BACH, CPE: Piano Sonatas and Rondos
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Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714-1788) Keyboard Sonatas Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach was born in Weimar, the second son by his first wife of Johann Sebastian...
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714-1788)
Keyboard Sonatas
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach was born in Weimar, the
second son by his first wife of Johann Sebastian Bach,
then newly appointed Konzertmeister to the Grand
Duke Wilhelm Ernst. He attended the Latin School in
Cothen, where his father became Court Kapellmeister in
1717, and in 1723 moved with the family to Leipzig,
where he became a pupil at the Thomasschule, on the
staff of which his father had become Cantor. In 1731 he
matriculated as a law student at the University of
Leipzig, embarking on a course of study that had been
denied his father. He continued these studies at the
University of Frankfurt an der Oder, and in 1738,
rejecting the chance of accompanying a young
gentleman on a tour abroad, entered the service of the
Crown Prince of Prussia at Ruppin as harpsichordist. He
moved with the court to Berlin in 1740, on the accession
to the throne of the Prince, better known subsequently as
Frederick the Great.
In Berlin and at Potsdam, Bach, confirmed as Court
Harpsichordist, had the unenviable task of
accompanying evening concerts at which the King, an
able enough amateur flautist, was a frequent performer.
His colleagues, generally of a more conservative bent,
included the distinguished flautist and theorist Quantz,
the Benda and Graun brothers and other musicians of
similar reputation, while men of letters at the court
included Lessing. In 1755 he applied for his father's old
position at the Thomasschule in Leipzig, but was
unsuccessful, his father's former pupil Doles being
appointed to take the place of Johann Sebastian's
immediate successor, Gottlob Harrer. It was not until
1768 that Carl Philipp Emanuel was able to escape from
a position that he had found increasingly uncongenial,
succeeding his godfather Telemann as Cantor at the
Johanneum in Hamburg, a city that offered much wider
opportunities than Leipzig had ever done. He spent the
last twenty years of his life there. In Berlin he had won a
wider reputation with his Versuch über die wahre Art
das Clavier zu spielen (Essay on the True Art of Clavier
Playing) and was regarded as the leading keyboardplayer
of his day. In Hamburg he continued to enjoy his
established position as a man of wide general education,
able to mix on equal terms with the leading writers of
his generation and no mere working musician. He died
in 1788, his death mourned by a generation that thought
of him as more important than his father, the latter
disrespectfully dubbed 'the old periwig' by his sons.
As a composer Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach was
prolific, writing a considerable quantity of music for the
harpsichord and for the instrument he much favoured,
the clavichord. His music exemplifies the theories
expounded in his Versuch, with a tendency to use
dramatic and rhetorical devices, a fine command of
melody and a relatively sparing use of contrapuntal
elements that had by now come to seem merely
academic. In musical terms he is associated with
Lessing's theories of sentiment, Empfindsamkeit, the
complement of Enlightenment rationalism.
Bach published some eighteen collections of
keyboard music in his lifetime and, while he failed to
please general popular taste in Vienna and South
Germany, he nevertheless won the admiration of the
greatest composers, of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven.
The influence on Haydn, in particular, is attested by that
composer's early biographers and is, in any case,
apparent from his own keyboard sonatas.
The Sonata in D minor, Wq.51/4, was written in
Berlin in 1758 and published in 1761 as what was to be
a set of six, a supplement to the Sechs Sonaten für
Clavier mit veranderten Reprisen (Six Sonatas for
Clavier with Varied Repeats), first published in 1760.
The energetic first movement, with its rapid passagework,
is followed by a slow movement with distinctly
rhetorical elements interrupting the general tranquillity
of the singing principal theme. The sonata ends with a
vigorous final Presto.
Bach's Sonata in F sharp minor, Wq.52/4, was
written in 1744 and published in 1763 in a set of six
sonatas as a second supplement to the Sechs Sonaten
fürs Clavier. The first movement offers a contrast
between the dash of the opening and a secondary
singing melody. The second movement, marked Poco
andante, offers an aria, discreetly accompanied, a
reminder of Bach's own instructions in the Versuch on
the art of presenting a sustained melody on the
keyboard. The sonata ends with a return to the original
minor mode in a texture that develops further the
dialogue suggested in the previous movement.
The Sonata in A major, Wq.55/4, was written in
1765 and published in 1779 as one of a set of six
sonatas, Sechs Clavier-Sonaten für Kenner und
Liebhaber (Six Clavier Sonatas for Connoisseurs and
Amateurs), the first of six similar collections, dedicated
to a Madame Zernitz. The first classical movement leads
to an F sharp minor Adagio in which one writer has
perceived an affinity with the slow movement of
Mozart's Piano Concerto in A major, K.488. The sonata
ends with an Allegro that seems to suggest a vein
explored by Haydn.
Bach's Rondos proved particularly popular with
those who subscribed to his Clavier-Sonaten für Kenner
und Liebhaber. The Rondo in D minor, Wq.61/4,
appeared in 1787 in the final collection, Clavier-
Sonaten und freye Fantasien nebst einigen Rondos für
Fortepiano (Clavier Sonatas and Free Fantasies with
Some Rondos for Fortepiano), the last contribution to
what Charles Burney's correspondent Thomas Twining
called his Carlophilipemanuelbachomania, an
enthusiam that must have been widely shared, as
witnessed by the commercial success of these
publications, although demand for this latest collection
had been rather less, with only 288 subscribed for. Carl
Friedrich Cramer, indeed, in the Magazin der Musik that
he published in Hamburg between 1783 and 1786,
deplores the inclusion of rondos, which he regards as a
trivial concession to superficial contemporary fashions.
Nevertheless Cramer, since 1775 professor of Greek and
oriental languages at the University of Kiel, was among
the subscribers, as was Baron van Swieten in Vienna,
who ordered twelve copies, and the publisher Artaria
who ordered six. Subscribers in London included Dr
Burney, the composer and harpsichordist Thomas
Linley, Carl Friedrich Abel, former colleague of Johann
Christian Bach, and Johann Samuel Schroeter, husband
of the heiress Rebecca Schroeter, who, as a widow,
enjoyed a relationship with Haydn during his London
visits. In Berlin Mendelssohn's great-aunt Sara Levy
continued her patronage of the Bach family, while 44
copies were demanded in St Petersburg. This final
volume contains two sonatas, two fantasias and two
rondos. In these last Bach's music is, as Burney had
earlier written, 'every thing, by turns, that music can
express'. The Rondo in B flat major, Wq.58/5, is taken
from the 1783 fourth collection for Kenner und
Liebhaber.
The Sonata in C major, Wq.65/47, was written in
1775 but not published in Bach's lifetime. The first of
the two movements has the contrast and variety
characteristic of the composer, with an aria-like Adagio
assai that embodies the ideals of the Empfindsamerstil,
with its juxtaposed changes of mood. Bach's Sonata in
E major, Wq.65/29, also unpublished in his lifetime, is a
relatively early work, written in 1755 and
straightforward in form and appeal. The present
recording ends with the Cantabile from the Sonata in B
minor, Wq.55/3, published in 1779 in the first Hamburg
collection of sonatas, a telling melody of apparent
simplicity.
Keith Anderson
Keyboard Sonata in D minor, Wq. 51/4, H. 128 (more info)
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I. Allegro assai - 3:12
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II. Largo e sostenuto - 4:06
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III. Presto - 3:51
Keyboard Sonata in F sharp minor, Wq. 52/4, H. 37 (more info)
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I. Allegro - 4:45
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II. Poco andante - 3:49
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III. Allegro assai - 3:11
Keyboard Sonata in A major, Wq. 55/4, H. 186 (more info)
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I. Allegro assai - 4:38
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II. Poco adagio - 4:08
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III. Allegro - 4:39
Rondo in D minor, Wq. 61/4, H. 290 (more info)
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Rondo in D minor, Wq. 61/4, H. 290 - 4:07
Keyboard Sonata in C major, Wq. 65/47, H. 248 (more info)
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I. Allegro - 3:29
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II. Adagio assai - 4:24
Rondo in B flat major, Wq. 58/5, H. 267 (more info)
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Rondo in B flat major, Wq. 58/5, H. 267 - 4:52
Keyboard Sonata in E major, Wq. 65/29, H. 83 (more info)
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I. Allegro di molto - 3:25
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II. Andante - 2:20
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III. Allegretto - 1:45
Keyboard Sonata in B minor, Wq. 55/3, H. 245: Cantabile (more info)
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Keyboard Sonata in B minor, Wq. 55/3, H. 245: Cantabile - 3:04