As a pedagogue and composer, Johann Sebastian Bach’s second eldest son, Carl Philipp Emanuel, was preeminent in the field of keyboard music during the transitional period between the baroque and classical eras. From his over 150 keyboard sonatas we have assembled a three-volume chronological selection that focuses on attractiveness and variety. Moreover, it makes available many previously unpublished sonatas. After all, sixty of Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach’s keyboard sonatas remained unpublished during his lifetime. This first volume contains eleven early compositions, composed between 1740 and 1748. The available sources for our Urtext edition have been autographs, first prints issued during Bach’s lifetime and manuscript copies from Bach’s circle. Darrell M. Berg’s preface provides important performance suggestions concerning the prescribed ornaments. With Berg’s table of the most important embellishments and their correct rendition, the player is optimally equipped to study Bach’s keyboard sonatas.
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During the period between the Baroque and Classical eras, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, the second son of Johann Sebastian, was the leading figure in the field of keyboard music, not only as a theorist and teacher, but also as a composer. C. P. E. Bach wrote more than 150 keyboard sonatas; this edition presents 34 of these in three volumes. The sonatas in this collection were … 계속
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Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
He is primarily famous for his music for keyboard instruments and is regarded as the most important composer of sonatas (approximately 150) in the mid eighteenth century. His self-image as a composer is in line with the aesthetic of the genius. His musical idiom is characterized by a “speaking” disposition and by moments of surprise.
1714 | Born in Weimar on March 8; second surviving son from Johann Sebastian Bach’s first marriage. Musical education from his father; attends the Lutheran Latin school in Köthen, the St. Thomas School in Leipzig. Participates in the Collegium Musicum. |
1731 | Law studies in Leipzig. |
1734–38 | Continuation of law studies in Frankfurt an der Oder. Occasional compositions. |
1740–68 | Harpsichordist in Berlin at the court of Frederick II. |
1741 | Symphony in G major (Wq 173), his first. |
1742–44 | “Prussian” and “Württemberg” Sonatas. |
1753 | Treatise: “Essay on the True Art of Playing Keyboard Instruments” (First part; second part in 1762) |
1758 | Publication of “Professor Gellert’s Sacred Odes and Songs” (Second collection in 1764) |
1760 | Publication of “Six Sonatas for Keyboard with Varied Reprises.” |
1768 | He succeeds Telemann as music director and cantor at the Johanneum Latin school in Hamburg. Composes liturgical music (cantatas) as well as instrumental works (symphonies, concerti, chamber music), large vocal works (Passion settings and oratorios), and occasional compositions for the city’s musical establishment. Organizes “Bach’s Private Concerts.” |
1775 | Oratorio “Die Israeliten in der Wüste” (“The Israelites in the Desert”). |
1779–87 | Publication of “Clavier Sonatas and Free Fantasies along with Divers Rondos […] for Experts and Amateurs.” |
1788 | Dies in Hamburg on December 14. |