J.S. Bach-Tocatta and Fugue in D minor BWV 565

• May 15, 2011 - 14:50

This is a version for printing purposes. The ornaments have not been realized.


Comments

In reply to by juzekxx02

I always will certainly want to know of any bugs and eliminate them. In preparing a piece of this length and complexity, I would not be at all surprised that there may be some anomalies -- as a result either of my transcription process or in the edition I was using. I was working from the following:

Editor: Wilhelm Rust (1822–1892)
Publisher Info.: Bach-Gesellschaft Ausgabe, Band 15
Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel, 1867.

It is in the public domain and is available on http://imslp.org.

I would appreciate knowing of any problems. But I do not know of what you are referring to as “secrets.”

In reply to by Bill Watkins

I listened to it the other night, and did notice some things that sounded wrong, but the most obvious was when the piece finished on a D major chord, when it should be D minor. There is a hidden # on the F in the final chord that should be a F natural. Why was this # placed, but hidden?

In reply to by schepers

It is called a “tierce de Picardie “ (Picardy third), where the final cadence of a piece in a minor key ends on a major tonic triad. In this case, I simply couldn’t resist, although I tried to indicate that it was editorial and entirely optional.

Other examples include the last chord in the first movement of Bach's Concerto for Two Violins in D minor, the final chord of Bach's 'Little' Fugue in G minor for organ.

In reply to by Bill Watkins

I listened to it the other night, and did notice some things that sounded wrong, but the most obvious was when the piece finished on a D major chord, when it should be D minor. There is a hidden # on the F in the final chord that should be a F natural. Why was this # placed, but hidden?

Why is bar 25 bracketed?

I can't flip some things, such as upstem semiquavers in pedal stave (bar 29).

Using MuseScore 1.0 and 2.0 Nightly Build (4233) - Mac 10.4.11.

In reply to by chen lung

I am not sure what you mean by “bracketed.” If you are referring to the parentheses around measure number 25, that is a fairly common way to indicate that the measure is incomplete and is continued from the previous system.

I don’t see any notes in bar 29 that need to be flipped, but I have no idea why they cannot be. Perhaps MuseScore’s developers can explain.

In reply to by Sphyther

"The tuba proper was first patented by Prussian bandmaster Wilhelm Wieprecht and German instrument-builder Johann Gottfried Moritz in 1835... This instrument was soon adopted by British brass bands."
[See http/ww.blackdiamondbrass.com/tbahist/tubahist.htm]

Since J.S. Bach died on 28 July 1750, (85 years earlier than the invention of the tuba) it is unlikely that adding a tuba would make the piece sound "more realistic." But thank you for the effort.

BWV 565 has been orchestrated many times, perhaps most conspicuously so by Leopold Stokowski for the Philadelphia Orchestra, and featured in the Disney movie “Fantasia.”

I wish to know of any "missing notes" or "mistakes."

In reply to by Bill Watkins

The Bb Tuba I put in was just to give the impression of a 16' Reed found on most organs in that era. In a study on the organs that Uncle Johann might have played on there might have been a 16' reed and even a 32' reed found on the pedals. The pedals on this program needs a bit of "Oomf"!

JS Bach was inspired to composed this piece when he attended an year-end organ concert by D Buxtehude in 1706.
Some music scholars believe that this piece was not written by JS Bach at all and that it was written for solo violin in A minor many years after JS Bach's death and later transcribed to D minor to be played on an organ.

BWV565 is also one of the new demo files for MuseScore 2.0. It features (at least) two new features of this upcoming version : playback via Aeolus & embed of original images. With Aeolus, you should be able to change the organ stops.

If you are on windows or mac, you can try a nightly build for MuseScore 2.0. See [[nodetitle:Comparison of stable, prerelease, and nightly builds]]

Sample audio created by recording MuseScore with Audacity.

Bwv565 by lasconic

Attachment Size
bwv565.jpg 201.75 KB

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