(1991) Bach: Musical Offering BWV 1079
Category(ies): Ancient music
Instrument(s): Organ
Main Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach
CD set: 1
Catalog N°:
CD 0198
Release: 1991
EAN/UPC: 7619931019826
- UPC: 829410603065
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VAT included for Switzerland & UE
Free shipping
This album is now on repressing. Pre-order it at a special price now.
CHF 18.50
This album is no longer available on CD.
This album has not been released yet.
Pre-order it at a special price now.
CHF 18.50
This album is no longer available on CD.
CHF 18.50
This album is no longer available on CD.
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BACH: MUSICAL OFFERING BWV 1079
Bach felt that he had by no means exhausted all the possibilities of the “royal” theme in his improvisation in Potsdam. Shortly upon his return to Leipzig he therefore employed this theme as the basis for a collection of thirteen compositions for chamber ensemble which he dedicated to the king as the Musical Offering. Bach’s delight in complicated canonic devices, puzzles and acrostics finds full expression in these works. Nine of the ten canons were not written out in full score but were notated with hints for performers to interpret and solve. The title of one, quaerendo invenietis, provocatively states “seek and ye shall find”. Moreover, although clearly intended for instrumental performance, Bach had only specified the instrumentation for a few of the movements. The theme is employed and varied distinctly in each of the movements.
Mark Manion
(1991) Bach: Musical Offering BWV 1079 - CD 0198
One of the few triumphs which J.S Bach enjoyed in his later years was his visit in 1747 to the court of Frederick the Great in Potsdam, where Bach’s son Carl Philipp Emanuel had been in service since 1740. King Frederick, himself an avid flutist, had gathered some of Europe’s finest musicians to his court and himself often performed in the daily evening concerts. The king was also apparently well-aware of the older Bach’s reputation and expressed his wishes to meet and hear the famed virtuoso. During his visit Bach was presented with a theme by the king on which he was to improvise.
Bach felt that he had by no means exhausted all the possibilities of the “royal” theme in his improvisation in Potsdam. Shortly upon his return to Leipzig he therefore employed this theme as the basis for a collection of thirteen compositions for chamber ensemble which he dedicated to the king as the Musical Offering. Bach’s delight in complicated canonic devices, puzzles and acrostics finds full expression in these works. Nine of the ten canons were not written out in full score but were notated with hints for performers to interpret and solve. The title of one, quaerendo invenietis, provocatively states “seek and ye shall find”. Moreover, although clearly intended for instrumental performance, Bach had only specified the instrumentation for a few of the movements. The theme is employed and varied distinctly in each of the movements.
Mark Manion
Return to the album | Composer(s): Johann Sebastian Bach | Main Artist: Peter-Lukas Graf