Organ Trios after Johann Sebastian Bach Organ - Sheet Music

J. S. Bach supplied the sources: three movements from the Sonata for viola da gamba and harpsichord BWV 1027 and the closing movement of the Sonata BWV 1029, as well as the three-part Invention (Sinfonia) in D minor BWV 790. Then it was the turn of pupils and friends who were in large part responsible for creating five organ trios out of the master's original material. Bach's friend Johann Peter Kellner is presumed to have arranged at least two of these trios. The "Organ Trios After J. S. Bach" not only presents four trios for the first time in print, but also contains an "encore:" the Andante from BWV 1027 that was missing in the contemporary transmission. Renowned organist Gerhard Weinberger offers his own organ trio arrangement of this piece in the appendix. The four-movement Sonata BWV 1027 is thus now also accessible to organists in its entirety.

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Details

Instrument:
Organ Organ Solo
Genres:
Baroque Period
Publishers:
Breitkopf and Haertel
ISBN:
9790004182505
Format:
Score Collection / Songbook
Item types:
Physical
Musical forms:
Symphony
Usages:
School and Community
Size:
12 x 9 inches
Number of Pages:
32
Shipping Weight:
0.39 pounds

Organ

SKU: BR.EB-8779

After Johann Sebastian Bach. Composed by Johann Sebastian) (Bach. Arranged by Gerhard Weinberger. Solo instruments; Softcover. Edition Breitkopf.

J. S. Bach supplied the sources: three movements from the Sonata for viola da gamba and harpsichord BWV 1027 and the closing movement of the Sonata BWV 1029, as well as the three-part Invention (Sinfonia) in D minor BWV 790. Then it was the turn of pup. Baroque period. Score. 32 pages. Breitkopf and Haertel #EB 8779. Published by Breitkopf and Haertel (BR.EB-8779).

ISBN 9790004182505. 12 x 9 inches.

J. S. Bach supplied the sources: three movements from the Sonata for viola da gamba and harpsichord BWV 1027 and the closing movement of the Sonata BWV 1029, as well as the three-part Invention (Sinfonia) in D minor BWV 790. Then it was the turn of pupils and friends who were in large part responsible for creating five organ trios out of the master's original material. Bach's friend Johann Peter Kellner is presumed to have arranged at least two of these trios. The "Organ Trios After J. S. Bach" not only presents four trios for the first time in print, but also contains an "encore:" the Andante from BWV 1027 that was missing in the contemporary transmission. Renowned organist Gerhard Weinberger offers his own organ trio arrangement of this piece in the appendix. The four-movement Sonata BWV 1027 is thus now also accessible to organists in its entirety.