Bach Concerto BWV 1060 1112
Bach Concerto BWV 1060 1112
Bach Concerto BWV 1060 1112
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by. In cold months the group gathered at Zimmermanns coffeehouse, in Leipzigs Catherinestrasse; during the summer they moved out
of doors, either to the cafs garden or to some
site on the outskirts of town. Bach directed the
group from 1729 to 1741 (with a two-year
break from 1737 to 1739), and often dipped into
his back catalogue of compositions when crafting new pieces for the Collegium to explore.
An analysis of the tessitura and other musical characteristics of Bachs C-minor Concerto for Two Harpsichords and Strings (BWV
1060) has led to the generally accepted belief that it was initially a Double Concerto for
Oboe and Violin, under which guise it is performed here. A 1764 catalogue from the publishing firm of Breitkopf lists a Bach concerto
for oboe and violin; although it fails to mention the works key, it does confirm that Bach
Some of Johann Sebastian Bachs concertos come down to us in multiple versions, and
when they dont it is widely assumed that the
existing text may be all that survives of
a lost original. All of his solo concertos with
orchestra there are only seven complete
ones exist as harpsichord concertos, but
none is thought to have been first created to
spotlight that instrument. Earlier violin versions of several are unquestionably authentic; indeed, it makes sense that Bach, who
was an adept violinist as well as a brilliant
keyboard player, should have chosen to feature the violin in several
of his concertos.
In Short
For the most part, Bach
wrote his harpsichord conBorn: March 21, 1685, in Eisenach, Germany
certos either for courtly
entertainment or for use Died: July 28, 1750, in Leipzig
by the members of the
Work composed: This concerto is a reconstruction of a work which Bach is
Leipzig Collegium Muthought to have written between 1717 and 1723.
sicum. The Collegium was
a society of university stu- World premiere: There is no information available about the early performance
dents, interested amateur history of this work.
musicians, and a few proNew York Philharmonic premiere: premiered December 30, 1961, Werner
fessionals who met most Torkanowsky, conductor, Joseph Silverstein, violin, and Principal Oboe Harold
Friday evenings to play Gomberg, soloists
music for their own pleasMost recent New York Philharmonic performance: March 24, 2005, Kent
ure, as well as for the
Nagano, conductor, Sheryl Staples and Sherry Sylar, soloists
delectation of members of
the public who dropped Estimated duration: ca. 14 minutes
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penned a piece for this instrumental combination. Dissenting opinions persist, however,
and all reconstructions or, more precisely,
retro-constructions involve considerable
speculation. That explains why this piece can
be found in modern versions for oboe and violin (or for two violins) in the keys of both C
minor and D minor, the latter being the version to be performed in this concert.
Commenting about the double harpsichord
concertos that we know today as BWV 1060
and BWV 1061, Johann Forkel wrote, in his
1802 biography of Bach: The first is very old,
but the second is as new as if it had been composed only yesterday. Recent musicological
opinion agrees with Forkels statement that
BWV 1060 was very old at that time. Bach
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At the Time
In the year 1717, when J.S. Bach began his employment at Prince Leopolds court in Cthen, and apparently
began composing the work on this program, the following events were taking place:
The first Premier Grand Lodge of
Freemasons is established in London; in letters to friends in England, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
(16891762, pictured at top left)
describes the practice of smallpox
inoculation in Constantinople;
French Enlightenment philosopher
Franois-Marie Arouet (1694
1778, top right), who wrote under
the pen name Voltaire starting in
1718, is sentenced to imprisonment in the Bastille for his satirical
writings; the English pirate Black
Sam Bellamy dies along with more
than 140 members of his crew
when his ship, the Whydah Gally,
sinks during a storm off the coast
of Cape Cod (the ship was recovered in 1984); the first levee, standing at three feet tall, is built in New
Orleans on the Mississippi River;
school attendance is made compulsory in Prussia; Britain, France,
and the Netherlands sign the Triple
Alliance, an effort to stem the
power of Spain in Europe; French
painter Jean-Antoine Watteau
(16841721) paints Pilgrimage on
the Isle of Cythera (center); George
Frideric Handels Water Music is
performed for Englands King
George I on the occasion of a royal
barge trip on the Thames, seen depicted here in a painting by Edouard
Jean Conrad Hamman (bottom)
The Editors
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