Robert Newman
Banned
1/5
It’s an amazing fact but researchers say only around half of J.S. Bach's music has survived to the present day (!) - the rest having been lost in the years following his death in 1750 when his mountain of musical manuscripts were bequeathed to his family and later widely scattered. This thread will introduce this fascinating subject. Especially because there have been a number of wonderful discoveries in recent years and every chance others will be made in the near future.
Here to start the ball rolling is a brilliant, hugely fun and almost completely unknown Sinfonia in D Major for orchestra by Bach, now officially listed as BWV 1045, but little recorded so far. In it the violins scramble for joy in rustic fashion with bassoons playing their part with oboes. And trumpets. A hugely entertaining and wonderful piece that may have been intended as an introduction for a now lost cantata or even a movement from an unknown orchestral suite. Tremendous energy here.
Time to dance when I hear this !!!! Viva maestro Bach !!!
J.S. Bach
Sinfonia in D Major
BWV 1045 (c.1730 ?)
http://www.mediafire.com/?nytdzgymnmw
It’s an amazing fact but researchers say only around half of J.S. Bach's music has survived to the present day (!) - the rest having been lost in the years following his death in 1750 when his mountain of musical manuscripts were bequeathed to his family and later widely scattered. This thread will introduce this fascinating subject. Especially because there have been a number of wonderful discoveries in recent years and every chance others will be made in the near future.
Here to start the ball rolling is a brilliant, hugely fun and almost completely unknown Sinfonia in D Major for orchestra by Bach, now officially listed as BWV 1045, but little recorded so far. In it the violins scramble for joy in rustic fashion with bassoons playing their part with oboes. And trumpets. A hugely entertaining and wonderful piece that may have been intended as an introduction for a now lost cantata or even a movement from an unknown orchestral suite. Tremendous energy here.
Time to dance when I hear this !!!! Viva maestro Bach !!!
J.S. Bach
Sinfonia in D Major
BWV 1045 (c.1730 ?)
http://www.mediafire.com/?nytdzgymnmw
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