Jump to content

The Art of Fugue discography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of commercial recordings of Johann Sebastian Bach's The Art of Fugue.

Artist Date Recording Instrument and remarks
Richard Buhlig and Wesley Kuhnle 1934 piano
Roth Quartet 1934–1935 string quartet (includes conjectural end played by Donald Tovey on keyboard)
Gustav Leonhardt 1953 harpsichord
Joseph & Grete Dichler 1954 2 pianos
Helmut Walcha 1956 organ
Milan Munclinger with Ars Rediviva 1959 orchestra
Collegium Aureum 1962 chamber ensemble
Glenn Gould 1962 piano and organ (incomplete)
Fine Arts String Quartet and New York Woodwind Quintet 1962 string quartet and woodwind quintet
Ensemble Wolfgang von Karajan 1963 organ (on three chamber organs)
Karl Münchinger and Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra 1965 orchestra
Karl Ristenpart with Chamber Orchestra of the Saar 1965 orchestra (adapted for orchestra by Marcel Bitsch and Claude Pascal[1])
Hermann Scherchen with Orchestre de la RTSI 1965 orchestra
Milan Munclinger with Ars Rediviva 1966 orchestra
Charles Rosen 1967 piano
Gustav Leonhardt 1969 harpsichord
Helmut Walcha 1970 organ
Lionel Rogg 1970 organ
Neville Marriner with Academy of St. Martin in the Fields 1974 orchestra
Yuji Takahashi 1975 electronic version (incomplete)
Yuji Takahashi ? piano (early version)
Milan Munclinger with Ars Rediviva 1979 orchestra
Grigory Sokolov 1982 piano
Zoltán Kocsis 1984 piano
Musica Antiqua Köln (director Reinhard Goebel) 1984 string quartet/harpsichord and various such instrumental combinations
Davitt Moroney 1985 harpsichord
Quartetto Italiano 1985 string quartet
Jordi Savall with Hesperion XX 1986 orchestra
The Canadian Brass 1987 brass quintet
Yuji Takahashi 1988 piano
Kenneth Gilbert 1989 harpsichord (earlier version of the autograph score)
Juilliard String Quartet 1989 string quartet[2]
Evgeni Koroliov 1990 piano
Berliner Saxophon Quartett 1990 saxophone quartet
Erich Bergel with Cluj Philharmonic Orchestra 1991 orchestra
Tatiana Nikolayeva 1992 piano
Josef Popelka and Zuzana Němečková 1992 organ
Wolfgang Rübsam 1992 organ
Marie-Claire Alain 1993 organ
Louis Thiry 1993 organ (Silbermann organ of Saint Thomas Church, Strasbourg)
Ton Koopman and Tini Mathot 1994 harpsichords
Andrei Vieru 1994 piano
Vladimir Feltsman 1996 piano
Keller Quartet 1997 string quartet
Amsterdam Loeki Stardust Quartet 1998 recorder quartet
Phantasm (director: Laurence Dreyfus) 1998 viola da gamba four-part consort
Robert Hill 1998 harpsichord
Rinaldo Alessandrini and Concerto Italiano 1998 orchestra
André Isoir 1999 organ. Some movements performed as a duet with Pierre Farago, on the Grenzing organ of Saint-Cyprien in Périgord, France
Menno Van Delft 1999 harpsichord
Hans Fagius 2000 organ (on the Carsten Lund organ of the Garnisons Church, Copenhagen, Denmark)
Delmé Quartet 2000 string quartet (arranged by composer Robert Simpson, including versions of Contrapuntus XIV unfinished and completed following Tovey's version)
Kevin Bowyer 2001 organ (on the Marcussen organ of Saint Hans Church, Odense, Denmark)
Peter Elyakim Taussig 2001 piano
József Eötvös 2002 two eight-string guitars
Fretwork 2002 consort of Viols
Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra 2002 orchestra
Emerson Quartet 2003 string quartet
Pieter Dirksen 2003 harpsichord
Aurelia Saxophone Quartet 2005 saxophone quartet
The Version of Jacques Chailley instrumentation of Pascal Vigneron 2005 wind quartet, brass quartet and organ
Sébastian Guillot 2006 harpsichord
Walter Riemer 2006 fortepiano (using a fortepiano of Mozart type)[3]
Bradley Brookshire 2007 harpsichord (includes an additional CD-ROM with score to follow along as MP3s play)
Gösta Funck 2007 harpsichord (Christian Zell, 1728)
Laibachkunstderfuge, by Neue Slowenische Kunst industrial band Laibach 2008 electronic version
An electronic version by Jeffrey C Hall 2007?
Pierre-Laurent Aimard 2008 piano
Sergio Vartolo 2008 harpsichord
Gavin Black & George Hazelrigg 2009 harpsichords (on two harpsichords with voices shared equally throughout)
Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin 2011 orchestra
Angela Hewitt 2014 piano
Martha Cook 2015 harpsichord
Schaghajegh Nosrati 2015 piano
Marco Angius with Orchestra di Padova e del Veneto 2015 orchestra (adapted for orchestra by Hermann Scherchen[4])
Roberto Giordano 2015 piano
Rachel Podger and Brecon Baroque 2015 string quartet/harpsichord and various such instrumental combinations
Jörg Abbing 2016 organ
Stephanie Ho and Saar Ahuvia 2016 piano duo
FM_Kantor 2016 Die Verkehrung der Fuge Yamaha DX7, Yamaha TX7 synthesizers[5]
Ensemble L'Arte della Fuga 2016 violin, viola, cello, bassoon, and contrabass
Kimiko Douglass-Ishizaka, including her own completion to the final fugue 2017 piano[6]
Accademia Bizantina (director Ottavio Dantone) 2017 string quartet/harpsichord and various such instrumental combinations
Quintaessentia 2017 recorder quartet
Wolfgang Rubsam 2017 Lautenwerk (lute-harpsichord)
Bálint Karosi 2017 organ, harpsichord and clavichord
Bob van Asperen 2018 harpsichord
Vincent Grappy 2018 organ
Berlin Saxophone Quartet 2018 saxophone quartet
Matthias Maierhofer 2019 organ
Pieter-Jan Belder 2019 harpsichord/clavichord
Samuel Kummer 2020 organ
Les inAttendus 2021 chamber ensemble
Margaret Phillips 2021 organ
Salzburg Chamber Soloists 2021 string orchestra
Daniil Trifonov 2021 piano
Aston Magna (ensemble) 2021 chamber ensemble
Geoffrey Douglas Madge 2021 piano
Eloise Bella Kohn 2021 piano
Filippo Gorini 2021 piano
Kenneth Weiss 2022 harpsichord
Maurizio Ricci 2023 organ
New Collegium 2023 chamber ensemble
Noël Akchoté 2023 guitar
Cuarteto Casals 2023 string quartet
Les Récréations 2023 chamber ensemble
Christophe Rousset 2023 harpsichord
Andrzej Ślązak 2023 piano
Aapo Häkkinen 2024 harpsichord
Masaaki Suzuki 2024 harpsichord
Quartetto di Cremona 2024 string quartet
  • Without recording date – to be inserted in the list

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Nonesuch HB-73013
  2. ^ "J.S.Bach – Juilliard String Quartet – die Kunst der Fuge" (CD). 1992 – via Discogs.
  3. ^ "J. S. Bach: The Art of the Fugue – Die Kunst der Fuge, BWV 1080". www.niederfellabrunn.at.
  4. ^ Stradivarius STR37008
  5. ^ "FM_Kantor on Facebook". Facebook. Archived from the original on 2022-04-30.[user-generated source]
  6. ^ "video".

Sources

[edit]