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Home » Classical Downloads » Rische: C.P.E. Bach – Piano Concertos Wq.1, Wq.45, Wq.15 (FLAC)

Rische: C.P.E. Bach – Piano Concertos Wq.1, Wq.45, Wq.15 (FLAC)

Rische: C.P.E. Bach - Piano Concertos Wq.1, Wq.45, Wq.15 (FLAC)
Rische: C.P.E. Bach – Piano Concertos Wq.1, Wq.45, Wq.15 (FLAC)

Composer: Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
Performer: Michael Rische, Berlin Baroque Soloists
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: HC17034
Catalogue: Hänssler
Release: 2017
Size: 242 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

Keyboard Concerto in A minor, Wq. 1 (H403)
01. I. Allegro (Cadenza by M. Rische)
02. II. Andante (Cadenza by M. Rische)
03. III. Allegro assai

Keyboard Concerto in D major, Wq. 45 (H478)
04. I. Allegretto
05. II. Andantino
06. III. Allegro

Keyboard Concerto in E minor, Wq. 15 (H418)
07. I. Allegro
08. II. Adagio
09. III. Vivace

What happened in Leipzig in 1733 was crucial to the development of a musical genre that has been an integral part of the music scene for over two hundred years: the keyboard concerto. That year, Johann Sebastian Bach wrote his great Concerto in D minor BWV 1052 and his second oldest son Carl Philipp Emanuel, aged just 19, composed his first keyboard concerto, the Concerto Wq 1 in A minor. Anyone who directly compares the two concertos will hardly believe that they were both written in the same place and at the same time: on the one hand, the elder Bach’s harpsichord piece, plumbs the deepest depths of polyphony; on the other, the younger Bach’s new approach to keyboard-writing, a style that almost seems to overlook the omnipresent tradition of counterpoint. Setting aside the extremely complicated compositional history of JS Bach’s harpsichord concerto — from the presumed adaptation of an oboe concerto by Benedetto Marcello through to the arrangement of Bach’s own violin concerto for keyboard by his son Emanuel (BWV 1052a) — what is certain is that the younger Bach did not simply inherit the keyboard concerto as a genre from the hands of his father; he played a decisive part in shaping and enriching it from the outset. Another point to note is that the composer’s artistic identity fundamentally changed during this period: the truths of faith ceased to be the focal point, eclipsed by principles of the Enlightenment, namely self-assurance and self-reliance.

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