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Alard: Bach – The Work for Organ & Harpsichord Chapter II (24/44 FLAC)

Alard: Bach - The Work for Organ & Harpsichord Chapter II (24/44 FLAC)
Alard: Bach – The Work for Organ & Harpsichord Chapter II (24/44 FLAC)

HiRes FLAC

Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach
Performer: Benjamin Alard
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Harmonia Mundi
Catalogue: HMC90245052DE2
Release: 2017
Size: 377 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: cover

01. Keyboard Sonata in D major, BWV963
02. Fantasia in C major, BWV570
03. Aria Variata in A minor, BWV989 ‘alla Maniera Italiana’
04. Fantasia (Concerto) in G major, BWV571
05. Fugue in B minor on a theme by Albinoni, BWV951a (Early Version)

Organist and harpsichordist Benjamin Alard has put his mind to producing a complete recording of J.S. Bach’s works for keyboard instruments. At this point we should note that the title for the English release, “The Work for Organ & Harpsichord” may cause confusion. It should in fact read “The Work for Organ & for Harpsichord”… Bach, after all, never wrote anything for organ and harpsichord playing together… But we digress. This sprawling work, covering thirty hours of music, will tell the story of the Cantor of Leipzig in fourteen chapters; and it seems that it is the first complete recording for all the works for a solo keyboard – i.e. all the music for organ and all the music for solo harpsichord – that Bach wrote, executed by one single musician. Alard attempts to bring out these albums in an order that respects the chronology of his life, following his influences, his journeys, his professional choices. The fourteen chapters, in an oblique numerological jest, represent the fourteen letters of his name. The recording was started on the André Silbermann organ (1718) in the church of Sainte-Aurélie in Strasbourg, and on a harpsichord made by Émile Jobin, inspired by a Ruckers of 1612 and a Dulcken from 1747. The first volume of this collected works will bring together the works composed between 1695 and 1705. It should come as no surprise that the works from Bach’s youth should carry such high BWV numbers – the numbering system of the Bach Werke Verzeichnis is not chronological, and the organ works run from BWV 525 to 771, and those for harpsichord from 772 to 994.

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