Violin Concerto in A minor (Bach)

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Violin Concerto in A minor
BWV 1041
by J. S. Bach
The first twelve bars of the third movement
Composed1717 (1717)–1723
Duration15 minutes
Movements3
Instrumental
  • Violin
  • strings
  • continuo
Recordings
I. Allegro moderato (U.S. Marine Band)
II. Andante (U.S. Marine Band)
III. Allegro assai (U.S. Marine Band)

The Violin Concerto in A minor, BWV 1041, is a violin concerto by Johann Sebastian Bach. It shows the influence of Italian composers such as Bach's older contemporary Vivaldi.

Bach is known to have studied Vivaldi's music from around 1714 when he was working at Weimar.[1] Italian influence can be seen in keyboard music he composed around that time. However, the date of the concerto is the subject of dispute as the original score has not survived. Most scholars think it was written after he had left Weimar (the violinist Lina Tur Bonet is in a minority in suggesting it was written there).[2] It is "generally thought to have been composed at Köthen" (where Bach worked in the period 1717–23).[3] It could have been written at Leipzig, as the only autograph source to survive is a set of parts Bach copied out (along with Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Johann Ludwig Krebs, and an unknown copyist) in Leipzig c. 1730 from a now lost score or draft.[4]

Christoph Wolff has argued that the work may have been written during Bach's time as director of Leipzig's Collegium Musicum.[4] John Butt takes a similar view, suggesting that Bach wrote it "probably soon after taking over the Leipzig Collegium Musicum in 1729".[citation needed]

Structure and analysis[edit]

The piece has three movements:

  1. Allegro moderato, in A minor, 2
    4
    meter;
    The opening movement is in ritornello form. This means that there is a main section that comes back in fragments in both the solo violin and orchestral parts. This 'ritornello' can be found in the first movement up until bar 24. The motifs of the theme appear in changing combinations and are separated and intensified throughout the movement.
  2. Andante, in C major, common time meter;
    In the Andante second movement, Bach uses an insistent pattern in the ostinato bass part that is repeated constantly in the movement. He focuses the variation in the harmonic relations. Butt notes that "Bach seems to have associated" the ostinato scheme "particularly with violin concertos.".
  3. Allegro assai, in A minor, 9
    8
    meter.
    In the final movement Bach relies on bariolage figures to generate striking acoustic effects. The meter and rhythm are those of a gigue.[5] Butt describes it as "perhaps Bach's most animated and carefree movement in the minor mode."

A typical performance of the concerto takes around 15 minutes.

Publication[edit]

The concerto was published for the first time in 1852.[6] In the 1870s Wilhelm Rust edited it for publication in the first complete edition of Bach's works.

Instrumentations and transcriptions[edit]

The Keyboard Concerto in G minor, BWV 1058 is an arrangement of this concerto with harpsichord.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Vivaldi's influence was discussed by Bach's first biographer Forkel in Johann Sebastian Bach: His Life, Art, and Work.
  2. ^ "Himmelsburg". Glossa. Retrieved 29 May 2024.
  3. ^ Stowell, Robin (1999). "Violin Concertos". In Boyd, Malcolm; Butt, John (eds.). J. S. Bach. Oxford Composer Companions. Oxford University Press. p. 492. ISBN 978-0-19-866208-2.
  4. ^ a b Wolff, Christoph (1991). "Bach's Leipzig Chamber Music". Bach: essays on his life and music. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 234–237. ISBN 978-0-674-05926-9.
  5. ^ Robin Stowell, "Violin Concertos," in Oxford Composer Companions: J.S. Bach, Oxford University Press, 1999, p. 493
  6. ^ "Violin concerto in A minor". Netherlands Bach Society.

External links[edit]