared to
The Art of Fugue for its thorough handling of the theme. The quality of the music is diverse, heavenly, and inexhaustible. It stands as one of the finest pieces of chamber music from the
Baroque era, and is a favorite among musicians who enjoy a challenge.
Painting: "The
Flute Concert of
Sanssouci" by Menzel, 1852, depicts Frederick the Great playing the flute in his music room at Sanssouci.
- published: 14 Sep 2015
- views: 549