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That single piece everyone knows.

Contratrombone64

Admiral of Fugues
Of course BWV 565 is so well known that scarely a person in the west wouldn't be able to say he/she'd not heard it.

But, is it really Bach?

I heard an interesting discussion about the work and there are two schools of thought, both poles apart, obvious one in favour of good ol' Johann Sebastian and one in favour of another (suggests including, but not limited to, Krebs).

The more I listen to Bach's organ music the more this work, for me, stands out apart from the rest in a very indescribable way. There's something stagnant about his harmonic richness that's almost never apparent in his other great organ works ... it's my humble opinion of course and I don't give a tincker's cuss if you disagree. Simply a point of dicussion.
 

Marc

New member
Of course BWV 565 is so well known that scarely a person in the west wouldn't be able to say he/she'd not heard it.

But, is it really Bach?

Ha! The good old BWV 565 discussion!

BWV 565:
Johann Sebastian Bach?
Johann Heinrich Buttstett?
Johann Peter Kellner?

Or even: composed originally for violin?

Some parts of the Fugue seem to be inspired by a theme of the Fantasia in a minor P 125, of Johann Pachelbel.

J.S. Bach was scholed by his eldest brother Johann Christoph Bach, who was a pupil of Pachelbel and probably used lots of copies of Pachelbel's music in his teaching. This Fantasia P 125 was not yet published, not even during J.S. Bach's entire life. That's why many believe that a young J.S. Bach might well have been the composer, because of the close relationship between Pachelbel and the Bach family.

Because of the both North and South German influences in BWV 565, J.H. Buttstett, who was also a pupil of Pachelbel, comes to mind, too. He was an important keyboard composer in his time, like J.S. Bach he was considered as being slightly 'old-fashioned' during his own lifetime, and he is known for combining those northern and southern styles in a contrapuntal way. But I personally don't find the works I've heard from him as impressive as BWV 565.

Of the Bach pupils, J.P. Kellner is known for adapting much of the Grandmaster's style. I once read that some scholars are almost certain that he's the composer.
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Then it wouldn't be a Stylus Phantasticus, but a Sturm und Drang piece!
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Cast yer votes, ladies & gentlemen.
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(And let's not forget that fourth option: because of the composing style, scholars like Peter Williams assume that BWV 565 is an organ arrangment of a violin solo piece.)

Oh, btw: I like to listen to BWV 565 very much, but it's my least favourite Toccata by Bach.
It's a great introduction to free baroque organ music though, who ever the composer might be.
AFAIK, the first surviving (late 18th century) copies of the piece mentioned Sebastian as the composer. The oldest copy is by Johannes Ringk, who, btw, was a pupil of J.P. Kellner. It wouldn't surprise me if those old sources, if they mention the name of Bach, proved to be more reliable than all those searching and digging 20th and 21st century scholars.
 

Luis Enrique

New member
My opinion is that BWV 565 has the characteristics of a truly-genius.youth-organist, who dares to use variations and dissonants and combine them with the regular style music of his time. As far ( and as little) I know, this work fits well in the character, style and youth of J.S.B.
 

mathetes1963

New member
Maybe the question to ask is NOT whether it is an "authentic" Bach work, because we'll never know...but what about WHO you think plays it best? :D
 

JHC

Chief assistant to the assistant chief
Maybe the question to ask is NOT whether it is an "authentic" Bach work, because we'll never know...but what about WHO you think plays it best? :D

I have it on the Hyperion CD of Christopher Herrick on the Metzler organ, Stadtkirche, Switzerland IMO that is a pretty good performance, but I am not an Organist so can really not asses the technical performance
 

mathetes1963

New member
I have some of the Herrick recordings including the Toccatas, they are uniformly excellent IMHO. The first recording of BWV 565 I owned back in the vinyl age was Lionel Rogg on the Metzler at St. Peter's Cathedral, Geneva. Excellent performance, but I think it is OOP.
 
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mathetes1963

New member
Mathetes is it this version, it's Rogg but does not specify which organ, you can listen to a sample.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Bach-Prelud...=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=music&qid=1265318157&sr=1-1

I have a CD of Rogg on the Metzler at St Peter playing Art of Fugue.

YESS!! I was able to enlarge the back cover just enough to confirm that. Have to put that one on my Amazon wishlist, I hope it's on the USA site.

Thanks, Dorsetmike! :D

EDIT: It is! And at a very reasonable price, too.
 

dll927

New member
Are we going to get into another composer controversy? Wasn't it someone who called himself "Robert Newman" who a while back was acting as if Mozart never existed? Where do such people come from?

Nobody alive now ever met these composers, but we have to take it on faith that they were there. Next, we'll have somebody come along and tell us that the St. Sulpice organ wes built by little old men with three arms.

There are such people as "revisionist" historians, but that doesn't mean they can change what happened. It's all in "interpretation".
 

mathetes1963

New member
Nobody's pulling a 'Robert Newman' here, that I can see. I just though it was good-natured discussion. Did I miss something? :confused:
 

Marc

New member
Nobody's pulling a 'Robert Newman' here, that I can see. I just though it was good-natured discussion. Did I miss something? :confused:

No, you didn't.
There is no link with mr. Newman.

But there are links with a.o. the famous Bach biographer Philipp Spitta (1841-1894), who f.i. thought that the fugue was relatively weak compared to lots of other authentic Bach fugues (waves of tones that do not relate in any way to any theme in the piece). Spitta mentioned also the 'relationship' of BWV 565 with works by Pachelbel and Buttstett.

So, the discussion about BWV 565, its plusses and its minors, is at least more than a century old. This can happen with pieces of which the original manuscript has gone lost.

Roger Bullivant mentioned the very unlike-Bach-character of the piece in his book Fugue (1971).
And there's Peter Williams, a scholar who wrote a famous article about BWV 565 and its authenticity back in July 1981, in the Early Music magazine. He suggested a.o. the violin source.
More recent contributors to the discussion are scholars like Rolf-Dietrich Claus and organist John Butt.
And, not to forget: in Gerhard Weinberger's recent integral of Bach's organ works (label: CPO) it is catalogued as a 'dubious and/or spurious work'. Also, in lots of 'normal' cd-booklets, which aren't written by mr. Newman, the doubt about its authenticity is mentioned.

I'm definitely not a scholar, and also not an organist. I'm just an interested and enthousiastic layman. I couldn't believe the 'gossip' when I first heard about it. But after that I got to listen to a lot of other Bach (organ) works.
If BWV 565 is concerned: I really love to listen to this spectacular piece, but, compared to dozens and dozens of other compositions by Bach, I find it not very interesting. But I'm still not convinced that it's not by Bach. To me, it sounds like a very young Bach, a budding genious so to speak, willing to exploit the instrument entirely, inspired by some of his beloved composers and predecessors like Buxtehude and Pachelbel.

My favourite recording of BWV 565 is probably by Daniel Chorzempa, at the Flentrop organ of the Onze Lieve Vrouwekerk, Breda, Netherlands.
I also like Lorenzo Ghielmi at the Ahrend organ of the San Simpliciano Cathedral, Milan, Italy.
Other personal faves: recordings by Thiemo Janssen (Arp Schnitger organ, Norden, Germany), Stefan Johannes Bleicher (Holzhey organ, Weissenau, Germany), Ewald Kooiman (Müller organ, St. Bavo Haarlem, NL) and Gustav Leonhardt (Müller organ, Waalse Kerk Amsterdam, NL).
I prefer the piece performed with a kind of youthful bravado and 'no nonsense' feeling, preferably in a straightforward way of playing.
 

Contratrombone64

Admiral of Fugues
Interesting how "young Bach" is used here, I really can't describe if I could tell if a piece was "young" or "old" Bach. Unlike, say, with Mozart or even Haydn.
 

Marc

New member
Interesting how "young Bach" is used here, I really can't describe if I could tell if a piece was "young" or "old" Bach. Unlike, say, with Mozart or even Haydn.

Sure, we don't know real childhood work of JSB.
So: 'young' and 'mature' mean different things than, say, when Mozart is the subject.

With Bach's organ music you can take the risk to 'gamble' ;), because a lot of his work for this instrument is written by a 'young' Bach (Weimar period and before).

Apart from that: although I understand what you're saying, especially helped by your comparison with Haydn & Mozart, I think that there is certainly a development with Bach's composing, too.

When organ music is concerned: there are some chorale preludes with dazzling interlude passages, and they are certainly a young man's work. Let's say: the young man that confused the churchgoers of f.i. Arnstadt with his strange chorale accompaniments. :)

When the free pieces are concerned: lots of his 'youth' Preludes/Toccatas are in 3 (or even more: BWV 566) parts: Praeludim - Fugue - Postludium. In this, Bach certainly was inspired by predecessors like Buxtehude and Böhm. Also these works sound more free and loose: spectacular, rhapsodic, more pedal solos. The 'mature' works are more refined, more majestic and striking, pedal parts more integrated in the entire piece, and Bach got rid of the 17th centurial habit by ending with the postludium.

Of course, this is just general talk.

But listen f.i. to BWV 531 (young Bach) and BWV 547 (mature Bach), both in C Major.

To me, it depends on my mood if I prefer the young or the mature Bach. One thing I can say for sure: I like them both very very much!
 

Soubasse

New member
For me there are simply too many inconsistencies in this work compared to the numerous others that count among the collection of JSB. There are also the "alarming" things which stand out such as the very opening of the Toccata (octaves) and the very final cadence of the Fugue (plagal, which was all but unheard of in central German Baroque).

The fugue I find far too underdeveloped even for young Bach. It doesn't even compare to the well-known Buxtehude influence. The counter-subject is nothing more than a parallel 6th harmonisation of the subject which is dull, even for a younger JSB. There are also those drawn out (and for me, rather tedious) echo passages in the fugue which are unrelated to any material presented elsewhere. The solo pedal entry of the subject later on is also without precedent - it just wasn't the "done thing" in those days, even for a young composer. They would have been discouraged from doing such a thing. Granted Bach really did enjoy bending the rules on occasion, but when he did so, he did it with magnificent panache!

There's too much of the Toccata and Fugue in d minor that is, relative to the known works (young or old) of JSB, compositionally inept. Personally I favour the theory that it was an arrangement in a Baroque style, possibly from the Romantic era, based on fragments/drafts of an earlier (anonymous) manuscript.


But in the end, who can really know?? I just might be in for a hell of a surprise! :)
 

Dorsetmike

Member
If this is the case why is it that it's so popular? I must admit it's not my Bach number 1, in fact due to its overexposure probably not even in the top 5.

As for orchestral versions (especially the Fantasia one) they don't rate quite as low as Gorecki on my all time list but well down nevertheless.
 

Marc

New member
Soubasse,
I agree at least on the very tedious echo passages in the fugue. Not my cup of tea, and I always want to get it over with. :grin:

I also agree about the fact that there's a countless amount of compositions in the BWV-catalogue that are much more impressive and striking than no. 565.

But I definitely don't agree with the hypothesis that it's a Baroque imitation of the Romantic era.

The first handwritten copy of the piece is by Johannes Ringk. He was a pupil of Johann Peter Kellner (1705-1772), who was a pupil of J.S. Bach. Ringk was organist of the Marienkirche in Berlin from 1754 until his death in 1778. Ringk also made a lot of copies of the so-called Kellner collection: a collection of copies by J.P. Kellner, made around 1725.
So I don't see the link with the Romantic era.

You mention the 'underdevelopment' of the piece. This might be caused by the possibility that BWV 565 is a transcription of a solo violin work, as Peter Williams tried to prove in his 1981 article.
 

Marc

New member
If this is the case why is it that it's so popular?

Because 'simplicity' does work in music. Most big hits in the hitparade aren't very difficult compositions, AFAIK.

Also: compared to a lot of other BWV catalogue works, BWV 565 sounds spectacular (on the outside), and is a rather direct composition and not very difficult to 'grab'.

I know of many non-classical listeners who adore BWV 565 or even get bewildered by it, and absolutely dislike real great(er) organ works like the Passacaglia, or the Prelude & Fugue in E Flat BWV 552, or the Chorale Prelude Aus tiefer Not schrei ich zu dir BWV 686 et cetera. I tried to convince them otherwise, but most of them find those pieces too long, utterly heavy, unattractive and/or boring.

Another cause for its popularity is the fact that Albert Schweitzer, who at his time was known as a great Bach connaisseur with lots of influence, absolutely adored the piece. He thought of it as a composition of great visionary power. His own performance of BWV 565 became one of the best-known vinyl recordings before World War II. I think it was recorded in 1935 or 1936 at the Harrison organ of All Hallows Church. Alas, the instrument was destroyed in the 1940 bombing raids on London.
 
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