JS Bach - English Suites BWV809-811
£9.45
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Label: Charade
Cat No: CHA3045
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Instrumental
Release Date: 17th September 2021
Contents
Works
English Suites (6), BWV806-811Artists
Eleonore Buhler-Kestler (harpsichord)Works
English Suites (6), BWV806-811Artists
Eleonore Buhler-Kestler (harpsichord)About
According to the harpsichordist, “One must play all six and understand the suites as a cycle.” In nos. 4-6, as with the English Suites nos. 1-3, the first suite, composed in the major, is followed by two suites in minor keys. In all six suites there are challenging, extended preludes, with the prelude in the concluding sixth suite counting as one of the longest that Bach ever wrote: it comprises a full 200 bars.
The title “English Suites” is misleading; except for the Preludes and a few Italian Gigues, Bach adheres to the French style. Tradition has it that they received their name because Bach wrote them “for a distinguished Englishman”. However, the actual source of this explanation is still unknown today (Johann Nikolaus Forkel made this claim in his Bach biography of 1802). Bach himself had not provided a title for these compositions and left them unpublished throughout his life. They were first published in Leipzig in 1805.
Bach probably wrote the cycle around 1715 during his time in Weimar to bolster his reputation as “Germany’s best harpsichordist” and introduce himself at larger courts such as those in Gotha or Dresden. The autograph of the English Suites is lost; the earliest copies date to 1716/17. Bach had already been residing at the Weimar court since 1708, where he was initially a chamber musician and court organist until he was finally promoted to concertmaster.
Not only did he impress his colleagues and competitors with his composition of the English Suites, but harpsichord makers as well. In 1718 he acquired a new, large harpsichord in Berlin for the court of Köthen so that he could play on an optimal instrument capable of realizing the high musical and technical demands of these works.
Eleonore Bühler-Kestler is equal to these demands. She explains that she did not play any of the suites during her studies, and only over time did they become more and more attractive to her. Born in 1930, Eleonore Bühler-Kestler devoted herself to Bach’s first cycle of harpsichord suites only late and many years after recording his Goldberg Variations, Partitas, and Toccatas. In the meantime, she says that Bach’s music has become a strong pillar in her life. Once again, she presents Bach’s English Suites in the second part of the complete recording with precision, liveliness, and passion.
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