(2000) Bach: Suites BWV 995 & BWV 1006a
Catégorie(s): Musique ancienne Raretés
Instrument(s): Guitare Lûte
Compositeur principal: Johann Sebastian Bach
Nb CD(s): 1
N° de catalogue:
CD 0605
Sortie: 2000
EAN/UPC: 7619931060521
- UPC: 829410602167
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TVA incluse pour la Suisse et l'UE
Frais de port offerts
TVA incluse pour la Suisse et l'UE
Frais de port offerts
Cet album est en repressage. Précommandez-le dès maintenant à un prix spécial.
CHF 18.50
This album has not been released yet.
Pre-order it at a special price now.
CHF 18.50
CHF 18.50
BACH: SUITES BWV 995 & BWV 1006A
While the lute transcription of the Partita in E Major, the Suite in E major for Lute (BWV 1006a), remains close to the original composition, the Suite in G Minor for Lute (BWV 995) is an entirely different case ; expressly named ‘Suite pour le Luth’, it is based on the suite for Solo Cello in C minor (BWV 1011). In addition to the actual transposition, as found also in the mentioned cantata movements, Bach made use the considerably more extensive technique of lute playing in the polyphonic elaboration of the setting of his work. This becomes evident above all in the fughe passage of the Prelude whose imitative form of setting is only hinted at in the cello version.
Both the Partita for Violin and the Suite for Cello were created in 1720. The transpositions for lute, however, can be dated only approximately even through the autographs of these works still exist. To judge from the characters used (script) and from the watermarks, the Suite in G Minor leads one to believe that it was composed between 1727 and 1731. The Suite in E Major, which must date from the years between 1735 and 1740, was probably written by Bach when he was visited in Leipzig in July 1739 by the famous lutenist Silvius Leopold Weiss of Dresden.
Many sources from the 17th and 18th centuries attest to the historical practice of transcribing settings for the lute into guitar settings and vice versa. If today compositions for the lute by Bach are also, not to say primarily, played on the guitar, this practice was actually customary until late into the 18th century.
Dr. Peter Benary