Johann Sebastian Bach (1685 - 1750)
Inventions Nos. 1-15, BWV 772 - 786
Sinfonias Nos. 1-15, BWV 787 - 801
Johann Sebastian Bach was born in Eisenach in 1685, one
of a large family of musicians. After the death of his parents he moved, at the
age of ten, to Ohrdruf, with his 13-year-old brother Johann Jacob, to live with
the eldest of their brothers, Johann Christoph, an organist. Bach's own early
career was as an organist, from 1708 until 1717 in the service of Duke Wilhelm
Ernst, elder of the two brothers ruling the duchy of Weimar. From 1717 until
1723 he was Court Kapellmeister to Prince Leopold of Anhalt-Cothen, with
different musical responsibilities, largely secular. Thereafter he served as
Thomas-Kantor in Leipzig, with responsibility for music in the principal city
churches, continuing there until his death in 1750. This final period of his
life involved him in activity with the Collegium musicum of the University, for
which he arranged earlier instrumental concertos for solo harpsichord or
harpsichords, and in the assembly and publication of a number of his
compositions, in particular a series of four volumes of keyboard music, the
Clavierubung.
Bach's Inventions and Sinfonias were
written about the year 1723 in Cothen, included in a collection of pieces
designed for the education of his eldest son, Wilhelm Friedemann Bach, later
employed as an organist in Dresden and then in Halle, before his final years in
Berlin. It has been suggested that Bach derived the title Invention, for
the fifteen two-part compositions, BWV 772 - BWV 786, from the work of
the Italian priest and composer Bonporti, a set of Invenzioni for violin
and keyboard published in 1712 and known to Bach. The term, however, was not
new to Bonporti, as it occurs from the sixteenth century onwards to describe a
variety of instrumental compositions. Originally Bach used the title Praeambulum
for the first set of pieces and Fantasia for the three-part Sinfonias,
BWV 787-801. While in The Well-Tempered Clavier, the 48 Preludes
and Fugues, Bach used all possible keys, major and minor, in the Inventions
and Sinfonias he avoids keys with more than four sharps or flats.
The first four Inventions, in C major, C minor, D
major and D minor, and Invention No.8 in F major, open with a direct
imitation of the upper part an octave lower, the opening subject providing the
basis of the Invention. Inventions Nos. 5, 6 and 7 have both
parts starting simultaneously. No.5, in E flat major, is based on the
opening figure in the upper part, and No.6, in E major, each half
repeated, makes use of syncopation between upper and lower parts, the second
section opening with a transposed inversion of the opening. In No.7, in
E minor, the lower part continues in imitation of the upper, while in No.9,
in F minor both parts start at the same time, the lower later imitating the upper.
The compound rhythm subject of No.10, in G major, has imitation at an
interval of a compound fourth in the lower part. The remaining Inventions have
both parts starting simultaneously, with No.14, in B flat major,
offering rhythms of greater elaboration, at times in consonant intervals
between upper and lower parts, moving together.
The fifteen Sinfonias, BWV 787- BWV 801, using the
same keys as the two-part Inventions, and often known themselves as Three-Part
Inventions, are fugal in texture, although in each of them two parts start
together, to be followed by the third voice.
Eleven of the Sinfonias open in otherwise standard
fugal form, an accompanied subject is followed by an answer in another part and
a later entry of the subject in a third part. Sinfonia No.2, in C minor,
and No.15 in B minor have only two entries, and these at the octave,
while No.5, in E flat major, uses two upper parts in imitative
counterpoint over a repeated bass figure. The Sinfonias, in spite of
their apparent clarity of texture and simplicity, conceal technical
contrapuntal devices often of some considerable ingenuity.
@ 1995 Keith Anderson
Performance of the Music of J. S.
Bach on the Piano
This recording was produced to
communicate, stimulate and encourage the interpretation of Bach's keyboard
works on the modern piano. It is based upon recognized fundamental elements of
performance practices of early music.
The interpretation of Bach's music on
the modern piano remains a confusing issue in light of the fact that the
instrument basically evolved with the romantic period. It is, therefore, no
surprise that attempts frequently result in romantic readings, a direction
which can be most musical at times but may be stylistically confusing if not
actually foreign to the score. Musical preferences also favour a clean,
mathematical and metronomic realisation -a safe but somewhat noncommittal
solution to the communication of Bach's artistry.
On a different level, then, is the
enjoyment of incorporating the often neglected elements of rhetoric, inegalite,
the structures of the strong and weak within a given pulse and metre, and the
fingering techniques of the time (shifting and sequential fingerings rather
than consecutive scale fingerings). These components, which are strongly
interrelated and directly influence choices of articulation and flexibility of
rhythm, often answer automatically questions of style, especially when they are
understood as basic elements of the musical language.
The complex subject of ornamentation,
both Bach's written out ornaments and the liberty given in repeats of
movements, is most challenging and - rewarding when there is the concept of
freedom of execution and the manner is improvisational and imaginative.
Dynamic shadings within figurations,
motivic material, and entire musical lines in any part of the polyphonic
structure become particularly exciting and meaningful upon melodic (and
harmonic) analysis. Important pitches, in the greater sense of the direction,
can be pointed out by dynamic control and nuance and by the effect of
rhythmic flexibility within the structure of the melodic line. The degree of
such bending in time is most personal and strongly communicative when applied
with balance and refinement of taste.
The process of merging the "old" and the
"new" in Bach's keyboard works will be an ongoing pursuit for me as
it will most likely be for pianists with an interest in early music who strive
for reorganization of the ear before fingers are expected to reflect such inner
feelings. Since such musical detail is best demonstrated by the music itself,
it is my hope that this recording will be a helpful example in this process and
that listeners and students alike will find it an enjoyable means of
communication.
Wolfgang Rubsam