Johann
Sebastian
Bach:
Organ
Works
Elena Privalova
-
Regular
-
£12.99
-
Sale
-
£12.99
-
Regular
-
SALE
Out of Stock
-
Unit Price
- /per
-
Description
As a young man in 1706 Bach famously walked 280 miles to Lübeck to see Buxtehude playing the organ. One of his sons, C.P.E. Bach, wrote in Bach’s obituary: 'At a certain moment here in Arnstadt he had so strong an urge to hear as many good organists as he could that he set out for Lübeck, on foot, in order to hear the famous organist of St Mary’s, Dietrich Buxtehude.' Bach’s devotion to the organ, and his desire to excel on it, is without question but whereas much of his output was written with a specific purpose or occasion in mind, the toccatas and fugues are less easily categorised. Almost all of them date from Bach’s Weimar years (1708-1717), when he had the most opportunities to play the organ, although he may have revised them in Leipzig (after 1723). Their elaborate nature belies the fact that Bach had to be careful about showing off: in 1705, while temporarily in Leipzig, he had been censured for an over-long organ prelude before Communion and in 1706 he had attracted the ire of the Arnstadt authorities by confusing the congregation with complicated chorale accompaniments.
-
-
-
Liquid error (sections/featured-collection-pmc-artist line 90): comparison of String with 1 failed
Liquid error (sections/featured-collection-pmc-genre line 90): comparison of String with 2 failed