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Bonizzoni: Johann Sebastian Bach – Die Kunst der Fuge (FLAC)

Bonizzoni: Johann Sebastian Bach - Die Kunst der Fuge (FLAC)
Bonizzoni: Johann Sebastian Bach – Die Kunst der Fuge (FLAC)

Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach
Performer: Fabio Bonizzoni, Mariko Uchimura
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Glossa
Catalogue: GCDP31510
Release: 2011
Size: 380 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

The Art of Fugue, BWV1080
01. Contrapunctus I
02. Contrapunctus III
03. Contrapunctus II
04. Contrapunctus V
05. Contrapunctus IX a 4 alla Duodecima
06. Contrapunctus a 4 , BWV1080/10
07. Contrapunctus VI a 4 in Stylo Francese
08. Contrapunctus VII a 4 per Augmentationem et Diminutionem
09. Canon II, alla Ottava
10. Contrapunctus VIII a 3
11. Contrapunctus XI a 4
12. Canon I, per Augmentationem in Contrario Motu
13. Contrapunctus XIIa a 4, rectus
14. Contrapunctus XIIb a 4, inversus
15. Contrapunctus XIIIb a 3, inversus
16. Contrapunctus XIIIa a 3, rectus
17. Fuga a 3 Soggetti (Contrapunctus XIV)

The fact that Bach may have been working on Die Kunst der Fuge up until the point that he died and the fact that the work’s concluding contrapunctus may have been left incomplete are just two factors which have subsequently allowed posterity’s imagination to operate in full flight. When Bach passed away, without further delay his sons busied themselves preparing this score work for printing and were the first in nurturing the legend that Bach, incapable of completing the final contrapunctus, dictated a four-part chorale on his deathbed in order to compensate for the contrapunctus’ abrupt end and as a way of saying farewell… In any case, what we are left with is a unique composition which for a great deal of time has been considered as a purely theoretical exercise and one which was not intended to be performed. Nowadays, however, many experts think otherwise and among them is Fabio Bonizzoni, who is convinced that this is music written for a keyboard instrument, and very likely for a harpsichord. Our musician, who hails from Milan, has opted with his recording for the structure of Bach’s first autograph version, the so-called P200 manuscript, making use of an additional harpsichord for four of the contrapuncti, something which was suggested by Bach himself in that manuscript.


Fabio Bonizzoni, whose artistry is currently particularly being appreciated on account of his memorable series of recordings of Handel’s Italian cantatas, presents with this album one of his own most personal projects; but one which also acts as a punctuation point prior to Bonizzoni embarking upon a new set of adventures with his ensemble La Risonanza.

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