J.S.BACH :: PARTITAS BWV 825-830 COMPLETE :: WIM WINTERS, CLAVICHORD

Описание к видео J.S.BACH :: PARTITAS BWV 825-830 COMPLETE :: WIM WINTERS, CLAVICHORD

Many of you have asked me and here it is: all Bach Keyboard Partitas in one video. The six are in a playlist, but now with just one click you'll have almost 3 hours of music. I'm all focused on the recording of the partitas now, so the regular upload scheme on the channel has to wait for a bit now. The One Thing, remember?
All the recording sessions will be live streamed on YouTube, and the coming days and weeks sections and complete sessions will be uploaded to the channel as well.

The complete index is to be found below the few links.
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🔺
0:06 PARTITA N°1 BWV 825
Praeambulum
Allemande
Courante
Sarabande
Menuet
Gigue

🔻
19:09 PARTITA N°2 BWV 826
SInfonia
Fugue
Allemande
Courante
Sarabande
Rondeau
Cappricio

🔸
45:23 PARTITA N°3 BWV 827
Fantasia
Allemande
Courante
Sarabande
Burlesque/Scherzo
Gigue

🔹
1:09:26 PARTITA N°4 BWV 828
Ouverture
Allemande
Courante
Aria
Sarabande
Menuet
Gigue

🔶
1:45:50 PARTITA N°5 BWV 829
Preambulum
Allemande
Courante
Sarabande
Tempo di Menuetto
Passepied
Gigue

🔷
2:10:15 PARTITA N°6 BWV 830
Toccata
Allemande
Courante
Air
Sarabande
Gavotte
Gigue

From Wikipedia:
The six partitas for keyboard are the last set of suites that Bach composed and the most technically demanding of the three. They were composed between 1725 and 1730 or 1731. As with the French and English Suites, the autograph manuscript of the Partitas is no longer extant.

In keeping with a nineteenth-century naming tradition that labelled Bach's first set of Suites English and the second French, the Partitas are sometimes referred to as the German Suites.[1] This title, however, is a publishing convenience; there is nothing particularly German about the Partitas. In comparison with the two earlier sets of suites, the Partitas are by far the most free-ranging in terms of structure. Unlike the English Suites, for example, wherein each opens with a strict prelude, the Partitas feature a number of different opening styles including an ornamental Overture and a Toccata.

Although each of the Partitas was published separately under the name Clavier-Übung (Keyboard Practice), they were subsequently collected into a single volume in 1731, with the same name, which Bach himself chose to label his Opus 1.[2] Unlike the earlier sets of suites, Bach originally intended to publish seven Partitas, advertising in the Spring of 1730 upon the publication of the fifth Partita that the promised collected volume would contain two more such pieces. The plan was then revised to include a total of eight works: six Partitas in Part I (1731) and two larger works in Part II (1735).

The keys of the six Partitas (B-flat major, C minor, A minor, D major, G major, E minor) seem to be an irregular sequence, but in fact they form a sequence of intervals going up and then down by increasing amounts: a second up (B-flat to C), a third down (C to A), a fourth up (A to D), a fifth down (D to G), and finally a sixth up (G to E).[3] The key sequence continues into Clavier-Übung II (1735) with two larger works: the Italian Concerto, a seventh down (E to F), and the French Overture, an augmented fourth up (F to B-natural). Thus this sequence of customary tonalities for 18th-century keyboard compositions is complete, extending from the first letter of his name (Bach's "home" key, B-flat, in German is B) to the last letter of his name (B-natural in German is H).

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