
With his Fifth Brandenburg Concerto of 1719, Bach had created the first
ever harpsichord concerto. From 1729, in Leipzig, the opportunity arose
to continue this experiment: each week at Café Zimmermann he conducted
his Collegium musicum in orchestral concerts that lasted around two
hours. In the summer of 1733, he took delivery of “a new harpsichord,
the like of which has not been heard before around here”. This
magnificent instrument, which featured at the Zimmermann concerts,
urgently called for concertos to be played by himself as soloist, and
even more so his sons and students. Not only in Saxony but also well
beyond, Bach was considered to be the absolute authority in all things
harpsichord and organ; he thus had to make his own contribution to the
emerging genre of the “clavier concerto”. The manuscript of his six
harpsichord concertos BWV1052 to 1057 should therefore be understood as a
repertoire collection for his Collegium musicum, and as a compositional
manifesto.
Within the six concertos, each work takes on a specific function: The D
minor concerto is the longest, most virtuosic and most Italianate of the
collection. The stormy and sombre concerto is followed by the serene
and cantabile E major concerto which, as Joshua Rifkin has convincingly argued, may well be based on a lost oboe concerto in E flat major
Whilst the concertos in D minor and E major are substantial works, the concertos in A major and F minor are far more compact. Both display noticeable influences of the galant style and were therefore probably not written before 1730.
Whilst the concertos in D minor and E major are substantial works, the concertos in A major and F minor are far more compact. Both display noticeable influences of the galant style and were therefore probably not written before 1730.
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