Johann Sebastian Bach
(1685-1750)
The Well- Tempered
Clavier, Book 1, BWV 846-869
Johann Sebastian Bach
was a member of a family that had for generations been occupied in music. His
sons were to continue the tradition, providing the foundation of a new style of
music that prevailed in the later part of the eighteenth century. Johann
Sebastian Bach himself represented the end of an age, the culmination of the
Baroque in a magnificent synthesis of Italian melodic invention, French
rhythmic dance forms and German contrapuntal mastery.
Born in Eisenach in 1685, Bach was
educated largely by his eldest brother, after the early death of his parents.
At the age of eighteen he embarked on his career as a musician, serving first
as a court musician at Weimar, before appointment as organist at Arnstadt. Four years
later he moved to Muhlhausen as organist and the following year became organist
and chamber musician to Duke Wilhelm Ernst of Weimar. Securing his release with
difficulty, in 1717 he was appointed Kapellmeister to Prince Leopold of Anhalt-Cothen
and remained at Cothen until 1723, when he moved to Leipzig as Cantor at the School of St Thomas, with responsibility
for the music of the five principal city churches. Bach was to remain at Leipzig until his death in
1750.
As a craftsman,
obliged to fulfil the terms of his employment, Bach provided music suited to
his various appointments. It was natural that his earlier work as an organist
and something of an expert on the construction of organs, should result in
music for that instrument. At Cothen, where the Pietist leanings of the court
made church music unnecessary, he provided a quantity of instrumental music for
the court orchestra and its players. In Leipzig he began by
composing a series of cantatas for the church year, later turning his attention
to instrumental music for the Collegium musicum of the University, and to the
collection and ordering of his own compositions. Throughout his life he
continued to write music for the harpsichord or clavichord, some of which
served a pedagogical purpose in his own family or with other pupils.
The collections of Preludes
and Fugues in all keys, major and minor, known as The Well-Tempered
Clavier or, from their number, as The Forty-Eight, explore the
possibilities inherent in every possible key. Experiments in keyboard
tuning in the later seventeenth century had resulted in differing systems that,
nevertheless, made the use of remoter keys feasible. Earlier composers,
including Johann Caspar Ferdinand Fischer, Pachelbel, Pepusch and Mattheson had
already made use of some form of equal temperament tuning in collections of
pieces in varying numbers of keys. While the precise nature of the tuning
system used by Bach may not be clear, his well-tempered tuning at least made
all keys possible, although in the system of equal temperament employed, some
keys were probably more equal than others, an effect lost in modern democratic
piano tuning, where all intervals on the keyboard are equal, if mathematically
inaccurate.
While the second book
of Preludes and Fugues was put together in Leipzig, for the most part
during the years from 1738 to 1742, the first collection was made towards the
end of Bach's time at Cothen and is dated 1722, including earlier works in a
compilation that eventually took on the purpose declared in its extended title
as a collection of Preludes and Fugues in all the tones and semitones, for the
use and practice of young musicians who want to learn, as well as those who are
already skilled in this study. This circulated in various copies and was
revised by Bach at various times, finally, it would seem, in 1740, when he was
already concerned with the second set of 24. The first book includes some
preludes from the Clavierbiichlein for Bach's eldest son, Wilhelm Friedemann
Bach, born to his first wife in 1710. While the Preludes vary in form and mood,
the Fugues are bound by stricter rules of counterpoint, in which a subject is
announced, to be answered in imitation by a second, third and fourth voice. The
answer may be accompanied by a countersubject, a secondary theme that fits with
the subject, but has its own characteristics. Intervening episodes appear
between further entries of the subject in other keys from any of the voices or
parts. Other devices used include stretto, the overlapping entry of voices with
the subject. Further complementary subjects may appear, again entering in
imitation by one voice of the other, and may be combined with the original
subject. The subject itself may appear in inversion, upside down, or in
augmentation, with longer notes, or diminution, with shorter and quicker
note-values. True art is to conceal art, and this Bach, as always, achieves in
music that is never merely subservient to technical requirements. The Preludes
and Fugues were written for unspecified keyboard instruments, with some
suggesting the gentler tones of the clavichord, others the louder harpsichord
and some even the sustained notes of the organ.
CD 1 The opening Prelude
in C major is among the best known of all, chiefly, it must be said,
because of later arrangements, notably that by Charles Gounod, who added a
melody, calling the work in this new form Meditation, to which another
added the words of the Ave Maria. It is followed by a four-voice fugue
in which the subject is announced first in the alto, answered in the
soprano" followed by tenor and bass. The Prelude in C minor is
characterized by busy semiquaver motion leading to a final cadenza. The
three-voice fugue has voices entering in the order alto, soprano, bass. The Prelude
in C sharp major has an alternation of figuration between the upper
and lower register, with material derived from the simplest origins and leading
to a final section of syncopation, as the right hand plays off-beat notes to
the steady rhythm of the left. There is a three-voice fugue, its subject stated
in the soprano, answered in the alto, followed by the bass and worked out at
some length. The Prelude in C sharp minor, in 6/4 metre,
allows the left hand to echo the right in its opening bars. It leads to an alIa
breve fugue, its solemn four-note subject stated first in the bass,
answered by the other voices in ascending order. Here the full lower range of
the keyboard is explored and the device of pedal-point, moving parts over a note
sustained in one part, finds its place as the fugue comes to a close. The Prelude
in D major is in the style of a toccata, its continuous right-hand
semiquaver movement culminating in a brief and more rapid cadenza and
impressive final chords. The four-voice fugue has a subject of varied rhythm,
announced by the bass and answered by other voices in ascending order. There
follows a Prelude in D minor of continuing semiquaver triplet rhythm in
the right hand and a three-voice fugue, with the subject answered by voices in
descending order.
The Prelude in E
flat major starts with a toccata introduction, followed by the imitative
counterpoint of a double fugue, a short subject first stated in the tenor,
answered at once by the bass, and then by alto and soprano in order. The second
fugal subject, which appears over a version of the first, is in shorter notes.
This elaborate and extended Prelude is succeeded by a three-voice fugue, with
the soprano subject answered by voices in descending order. The recitative
style of the Prelude in E flat minor, with its key signature of six
flats, leads to a three-voice fugue in the key of D sharp minor, with six
sharps, an enharmonic change that makes no practical difference in the choice
of notes to be struck by the player. The middle voice announces the subject,
answered above, before entering below, in a movement that includes inversions
of the subject and its augmentation, when it later appears at half speed Triple
rhythms mark the 12/8 Prelude in E major, while its three-voice fugue,
with a subject announced by the middle voice, to be answered above and then
below, is marked by the idiosyncratic break, in the rhythm of the subject
itself, to be repeated at each reappearance. The Prelude in E minor leads
to a rapid final passage, with right and left hand often in parallel motion.
There follows a two-voice fugue, an example of what can be achieved in a
simpler fugal texture, with a subject of chromatic propensity. The eleventh of
the set has a Prelude in F major in 12/8 metre in a general toccata
style of rapid notes and continuing rhythm. The three-voice fugue, its subject
again stated in a middle voice, to be answered above and then below, has a
particularly clear texture. The Prelude in F minor forms a stately
introduction to a four-voice fugue, its chromatic subject appearing first in
the tenor, followed by alto, bass and, eventually, soprano, with an elaboration
of countersubjects in contrapuntal intricacy.
CD2 Prelude No.13 in F
sharp major is particularly attractive in its melodic treatment, whatever
reluctance a student may have to confront a key with six sharps. The key brings
more complexity in the three-voice fugue, the subject answered here by voices
in descending order, since fugues inevitably bring modulations, as the subject
returns in different keys. The Prelude in F sharp minor brings the
player some relief, with a generally two-voice texture in which one part
imitates the other in the manner of a two-part invention. The four-voice fugue,
in 6/4, has a relatively extended subject, announced first by the tenor,
followed by alto, bass and, finally, soprano. A degree of relative simplicity
comes with the Prelude in G major, a movement in two-voice
texture, with a three-voice fugue, its subject answered by voices in descending
order. The Prelude in G minor opens with a prolonged
right-hand trill, as the movement moves forward, leading to a cadenza-like
ending. There is a four-voice fugue, with the subject appearing in the alto,
soprano, bass and tenor, in that order. Prelude No.17 in A flat major makes
much of its opening figure, answered by the left hand and the subject of
continued dialogue. There is a four-voice fugue, with voices entering now in
the order tenor, bass, soprano, alto, with a characteristic countersubject.
This is followed by a Prelude in G sharp minor, making use of the
keyboard identity of G sharp and A flat. The three-voice texture of the prelude
is followed by a four-voice fugue, with a subject entering in the order tenor,
alto, soprano and bass.
The Prelude in A
major is marked by the re-appearance of its opening figure in the manner of
a fugue, with two other subjects added and treated accordingly. ft leads to a
three-voice fugue in 918 metre, with voices entering in descending order. A pleasing
Prelude in A minor is coupled with a four-voce fugue with an extended
subject. This appears first in the alto, followed by soprano, bass and tenor
and brings a movement of some length, finding a place for the sustained notes
required by the device of pedal-point and seeming to call for the use of a
pedal harpsichord or organ with pedal- board to enable the player to hold a
lower note, while the fingers of a hand of normal size are occupied elsewhere
on the keyboard. The Prelude in B flat major allows the right hand to offer
a delicate accompaniment to the left and includes cadenza-like passages. It
leads to a three-voice fugue with a long subject treated by voices in
descending order, on its first appearance. Prelude No.22 in B flat minor is
characteristically Baroque in its form and texture, a true prelude to an alIa
breve fugue with five voices entering in descending order and suggesting
the sustained notes of the organ. The Prelude in B major offers a
three-part texture and is paired with a four- voice fugue, with voices entering
in the order tenor, alto, soprano, bass, bringing a subject marked by a trill
on its penultimate note, although the limitations of the human hand prevent its
re-appearance with every statement of the subject. The book ends with
the Prelude and Fugue in B minor, the prelude making use of initial
fugal counterpoint over a moving bass. The last fugue, marked Largo and
with four voices, which enter in the order alto, tenor, bass, soprano, has an
extended chromatic theme that uses all twelve notes of the chromatic scale.
This provides a solid conclusion to the first volume of a most remarkable
collection, the keyboard-player's Old Testament to the new world offered by
Beethoven in an increasingly contrapuntal mood in his 32 sonatas, to which more
recent composers have provided a startling Apocalypse.
Jeno Jando
The Hungarian pianist
Jeno Jando has won a number of piano competitions in Hungary and abroad,
including first prize in the 1973 Hungarian Piano Concours and a first prize in
the chamber music category at the Sydney International Piano Competition in 19n
He has recorded for Naxos all the piano concertos and sonatas of Mozart.
Other recordings for the Naxos label include the concertos of Grieg and Schumann as
well as Rachmaninov's Second Concerto and Paganini Rhapsodyand Beethoven's
complete piano sonatas.