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EPISODE · Sep 18, 2004

Bach Sinfonia 5

from In the Hands · host Paul Cantrell

The first Bach of the blog, one of his sinfonias (also known as three-part inventions). The three parts in this one are not obvious at first: the upper two voice are wonderfully intertwined, and do an intricate little tango together as third voice turns slowly through a cycle of Bach permutations underneath. I love the way it unfolds. Johann Sebastian Bach ▶️ Sinfonia No. 5 Paul Cantrell, piano ⬇️ Download audio file for Sinfonia No. 5 (3:58 / 5.0 M) As I listen to myself play this one, it sounds like I’m still a bit tentative with a new piece — certainly there is room to be more expressive, and more fluid. I am pleased to have worked out the ornaments, though, which Bach only suggests and leaves largely at the performer’s liberty. (Those are are the little slides, twirls and general filigree in the upper voices.) I know now why these baroque performers made a custom of improvising ornaments: it’s fun!

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Sep 18, 2004

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Bach Sinfonia 5

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The first Bach of the blog, one of his sinfonias (also known as three-part inventions). The three parts in this one are not obvious at first: the upper two voice are wonderfully intertwined, and do an intricate little tango together as third voice...

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