
ExclusiveBach: French Suite no. 5 in G major, BWV 816
【Classical music and nature 古典音樂小站】Johann Sebastian Bach: French Suite no. 5 in G major, BWV 816. This beautiful piece was played by Sylvia Marlowe. It has Creative Commons license (Public Domain Mark 1.0 Universal) and is provided through www.musopen.org.
NETHERLANDS BACH SOCIETY writes in "About Us":
Ever since 1921 we have dedicated ourselves with heart and soul to sharing Bach's music with the world. We show the diversity of early music and the Netherlands Bach Society.Even in the Sarabande, the melody gains the upper hand.
Here what they write about French Suite no. 5 in G major, BWV 816:
The fifth ‘French’ suite is the most tuneful and elegant of the six. It is also the most Italian, says harpsichordist Francesco Corti. You can hear that straight away in the Allemande, but even in the Sarabande – a piece where Bach usually searches for harmonic expression – the melody gains the upper hand. This Sarabande could easily be an adagio from an Italian sonata. The right hand plays a beautifully ornamented melody and the left hand provides the accompaniment. The ornamentation is written out in two variations in various manuscripts. Francesco Corti is happy to use both, keeping the most exuberant variation for the da capo.
The relatively uncomplicated Gavotte with its catchy melody is a great audience favourite. In the Bourrée, Bach goes into a higher gear with an extremely active left hand, which races along below the simple rhythm of the right hand.
In this suite, Bach adds an extra dance, a Loure, which Corti explains is a sort of slow minuet. Bach rarely used this dance form. Only one other example survives, in the Violin Partita No. 3, BWV 1006. Later on, Bach may have taken out the Loure, as it no longer appears in later copies of the suite.
The Gigue that closes the suite is one of the most extensive written by Bach. The time signature (12/16) demands a fast tempo. But it is not just hard and fast. The piece is actually a reasonably complete two-part fugue. In the second section, the theme is mirrored and Bach places it in a breathtakingly harmonic rollercoaster.
‘French’ suites, BWV 812-817
Bach composed his ‘French’ suites as a young man of thirty, when he was working at the court of Köthen. However, the suites have nothing to do with the court. Bach wrote them for teaching purposes in his own private circle. The first five appear in their original form in the little music book he compiled in 1722 for his second wife Anna Magdalena, possibly as a wedding present. But Bach continued to rework the pieces. The later versions, with the addition of a sixth suite, have survived thanks to the many copies made by his pupils. They are rewarding practice pieces that despite a certain compositional complexity (it is Bach, after all), do not make extreme demands on the player.
The epithet ‘French’ was not given by Bach himself and appears for the first time in a text from 1762, twelve years after Bach’s death. The pieces are no more French than his other keyboard suites, just as the previously composed ‘English’ suites are not particularly English either. Indeed, the ‘English’ suites, with their extensive preludes, actually follow the French model to a certain extent. But as usual, here Bach is using a cosmopolitan language; an ingenious synthesis of various European styles.
The ‘French’ suites do not have a prelude, but launch straight into the first dance: an allemande. This is followed by the classical sequence of courante, sarabande and gigue, with a somewhat freer selection of dances in between the sarabande and gigue, ranging from the minuet and the gavotte to the bourrée and the less common loure.
Source: bachvereniging.nl
The video was captured by Simone Schlegel and was edited by Wenjing Ma.
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