J.s. Bach: Partitas Nos. 1, 5 & 6
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Release Date: 21 April 2023
Label: Lawo
Packaging Type: Digipak
No of Units: 1
Barcode: 7090020182711
Genres: Classical  Solo Instrumental  
Release Date: 21 April 2023
Label: Lawo
Packaging Type: Digipak
No of Units: 1
Barcode: 7090020182711
Genres: Classical  Solo Instrumental  
Description
On this recording, Norwegian pianist Nils Anders Mortensen presents three of the six partitas for keyboard (nos 1, 5 and 6). There will be a second CD with the three remaining partitas (nos 2, 3 and 4).
Bach composed ten partitas - three for solo violin, one for solo flute and six for keyboard. As the term partita may mean, to quote from the Oxford Composer Companion to Bach, "a suite of dances or a set of variations" - it is no more precise than many other musical terms. If there is no obvious difference between the partita and the suite, there seems to be no justification for two separate terms. In the sixteenth century partita indicated one of a sequence of variations, but this meaning evolved, coming to signify a collection of movements and later - by the time of Bach's keyboard partitas - a suite of dances.
Bach's six partitas for keyboard, BWV 825-830, were published individually beginning in 1726, then, in 1731, as a group entitled Clavier-Ubung 1 (Ubung may be translated as practice or exercise). Among what may be described as Bach's various sets of dance-suites - also including the English Suites and the French Suites - the partitas are the most technically demanding. Johann Kuhnau, Bach's predecessor as cantor of St. Thomas's Church in Leipzig, had published a collection of partitas under the title Clavier-Ubung - two volumes (1689 and 1692), each containing seven works.
These two collections by Kuhnau, together with two other volumes which he published during his time at Leipzig, proved to be an important influence on German keyboard music. Bach's keyboard partitas in general mark a further advance on his French Suites - even more adventurous in terms of new handling of the dance-forms, more favouring of galant melody-with-harmony rather than imitative counterpoint, and new types of texture. With regard to the dance-movements in particular, Bach shows remarkable creative freedom and diversity while departing from the traditional models.
"This is Bach in private mode, intimate, exploratory […]. Elegant playing, without eccentricity or ostentation." – Gramophone
"These well-recorded performances are never less than impressive technically" – BBC Music Magazine, Recording ????, Performance ???
"Mortensen impresses with his thoughtful approach to slower numbers to suggest extemporisation and fantasy, […] these are musically considered readings, articulate, dynamic and full of character, stimulating and illuminating." – Colin Anderson
Tracklisting
Engegard Quartet, NyNorsk Messingkvintett
Trondheim Symphony Orchestra, Peter Szilvay, Aage Richard Meyer, Cam Kjoll, Ruth Potter
Ssens Trio
Torleif Thedee & Marianna Shirinyan
Oslo Kammerkor, Hakon Daniel Nystedt
Berit Norbakken & Solmund Nystabakk
Magnus Boye Hansen, Mathias Halvorsen
Tine Thing Helseth, tenThing Brass Ensemble
Marianne Beate Kielland, Nils Anders Mortensen
Arvid Engegard, Nils Anders Mortensen
Marianne Beate Kielland, Nils Anders Mortensen
Nils Anders Mortensen, Engegård Quartet
Marianne Beate Kielland, Nils Anders Mortensen
Nils Anders Mortensen
Nils Anders Mortensen