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J Bach S - Introduction To Con Brandenburg 4/5

Details

Format: CD
Catalog: 8558055
Rel. Date: 07/16/2002
UPC: 636943805527

Introduction To Con Brandenburg 4/5
Artist: J Bach S
Format: CD
New: Available $25.99
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Formats and Editions

DISC: 1

1. The Brandenburgs As Concerti Grossi
2. Introduction: Melody, Theme And Motif; Bach's Opening Gambit
3. Onwards And Upwards: Motif No.2 And Its Function
4. The Two Elements Of Motif No.2 And The Effect Of Their Combinati
5. The 'Motto' Rhythm Hidden Even Within The Opening Bar
6. Motif No.3, Introduced By The Two Recorders, Has A Kind Of 'Hove
7. Motif No.3, Repeated For A Second, 'Directed' Listen
8. Bach Reminds Us Of The Opening
9. Motif No.4 - A Steadily Rising Derivative Of Motif No.1
10. Motif No.5, A Lovely, Bouncy, Syncopated Flourish, In Which All
11. Opening Ritornello (Complete)
12. Episode 1 Begins With Virtuoso Entry Of The Solo Violin, Made Up
13. Motif No.3 Returns, Courtesy Of The Recorders, Recently Sideline
14. Ritonello 2, A Varied Repeat Of Ritornello 1, Arrives After Much
15. Episode 2, Part 1, Preceded By The 'Fanfare' Motif From Which It
16. Episode 2 Continued, With More Bravura Dazzle From The Solo Viol
17. Repeat Of Section For Purposes Of Hearing The Harmonic Movement
18. Ritornello 3, With The Prominent Participation Of The Soloists
19. Episode 3 Prove Retrospective, Featuring Transposed Repeats Of E
20. Ritornello 4, Not Altogether What It Might Seem; Solo Violin Tak
21. Episode 4. Cue To Part 1, Focusing On 'Soloistic' Counterpoint P
22. Return To Ritornello 4 To Hear Sources Of Episode 4, Part 2
23. Episode 4 Continued, With Emphasis Placed On Conversational Inte
24. Return To Opening Ritornello In Order To Enhance Awareness Of Th
25. Ritornello 5, Beginning
26. Ritornello 5 Continued, With Emphasis On The Determined Banishme
27. Cue To Complete Performance Of First Movement
28. First Movement (Complete)
29. Introduction: Rhythmic Motif Provides Basis For Whole Movement;
30. The Melody Not Much To Write Home About; Nor Is The Meek 'Answer
31. Putting The Two Together, Thereby Establishing A Relationship
32. Contrast And Syncopation - Their Relationship In Opening Section
33. Listening From The 'Bottom Up'
34. The Intertwining And Alteration Of Solo And Orchestra; The Irreg
35. The Next Orchestral Phrase; Slowing The Pace But Not The Tempo
36. The First Section (Complete)
37. The Next Section; Foreground Symmetry And Background Variety
38. The Central Section's Groupings Are Hugely Asymmetrical
39. Cue To Second Movement As A Whole
40. Second Movement (Complete)
41. Introduction To The Third Movement...
42. Fugue Subject
43. First Counter-Subject
44. Second Counter-Subject
45. Bass Entry Of The Subject
46. Exposition (Complete)
47. First Episode; The Us Of Fragmentary Derivatives
48. The Difference A Detail Can Make!
49. Harmonic Rhythm Defined; Back To The Beginning To Find The Seed.
50. ...And Now The Blossom
51. The First Solo Episode; A Confusion Of Terms; Onwards, To The In
52. Ritornello 2 Complete
53. Solo Episode 2 Dominated by Thrilling Virtuosity From The Solo V
54. Ritornello 3: Highly Contrapuntal And Dominated By Subject-Deriv
55. Ritornello 3 Continues: Engine Of Harmonic Motion Repeated At Hi
56. More On Ritornello 3: The Use Of Long, Sustained, Slightly Synco
57. Ritornello 3 (Complete)
58. Solo Episode 3 - Less Solo Than Earlier Ones, What With (Albeit
59. The Two Recorders Converse In Canon, Accompanied For Six Exhilar
60. Finishing Solo Exposition 3: Orchestral Cellos Introduce What So
61. Approaching The Final Ritornello; Stretto Explained
62. Cue To Final Ritornello, Noting Tension-Building 'Pedal Point' I
63. Coda - The 'Tail-Piece', With Its Surprising 'Hammer Strokes'
64. Cue To Third Movement
65. Third Movement (Complete)

DISC: 2

1. Opening Music; Analysis And Phony Analysis; Shaw Quote; Music: M
2. Music, Energy And Relationship
3. The Outlines Of A Melody Emerge
4. The Opening Bar Again
5. Motif No.2: Ta/Dee-Ya, Dee-Ya, Dee-Ya
6. Motif No.3, And An Important Feature Of Its Rhythm
7. Beethoven Fifth Symphony (Opening)
8. Motif No.4
9. Motif No.5
10. Motif No.6
11. Episode 1: A 'Love Duet'
12. Episode 1 Continued; Violin And Flute Reverse Direction Of Their
13. 'False' Ritornello; Soloists Interrupt; Rising 'Sighing' Motif;
14. Four Things Going On At Once, In Violin, Flute, Harpsichord Righ
15. The Orchestra Returns, Picking Up At Exactly The Spot Where It W
16. The Harpsichord Intervenes With Derivative Of Motif 4; Key Shift
17. The Orchestra Returns To Foreground And Brings This Section To A
18. Harpsichord Emerges As Virtuoso; A Series Of Expectations Are Fr
19. A Backwards Look; Blurred Distinctions Between Soloists And Orch
20. Out Of The Twilight Zone; A Sequence Of Surprises
21. The Epoch-Making Harpsichord Cadenza And The Final Ritornello
22. Cue To First Movement
23. First Movement (Complete)
24. Introduction; The Opening Ritornello
25. The First Bar; The First Main Building Block
26. The Flute Motif
27. Opening Of The First Solo Episode
28. An Important Motif; The Second Main Building Block
29. The Second Main Theme
30. Ritornello 2; Violin And Flute As 'Orchestra'
31. Episode 2; Inversion Of Original Motifs
32. More On Episode 2
33. Episode 1 And Episode 2 Compared
34. Episode 2; Key Shifts From D Major To F Sharp Minor
35. Ritornello 3: An Exact Transposition Of Ritornello 1
36. Episode 3 Contrasted With Episode 1
37. Episode 3 Described In Detail
38. Rotornello 4; Second Main Theme's First Appearance In A Ritornel
39. Episode 4: Dominated By Inversions
40. Cue To Second Movement
41. Second Movement (Complete)
42. Introduction: Ritornello 1
43. The Fugue Subject: Close Juxtaposition Of Contrasting Elements
44. Flute Takes The 'Answer', With Countersubject In The Violin
45. Contrary Motion As A Contrapuntal Device
46. Contrary Motion As A Listening Aid; A New Theme
47. Playing With The Counter-Subject; A Musical Game Of Tag
48. Hidden Rhythms: Background Variety Behind Foreground Uniformity
49. Fugal Writing And The Compatibility Of Parts; The Exposition
50. Episode 1, Taken By Soloists, Contains Importand 'Seeds'
51. The Orchestra Enters At Last, But By Stealth
52. Stretto And Musical Football
53. Key Changes To B Minor, Introducing Extensive Middle Section
54. The Middle Section A Precursor Of The Mozartian 'Development'
55. The Fugue Subject Out In Force: First Four Immediately Consecuti
56. Ambiguity Of Mode And A Scottish Twist
57. Middle Section Continued; Harpsichord Dominates
58. Cue To Last Movement
59. Last Movement (Complete)

        
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