Two Part Invention - Dissertation
Two Part Invention - Dissertation
Two Part Invention - Dissertation
BACH: A PERFORMING
EDITION BASED UPON THE KEYBOARD TECHNIQUE AND
PERFORMANCE PRACTICE OF BACH AND HIS CIRCLE
by
Accepted
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The Texas
For this I
to harpsichordists Gustav
Ill
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
ii
ABSTRACT
vi
LIST OF EXAMPLES
viii
CHAPTER
I.
II.
Pedagogical Significance
Prioritization of Eighteenth-Century
Sources
11
11
Affect
19
IV-
23
23
36
62
62
70
IV
V-
VI.
74
Tempo Considerations
74
78
105
Introduction
105
105
122
Introduction
122
The Clavichord
123
The Harpsichord
126
The Piano
126
132
132
...
138
173
178
254
ABSTRACT
Vll
LIST OF EXAMPLES
2.1
3.1
from
15
30
3.2
38
3.3
43
3.4
47
3.5
found
in the Inventions
49
3.6
52
3.7
53
3.8
3.9
..
54
55
56
4.1
Fingering which
"crosses over"
4.2
5.1
5.2
65
67
..
82
86
5.3
88
5.4
90
5.5
5.6
5.7
92
93
94
5.8
5.9
95
97
98
101
102
103
104
6.1
106
6.2
6.3
108
6.4
6.5
6.6
8.1
109
116
118
120
139
8.2
140
8.3
142
8.4
Giga II articulation
150
8.5
8.6
156
8.7
IX
158
159
CHAPTER I
THE INVENTIONS OF J.S. BACH: PEDAGOGICAL
SIGNIFICANCE AND THE DESIRABILITY OF
INCREASED HISTORICAL AWARENESS
Pedagogical Significance
The fifteen Inventions of Johann Sebastian Bach form one
of the most widely acknowledged bodies of literature deemed
useful for the training of young pianists and other keyboard
players.
Harpsichordist
Versuch liber
Primary sources of
by
10
CHAPTER II
BAROQUE EMPHASIS UPON RHETORIC AND AFFECT
' Willi Apel, The Harvard Dictionary of Music, 2nd ed. (Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1972), 313.
^ See ibid., 313; Claude V. Palisca, Baroque Music, 2nd
ed.(Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1981), 107-112; Piero Weiss
and Richard Taruskin, Music in the Western World: A History in
Documents (New York: Schirmer Books, 1984), 187-189.
11
12
13
in
Variations
on Simple
Intervals,
consists
Schulenberg, 16.
14
lH#t&=Ut^psil^^^^
t.^m^^n-^
^1"^
f-^
r^
f^-F-
13
m^
14
r^tnxi
3
22
23
f:^
24
25
^a
W^mW-
15
~zz
ffl
Example 2 . 1 . Continued.
27
mm
28.
^f.Mifl:^^r
34
m-W_m^^m_^_^W m
i-P-T
^^^^,-j^^^6p
40
wmm
42
i^fc^
48
50
49
iff
?4
^
^
51
3
3
^ ; I ItacS^^j-^ffgf^^
ffi
16
Example 2 . 1 . Continued.
54
Cni^^t:
57
r\
58
56
'fy-
r_i_ll^^^^
59
m^^-mX
0-4t
g^-^-4ffla^- ^ " g ^ ^ ^
60
17
1!
Affect
A quotation from C.P.E. Bach's Essay serves as an
introduction to the topic of affect in Baroque music:
What comprises good performance? The ability
through singing or playing to make the ear conscious
of the true content and affect of a composition. Any
passage can be so radically changed by modifying its
performance that it will be scarcely recognizable....
Good performance, then, occurs when one hears all
19
20
Ibid., 218.
21
22
CHAPTER III
ARTICULATION AND THE IMPACT OF METRICAL
PLACEMENT
Articulation
Before venturing into this topic it is necessary to
clarify a few of the terms which will be used. Rosalyn Tureck
states that "Only one kind of legato exists.... [But] there
are many kinds of staccato...."' She is right, of course.
Notes cannot be partially connected; they can only be
entirely connected or else they exhibit varying amounts of
disconnectedness. Nevertheless, the literature which deals
with the subject of articulation in Baroque music uses the
term "semi-detached" to denote the midpoint between pure
legato and sharp staccato with enough frequency that it would
be cumbersome to insist upon another term in the present
study (though non-legato, which seems less inaccurate, is
also found with some frequency in the literature). The reader
is therefore reminded that when the term "semi-detached" is
found in quotations in the following pages, the laws of
nature are not somehow intended to be broken so that two
sounds are separated from each other while, in some way,
remaining joined together!
Phrasing and articulation are two terms which must be
understood and differentiated, Robert Donington's remarks on
the subject are helpful here:
To inflect the line means to respond to its
implicit patterns. One way of making these patterns
audible is by phrasing and articulation. Phrasing
groups the notes into units of more or less
' Tureck, 6. See also Keller, 51, for a discussion of non-legato.
23
24
25
26
27
clearly
the rule In the music of Bach and probably
all Baroque composers." [emphasis added]
Robert Donington adds
Normal accentuation results from a momentary
silence of articulation followed by a dynamic
emphasis. Organs and harpsichords, having little
control by touch over dynamic level, simulate
accentuation successfully by the silence of
articulation alone. The effect of accentuation can be
further increased by prolonging the note which
carries or simulates the accent: this is sometimes
called 'agogic accent'.'^
The summary of Rosenblum's chart continues: A note
could be emphasized by detaching (shortening) the note before
it. Recurring motives had the same articulation at each
appearance, unless otherwise noted by the composer, while
contrasting motives had contrasting articulations. These
conventions tended to be observed whether or not they were so
marked in the score."
Later, Rosenblum discusses slurs in more depth: Slurs
are given a "string-like" interpretation, with the beginning
receiving an accent or stress while the end contained an
explicit release.' Schulenberg concurs, adding that small
articulative units inform the "phraseology" of the music:
Each slur marks a small, indivisible motivic
unit usually consisting of the arpeggiation of a
single harmony or the embellishment of one note
(e.g., through an appoggiatura). This function of the
slur, recognized as early as 1925 by Schenker...,
should probably take precedence over "phrase marks"
that one might be inclined to add as a result of
motivic analysis.... ""
'^ Schulenberg, 15.
" Donington, 38.
"Rosenblum, 144-147.
" Ibid., 172.
" Schulenberg, 15. See also Butt's summary of Lohmann's remarks
dealing with the impact of metrical placement upon phrasing.
28
Nova.
Jean-Claude
style of playing.""
29
^^Hl^^^
^0^^^^^^m
&
30
31
Butt, 15.
Badura-Skoda, 131
Schulenberg, 151.
32
and the notes that require individual articulation (nonlegato and staccato)."'"
As the eighteenth-century sources make clear, an
understanding of the issues related to articulation in this
repertoire is of the greatest importance. Yet this is not a
task without obstacles, since many of the Bach sources
contain a fair amount of articulative ambiguity:
[Georg von Dadelsen and Alfred Durr] readily
admit that considerable problems arise in
interpreting Bach's articulation markings and... no
edition can reflect the original merely by means of
diplomatic transcription, so incomplete and hastily
drawn are many of Bach's slurrings.... [Yet Dadelsen
has observed that] most instances of inconsistent
articulation are related to minor matters of
performance technique... [while] markings
which
[emphasis added]
33
34
" Butt, 166. For example, a long slur of this type would not
obscure the regular pattern of metrical accentuation, even though it
would indicate a smoother-than-normal performance.
" Schulenberg, 155-56.
35
Dots clarify
textures
in the
"chance ink
36
" Houle, 5.
" Ibid., 201.
"' Jean-Claude Zehnder,Part II, 17, No. 12: 42
" Faulkner, 43.
37
3 4
1 2
3 4
3 2
um
3 4
2 3
5 4
3 2
3 2
1 2 3 4
3 4 3 4
^
5
38
The following
39
Quantitas
Intrinseca
Notarum (also termed
Quantitas
Accentualis
) is that length which results
when all notes of otherwise equally notated value are
performed unequally, so that one note is longer, the
next shorter despite their outward appearance....
[A group of eight eighth] notes are equal according
to their external value... while, according to their
internal value, the first, third, fifth, and seventh
are long, while the second, fourth, sixth, and eighth
are short.... [A] note which, according to its
number, is long receives a strong accent, while one
that is short, according to its number, is expressed
somewhat shorter and softer."'
After cautioning that what is being described are subtle
nuances which, however, are not to be confused with French
notes Inegales,
who
repeatedly stressed in his Anleitung
(p.160)
"the need to correctly observe the good and bad
notes." Some musicians, he continued, also term this
"the long and short, although without reason, for the
duration
is not altered
at all."
[i.e., though each
eighth note in a group may receive different stresses
and articulation, the group is played in even
rhythm.] In this respect, an organ's ability to
achieve these nuances is often underestimated."'
[emphasis added]
Perhaps a comparison with the spoken word will have an
illuminative effect at this point: metered music is
comparable to poetic speech (Kirnberger compared poetic
speech to dance),
40
(1768) :
41
None of the
42
the
mM
M
Bach Gesellschaft Edition, 1853, 1863.
43
45
fei^^di^^^
es
^mfff^^^^mm
Well-Tempered Clayler, Book II, Fugue 4
47
but is performed
48
In faster tempos
r r -- - " - ^ r r
o In slower tempos
Never
rTTr
5 "Lighter" than 3/4
Usually lively
r l i f r rT~TT~f~Tr i^
Never
LULL
Kirnberger, 390-400.
49
for other
Instrumental
media:
articulation according to the natural metrical
hierarchy ('good' and 'bad' notes) was reflected in
the systems of paired fingerings, modified by the
style of the piece, speed of notes and the distance
between them, a knowledge of harmonic accents and
spec if ic f igures.''
Clearly, this represents a contrast to modern phrasing
preferences, as Butt remarks:
In nineteenth-century music two levels of
slurring are often used: smaller slurs indicate the
details of articulation and larger slurs imply a
general 'phrasing'.... There are no authentic
instances of the simultaneous use of smaller and
larger slurs in the music of Bach examined in this
study. A study of slurs unrelated to articulation or
small-scale 'figural' and accentual grouping must be
based on circumstantial evidence
" The existence
of long slurs in Bach's notation challenges the
assertion that consecutive shorter slurs or
inconsistent slurs imply a 'general legato,'
" Butt, 5-6.
" Ibid., p. 52.
'' Ibid. , p. 180.
50
^^^^S
ss
fe
52
==^
^ ^
^-^ipSp^ - - ^ f ^
^^m^
-~)-^
iach G e s e l l s c h a f t
i
Edition,
i-1
J^ 7 -fi-^=d
i^=^x^ r r^f^
^5Pf=
1853, 1863.
53
54
Example 3.9: Gique from the F-major English Suite, measures 1-3,
r~^"^^^hTf=B
ii^
r~r~t -\~r-^^^g?=^
^m
55
Example 3,10: Prelude from the G-minor English Suite, measures 8-13.
r=f
xu
wm
f=
^gg^
I
^
i=5
s^
Bach Gesellschaft Edition, 1853, 1863.
56
notes
Inegales
inegales
were commonly
Schulenberg, 17.
57
Otherwise,
is not appropriate
58
Schulenberg, 16.
Ibid., 16-17.
Badura-Skoda, 17.
59
60
61
CHAPTER IV
BAROQUE FINGERING PRACTICES, HAND
AND BODY POSITION
62
64
crosses over'
^..
3
65
:i
and
Fugetta
and Fugetta
66
.^ 4
3 4 3 4
/! I
5F=3=3=3= ^ '
.^-+3
^
4 5
-^
^MK
sW
fi
5 4 -- 3
5 4 3 2 3
2 15
: J-
12
H^j
Tr
4
,'V*'
at:^ ^
at
B ^ ^^^t^trr
^
2
isEEEEEE^E^
'
J:
Transcribed from the facsimile.
67
1 2
68
Fugues
69
71
72
73
CHAPTER V
TEMPO CONSIDERATIONS AND APPLICABLE
DANCE FORMS
Tempo Considerations
We have little direct and unambiguous evidence of
Bach's intentions concerning tempos for the Inventions.' On
the other hand, this is an area in which modern musicologists
have constructed some guidelines, based upon scattered and
fragmentary evidence. In the obituary of J.S. Bach which
C.P.E. Bach and J.F. Agricola wrote in 1754, one finds the
following: "... of the tempo, which he generally took very
lively, he was uncommonly sure."' Bach scholar Robert Marshall
comments that "The suspicion... that an Allegro tempo
constituted Bach's norm receives virtually explicit
corroboration from the [Obituary]."'
' i.e., we do not know without doubt that when Bach wrote a piece
in the style of a minuet he intended it to be performed at exactly M.M.
138 to the quarter note.
'David, Mendel, and Wolff, 306.
' Robert Marshall, The Music of J.S. Bach: The Sources, the Style,
the Significance (New York: Schirmer Books, 1989), 266.
74
75
Key
Note Value
C major:
quarter-note =
120
C minor:
quarter-note =
108
D major:
dotted-quarter note =
80
D minor:
dotted-quarter note =
72
108
E major:
eighth-note =
144
E minor:
auarter-note =
1 ^7
F major:
quarter-note =
144
F minor:
quarter-note =
116
10
G major:
11
G minor:
quarter-note =
12
A major:
dotted-quarter note =
13
A minor:
quarter-note =
14
15
B minor:
quarter-note =
76
Metronome
Marking
108
84
104
104
77
At that tempo
Slow
78
" J.P. Kirnberger, Die Kunst des Reinen Satzes in der Musik, 376377.
'^ Little and Jenne, 3-5.
" Ibid., 33-34, 217-221.
" Other sources which mention dance genres are much less helpful.
For instance, Paul Badura-Skoda's Interpreting Bach at the Keyboard,
pp. 85-87, which otherwise contains some valuable insights, merely
quotes Griepenkerl's Preface to the old Peters Edition of the Partitas,
nearly without comment. This perpetuates some nineteenth-century
misconceptions and oversimplifications with regard to Baroque dance
genres. A concise overview of Baroque dance as it relates to the suite
for keyboard can be found in Newman, 139-151.
79
each of which
In Baroque dance
80
(arsis)
m.
tfL
Pulse
Beat
Minuet:
Tap
Giga I:
Tap
^fnfufnfnup
f~i*-^Pulse
Pulse
Beat
^Beat
*T-^
Sarabande, Corrente:
Tap
11
1 1 i
J i
Pulse
Beat
Little, Jenne, If
82
^ i ^
the tempo is
83
(i.e., another
on the eighth-
84
Croises
I,
providing
I meter, with an
Ibid.,
Ibid.,
Ibid.,
Ibid.,
Ibid.,
83.
83.
85.
85.
86.
85
'\^
86
(e.g.,
in
in the
r r'r^%
abande.
rT^r
r^r~r^nT~r^
Ibid., 219.
Ibid., 129.
89
Sarabande.
^
^^mw^^w^^^
^E^%-'SSi
ii
r^f^T
^
S ^5
mm^f^
^s
s ^ ;^^<1- ^j^^^-V^rzg^g4^yJ-t:tfj
^s:^
Ibid., 143.
91
Courante.
^^fe
^^^M
-
^ ^ = ^
i^r-^^^^
^ # ^ ' - ^
92
C our Mite.
fl 1
yVr'v '
1,-f-f,
i"#r*
Uairr~
- 1
Ty-r--to
'
'^^
r^pri
B*
J^
*'
*_\_ '^^ -
^ ^ *
'
~f~I^^
93
^ ^
j _ t [ ! 1
Courante
94
Example 5.8: Excerpts from "Model for the [French] Gigue Dance Rhythm."
r
Little,
X-H' LZT'T'r
Jenne,
14J
95
~^^^m-i-[ir^M^rTr-pHr-pT-r^
Little, Jenne, 156.
97
P^ m
m^^^ Tr^
^
^^^^s
i=^
p^^^^e
^^T-fin
p^
98
^pa
- i ( ^
the French gigue is not found in giga II." Before Bach, most
examples of giga II were by French composersdespite the
Italianate title (see Examples 5.11 and 5,12)."
Examples of the giga II by Bach are found in the Amajor and E-minor English Suites, in the B-minor, E-flatmajor, and E-major French Suites, and in the G-major
Partita." Little and Jenne, in their partial listing of
untitled dance pieces by Bach, have identified the D-minor
Invention as a giga II (see Appendix A ) . " One notices an
affinity between the style of this Invention and that of the
gique from the E-minor English Suite (see Example 5.13). It
is also possible, after consulting the foregoing description
of the giga II and looking at other examples of this genre by
Bach, to identify the A-major Invention as a giga II. This
movement contains several similarities to the gique from the
A-major English Suite (see Example 5.14).
Loure, Forlana, Polonaise and Passacaglia. These genres
are not found in the Inventions.
Other Genres. Not all of the inventions fit neatly into
one of the above categories: some are simply preludes or
fughetta-like movements. Others contain a limited number of
elements from a particular genre, the identification of which
may be helpful in making tempo and and articulative choices,
although perhaps the principles discussed in other sections
of this study would do this more effectively.
" Ibid.
" Ibid., 164. Couperin's La Milordine
an example of a French Giga II.
'' Ibid., 169-174.
" Ibid., 220.
100
^--rr-rr f T r-'i^rrr r
fr
^ - ^ - r - r r-r r i f
101
102
Gique.
103
Gique.
cii-^
.>41* f
.A*
^ ^ ^ ^ = ^ : ^ t ^ , c ^ ^
t'
B
"f'f"^
tt<i
# ^^-r
jg ^LJLC-^-.
M-
^*
'**'
1 1 rH-#~^
A V
^~
9^.
->
tf
* ^
AV
.^^^^01^91
*^' itriff
f*^^yr
I
JI^J
^^I
-^y
/w
1
104
CHAPTER VI
DYNAMICS AND ORNAMENTS
Introduction
The grouping of these two topics might initially seem
unusual. However, the practical function of any ornament in
this repertoire is the creation of a brief emphasis, a
gradual crescendo, or a "sigh" decrescendo. Ornaments are
valuable tools for the creation of dynamic nuances,
especially on the harpsichord or organ. The mechanics of
performing ornaments will not be discussed here since the
keyboard player can turn to any number of readily available
modern guides to ornamentation, including many modern Urtext
editions of the music. Thus there is no necessity for a
detailed, separate section to deal with ornaments in this
study.
105
Allemande.
106
p r e s e n t v e r t i c a l l y for a t h i c k e r or t h i n n e r t e x t u r e (see
Example 6.2, the Prelude from the G-minor English S u i t e ) ; and
they used o v e r - l e g a t o (or, t o use Czerny's l a t e r term,
"prolonged t o u c h " ) , '
luthe.
brise
brise
or
can r e a d i l y
as the normal
107
Prelude.
'flw p "^^1
gf\\' ., j - B s a ^
tT ^^'JJJ*' '
-- ^ '"y^
\--ff-f-fi0f
"J
ti^^~
trr/fr 1^1
108
^ ^ ,
7 r'/ F-:
r, , feMBf*"""', 1
mmm^k^=L ti^^T^^^-^
T e^
^
^M'
109
Butt concurs:
In statistical terms there are far more
'forte' marks in Bach's keyboard works than any other
dynamic indications.... Unmarked works should
normally also begin forte.'
It seems unlikely that effects such as change of
registration within a movement (which is the harpsichord's
manner of creating larger dynamic contrasts), would be
appropriate in brief pieces such as the Inventions. On the
other hand, each movement could employ a somewhat different
prevailing dynamic: a vigorous movement such as the F-major
Invention would almost certainly be somewhat louder in
general than the more tender F-minor Invention, and the rise
and fall of the melodic line demand the kinds of fluctuations
in dynamics that a good string player would apply. Yet when
thinking in terms of string-like phrasing it is important to
determine which style of string performance is referred to:
Badura-Skoda quotes Wilfried Bruchhauser as stating that when
taking string players as an example, one should realize that
Baroque performers were not in the "habit of playing longer
string notes so that they start as it were from nothing
[T]he note is there, or it is not. Gradually creeping into a
note and other hypertrophic sensitization processes first
appeared in the late Romantic period."'
Marshall states that considerable freedom in the use of
dynamics was exercised by the solo performer:
[Except in special circumstances, such as the
Italian Concerto] it is clear that Bach considered
the prescription of dynamics to be necessary only in
ensemble compositions; in solo works the choice
' Badura-Skoda, 139.
' Ibid., 135.
110
Ill
112
113
114
115
r P
P r p r
-P-
w^^^^mi
^
M.
M-
I^
Rosenblum, 155.
116
de Clavecin
(1724) in a
of these techniques:
In the Baroque instrumental style, a form exists in
which a two- or three-part texture is hidden behind a
single melodic line. Such cases were frequently
performed in Germany with a suspension (holding over)
of the respective notes.... This form of notation was
known in France as the style
luth6 or style
brise and
was derived from models in the contemporary lute
repertoire. The duration of the plucked note (as is
also the case in the lute tablature notation) is not
fixed precisely: the note sounds until the finger
leaves the respective fret and the string is used for
another note. This style was frequently employed in
France as a method of harpsichord playing.... This
holding over of notes is often written out in full,
but when so written gives the music a very complex
appearance.... There is, therefore, every reason to
believe that the single-line notational system was
preferred for ease of reading and that the
interpretation, with or without the over-legato, was
left up to the performer."
The reader will observe that Zehnder does not distinguish
between rapidly arpeggiated figures, the notes of which are
sustained (for which the present study has adopted the term
style brise)
117
P^
118
de
119
T^^;Al^ f^l:^-
- - toue.
120
121
CHAPTER VII
EXPRESSIVE RESOURCES OF THE VARIOUS
KEYBOARD INSTRUMENTS
Introduction
To an extent, the expressive resources of the keyboard
instruments of Bach's day have been elucidated by the
preceding material, but perhaps some additional remarks are
appropriate. A question which frequently arises in reference
to the keyboard music of J. s. Bach is "Is there a 'best'
instrument for the performance of this repertoire?" In
response to this question, David Schulenberg writes
The sources for the keyboard music rarely give an
explicit indication of instrument, more often using
ambiguous terms such as Clavier
or manualiter.
Even
though Bach must have realized that certain pieces
would suit one instrument better than another, he
evidently accepted the custom of composing in a
manner that made most music readily transferable from
one keyboard to another.... Nevertheless, Bach's
suites... were certainly meant for harpsichord of one
sort or another.... All this merely proves that the
harpsichord is a suitable medium for the keyboard
pieces not necessarily [always] the optimal or the
intended one.'
This would indicate that while the harpsichord is perhaps the
most likely instrument for the performance of Bach's keyboard
music (other than pieces specifically designated for the
organ), nothing hinders this repertoire from being played
upon the modern piano. Schulenberg also notes some general
characteristics of eighteenth-century keyboard instruments,
contrasting them with modern instruments:
The keyboard instruments dating from Bach's time are
not standardized.... [Yet each shares] certain
' Schulenberg, 11-12.
122
The Clavichord
The clavichord was Bach's favored instrument for
private practice and performance, as shown by this quotation
from the biography of Bach by J.N. Forkel:
[Bach] liked best to play upon the clavichord; the
harpsichord, though certainly susceptible of a very
great variety of expression, had not soul enough for
him.... He therefore considered the clavichord as the
best instrument for study, and in general, for
private musical entertainment.'
Marshall interprets Forkel's remarks, stating
...that Bach 'considered the clavichord as the best
instrument for study,
and, in general, for
private
musical expression [emphasis added by Marshall].' The
tacit implication of this remark is, at the least,
that Bach did not regard the clavichord as the 'best
Ibid., 10.
David, Mendel, and Wolff, 436.
123
124
125
The Harpsichor_d
The harpsichord has much more power than the
clavichord, its tone features more brightness and clarity
than the piano, and it is capable of very carefully
controlled articulative effects. Harpsichords often have two
keyboards with several sets of strings, so that the performer
can change registration and thus vary the tone and volume,
but unfortunately the harpsichord is incapable of producing
the dynamic gradations which the clavichord, piano, and even
the organ (through use of the Venetian swell) can produce.
Yet this does not mean that the harpsichordist can afford to
neglect good tone production, since, as Eta Harich-Schneider
states
[N]othing can sound as ugly, thin, and inadequate as
a harpsichord played with bad touch.... In none of
the sources from the sixteenth to the eighteenth
century is there the slightest support for the view
that flat, uniform harpsichord playing with no
dynamic curves and no cantabile was felt to be the
particular charm of the instrument. On the contrary,
we find a unanimous acknowledgement of a certain,
albeit weak, capacity for modification, the
meagreness of which lends a certain fascination to
the task of 'infusing with soul' (as the early
masters call it) this inflexible instrument. The
treatises repeatedly state that one should improve
one's technique and ear by practising the clavichord,
in order to make the harpsichord sing as much as
possible, and not to play in a monochrome manner.'
The Piano
The modern piano combines much of the expressivity of
the clavichord with some of the brilliance of the
harpsichord, and is certainly capable of more power than
either, but the much heavier action, deeper keydip, and less
Quoted in Badura-Skoda, 185.
126
127
128
129
130
131
CHAPTER VIII
RAMIFICATIONS OF THIS STUDY
FOR PERFORMANCE PRACTICE
134
the same finger twice in a row with some frequency. The thumb
is not used on black keys unless doing so is the best way to
execute the phrasing which one has established. The technique
of turning the thumb underthe cardinal principle of modern
fingeringis used when it will cause longer phrases to be
performed effectively and when using the technique will not
force weaker fingers into repeatedly playing at strong points
in the metrical scheme. Because this fingering system
reinforces the articulative customs of the era it is a very
valuable tool for one who wishes to recapture the spirit in
which this music was originally conceived. The fingering
principles stated above are flexible enough to accommodate
more than one approach to the performance of this repertoire.
The meter, tempo, and rhythmic content of a movement
along with any explicit markings added to the music by the
composer--indicate which articulative patterns are
appropriate.
This
137
Two possible
models present themselves for this meter and this piece: the
allemande and the Baroque concerto allegro.
Rameau's allemande (see Example 8.1) is characteristic
of the genre and contains some rhythmic and figurative
similarities to the C-Major Invention. Modern performances of
this allemande are typically taken at around 60-66 to the
quarter-note. When the Invention is played at this tempo the
sequential passages do not sound at all "lively."
The prelude from Bach's fourth English Suite is a
concerto allegro for solo keyboard, containing alternating
ritornello and solo passages in a predominantly two-part
texture (see Example 8.2). There are some rhythmic and
figurative similarities to the C-Major Invention.
The
91.
138
^m
. - ^
-^r-i
iw
s^^ ^^^^S
^m
'^\
fr
139
SL^Bi
i
W'^
i^^^^S^^
I'reludc
140
C: *
-4t
-u
m lf""
142
"^
143
144
146
147
148
pleasant. "'
' Little and Jenne, 171.
" Goldberg, 91.
149
-|XiJ_J..-.lJ.^^_j
Little and Jenne, 171.
150
J ^
Other
" Bach,
Clavier-Buchlein, 9.
151
152
or "lively" and
153
154
Goldberg, 91.
155
Example 8 . 5 :
"Normal" s l v i r r i n g f o r t h e E-Major
feft
P
156
Invention
Variations,
Variation
157
Example 8 . 6 : A r t i c u l a t i o n
Goldberg V a r i a t i o n s .
Butt,
from ' V a r i a t i o n 14 of
176.
158
the
^
1
and
(2)
and
(3)
and
iste
1 and(2) and(3)
and
1 and(2) and(3)
159
and
Swift music
160
Ibid.
161
The primary
emphasized
part of the
measure, and this is not characteristic of the sarabande. Deemphasizing the second beat would also have the ungainly
effect of making beat three the most emphasized part of every
measure in which there was a tie across the barline. Finally,
slurring the eighth-notes in the second beat makes for a more
"emphatic" or "heavy" interpretation of the movement, which
is appropriate. Perhaps Bach marked the slur in measure
thirteen to keep the performer from breaking an established
habit at the approach to the climax of the first half of the
Invention.
" Ibid.
163
164
Amid many
f.
165
167
168
169
Goldberg, 92.
See Table 5.1 .
Goldberg, 92.
170
171
172
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Adams, Courtney S. "Organization in the 2-part Inventions of
J.S. Bach". Bach XIII/2 (April 1982) p. 6-16, Bach
XIIl/3 (July 1982) p. 12-19.
Anthony, James R., H. Wiley Hitchcock, Edward Higginbotham,
and Graham Sadler. The New Grove French Baroque
Masters. New York: W.W. Norton, 1980, 1986.
Arnold, Denis, Donald Grout, Anthony Newcomb, Joel Sheveloff,
Michael Talbot, and Thomas Walker. The New Grove
Italian Baroque Masters. New York: W.W. Norton, 1980,
1984.
Babitz, Sol. "On Using Early Keyboard Fingering," Diapason.
February, March, and April 1969.
Bach, Carl Philipp Emanuel. Essay on the True Art of Playing
Keyboard Instruments. Trans, by William J. Mitchell.
New York: W.W. Norton, 1949.
Bach, Johann Sebastian. Clavier-Buchlein vor Wilhelm
Friedemann Bach. Facsimile ed. by Ralph Kirkpatrick.
New York: Da Capo Press, 1979.
. Two- and Three-Part Inventions.
Facsimile ed. New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1968.
. Keyboard Music. New York: Dover
Publications, Inc. 1970.
. Inventions and Symphonies. Ed. by
Georg Dadelsen. Kassel: Barenreiter-Verlag Karl
Votterle GmbH & Co. KG, 1982.
. Inventionen und Sinfonien.
Ed. by Rudolf Steglich. Munich: G. Henle Verlag, 1955.
. Two-Part Inventions. Ed. by Carl
Czerny. New York: G. Schirmer, Inc., 1904.
Badura-Skoda, Paul. Interpreting Bach at the Keyboard.
York: Oxford University Press, 1993.
New
Harpsichord Method.
173
Boyd, Malcolm.
Bach.
David, Hans T. and Arthur Mendel, eds. The New Bach Reader.
Revised and expanded by Christoph Wolff. New York: W.W.
Norton, 1998.
Derr, Ellwood. "The Two-Part Inventions: Bach's Composer's
Vademecum." In Music Theory Spectrum 3:26-48 (1981).
Dolmetsch, Arnold. The Interpretation of Music of the
Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. London: Novello
and Co., 1915, corrected edition, 1946.
Donington, Robert. Baroque Music; Style and Performance.
New York; W.W. Norton, 1982.
Dreyfus, Laurence. Bach and the Patterns of Invention.
Cambridge; Harvard University Press, 1996.
Faulkner, Quentin. -T.S. Bach's Keyboard Technique; A
Historical Tntroduction. St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1984.
Flindell, E. Fred. "Apropos Bach's Inventions". In M Q ^
XIV/4 (October, 1983) p. 2-5, Bach XV/1 (January, 1984)
p. 3-16, Bach XV/2 (April, 1984) p. 3-17.
Ferguson, Howard. K^yhoard Interpretation; From the 14th to
thp. 19th Century. London; Oxford University Press,
1975.
174
Kochevitsky, George A. "Performing Bach's Keyboard MusicNotes Inegales; A Brief History and a Summary," Bach
IV/4 (October, 1973) p. 27-35.
LeHuray, Peter. "On Using Early Keyboard Fingering,"
Diapason. February, March, and April, 1969.
Lindley, Mark and Maria Boxall. Early Keyboard Fingerings;
An Anthology. London: Schott, 1982.
Lindley, Mark. "Keyboard Technique and Articulation;
Evidence for the performance Practices of Bach, Handel,
and Scarlatti," In Bach, Handel, Scarlatti;
T^^ri^ntenarv Essays, ed. by Peter Williams, p. 207-44.
Cambridge; Cambridge University Press, 1985.
175
Englewood Cliffs,
Romantic Music.
New
176
New
177
APPENDIX A
A PERFORMING EDITION OF FIFTEEN
TWO-PART INVENTIONS
BY J.S. BACH
178
One such
has therefore been compared with both the 1720 ClavierBiichlein vor Wilhelm Friedemann Bach and the 17 23 fair copy,
with preference given to the latter.
The Neue-Bach Ausgabe (New Bach Edition) was helpful
in terms of deciding which ornaments to include as part of
the basic text. Other ornamentsincluded in parentheses in
this studyare (1) later additions by Bach in the
manuscripts according to Georg Dadelsen (editor of the New
Bach Edition), are (2) from Wilhelm Friedemann's book, or are
(3) originally found in two copies of the Inventions (known
as "Gerber" and P219") which were copied by two of Bach's
students. "Expected" short trills have been added in
parentheses at the final cadences of the D-major and D-minor
Inventions. The rationale for this is given in Chapter VIII
of this study- The Henle edition of the Inventions was also
consulted, and Butt's text on articulation in the music of
Bach proved to be quite helpful, especially in the F-minor
and D-major Inventions.
179
m a
couple of places where Bach's slurs are quite vague-notably
in the treble staff of m.l7 of the B-minor Invention-this
study does not follow the New Bach Edition, in this instance
preferring three-note slurs to four-note slurs.
These seem
to make much more musical sense and they are certainly not
precluded by the manuscript sources.
The establishment of a good musical text of the
Inventions is essential, but the goal of this study is to add
interpretive details to that text.
The
In many instances a
parenthetical option has been given which does not place the
thumb on a black key,
--Notes which are not slurred are intended to be played
with some amount of detachment from surrounding notes. The
fact that a note is detached does not mean that it is to be
accented, however.
its full duration but not slurred into the next note. This
differentiation between a slurred group and a single note
which is held for its entire length has been deemed necessary
181
Major interior
These
Invention 1 in C Major
J. S. Bach
liWV 772
1
5 4 3 1
^1
^
^m i
1
32
^w
1 2
3
4
^"
3i~iE
3
^
4
32
')
1 -
184
13
2 4
S[
*
w
JpFf^i^
T'-r^-vn*-
:^
3;
^^|f^5S^
10
f^^^^^^-^mmi
jf
fej
S y
12
z):F^^gLfrfrj-if^
185
S.
~ #
^ ^fei
^^f^^X^
OTgg
3 2
12
gi
: L p P y f > ^ : C&
3
21
Eg
s
1
S
4
186
XSI
Invention 2 in C Minor
inVV 773
^ 76 80
187
,J. S Hacli
(2 4)
3 1 3 2 5
54 2 1
2 12
'^ r r r r
^
^m
^
2
4 3
1 3
rt
5
1 3 2 1
kecapiUilatioi
1 3
A
^g
ESr:
13
2 5
m^F
2
4 1
3
12
I 2
31
1 3
2 3
32
XE:
^
T
4
3
1 2
190
5 1
Invention 3 in D Major
HWA' 774
S. Hacii
32
32
i^ P ^m
^ ^ ^
mm
r"
!s:
i
i\- ft
Echo^
~4
&
:x:
f
191
21
12
3 4
32
32
^^g f = ^ ^ p = ^ P^^^^
12
1 2
1 3
192
0-
) '
-^
I-
-if..
.f^,)
^'
**
^"^^^^^^
^
T
;s
(4
1
\f=f='T=^^P^=^
2
5)
2
*M
ferf
^g^
5
32
^i~
f
^
':M.
*P^^^^i
^
^ ^ _:
2
(1
193
^^
32
34
E
^
i ^ ^
^4
3212
(OO)
3212
[OO)
9ap^
1
41
(3)
1 4
Recapitulation
3
3
-'^' 'ii L E m j
3
&
194
44
3 2
P^^
r
^
Fxho?
fcJ
ST
a^^^^^
1
:s3
tEE^E^
50
^ =
IS"
Wg
53
_31 2 1
ICVJ)
:^
195
^S
55
-d
?EEE^EE^EE^feE^^
*i
^s=v
S
=^=3t
3^
196
^
^
Invention 3 in D Major
B \ \ \ - 774 as il appears in Ihe H.icli (icscllscli.ill lulifion
J. S Batli
m
f^
>' ^
\\-9
1 r r r-
^^ r
r ^ > =
m
srrr
-j--!.ij
. =
197
10
C\D
;: -p
"
I*
_"
i\- H_
-iir r f
^m
1m
fe
-p
r^
^^m
"T:T~
19
i
#
^i
21
"i^
=F=^
P^
198
^^rr^
^H^^^
>
ft
1*
___^-
.^^
==r^=^^^
- ^
51
1 ^ ii 'r^^^
^ = =-'i p- 7^
^ % = ' ^ ^ ^ -
r r > ^^^f
33
/:
"i*^^
p '-jT >
rrT
-W
^:i #^i
(rp ^
^-
Ii
' i^
. . J
-^^
Wh^ '^^^ ^ r r b - \^ J J J J J
199
C\5
3S
*F
i
^ = ^ = ^ = ^ H ^
40
CNJ
* ^
&
43
-^^
46
tijr JJ'
200
oo
"isTi-r^^
^
-*
-^<r^
^m
/0^
<J
201
Invention 4 in D Minor
J, ,S. Ha
inVV775
6(H>3
(2
1
5 4
3 2
4 3 2 3
Pi
1^
I)
2
i
5
3,
ir=t
b .-nTf
1 4
3
3
s
;^=J&
^
5
1 4
m
10
1
^
:z_
f^f^^
-/
Si
^
3
202
1 3
lo
-^
32
3 '0 '0 ~
,'
0
-J
19
^ ^ ^ ^ ^
3
^^=F^
m^^
1
^'-=::i
-J^
)
5
1
i23)
32
: ^
~"^^
rf--
L^^w=z
m
1
IjJ ^_ f
*=?
- 7 ^
--.
4
(3,
203
^
4
(3)
:^
int^i^
tJS
(2 1
4 3
^Y^ I
^
m
i
3
37
32
3
S
3
^
2
4
204
40
P^
WMp:
^
4
5
Recapilulalion
1
3^_^
43
J ^
^
1
^
^
^
5
PI
3
32
50
=SI
205
J.S. Bach
inVV 776
1 4
21
14
I '' E w c m g B i ^
et>* ^
* According to the New Bach Edition, all ornaments except those in the final measure of tlus ln\ enlion
aie later additions by Bach.
** This mordent could be omitted, in accordance with similar passages
in the right hand (e.g., mm. 16, 23, 27).
206
10
pe^Epg
wm
f ,f
4 1
1 5
2 1
5 1 2 13 2
^^m
14
15
1 4 24 1 4
kteiii=
mv^
5
^g
Iifmt
1 2
5 1
207
3
^
17
f ^g- r f-
^L
5
5
4
18
31
m^
1^
SS
gEEg^
m^
3
2 1
123
21
BE
S^
i
Sii
Si
E.I^^,-1t3"^
4^
B
12
w:.'
14
1'
3
te
5 13 2 3
14
\m^ssm
J4
2 1-^3
12
208
t3
'> bv
' Liz-U
Recapitulation
2
^
2^^
27
SE
32
5 1
4 2 1
(3)
13 2
209
^^m
mmm
Qi
5 1
rissss
53
i^S
0 r ^ 0
5 1
5 1
29
31
3 2
1*I~^^ ^
3S=Tc^^fei5
.
p 1,
^'-'
*&J
"1 *j "f # V0 ^r ^
1
-^
-\-
^^^rf
^
210
Invention 6 in E Major
B\\'\ 777
.1. S. Bach
^m
t
1 3
3 5
.^
12
1 3
-^'
V- g/tt J r ' V ^
if
^
^
rm
"ttatil
2
S
4
0-^^
S
^
~i
3
1
# ^
't ^
M^^
*iff 1 ^
1^
/ ^
gVi^
:-
211
W^
M-4^
3 12 1 3
?T"^
--T#
f^\-r-py-^y-
^K-
r^
^
^
Iis^te*
3
M
m
^m
^-Mr^E
S
2
3
2
2
^A ' r ^/Tr
3
3 2
* fff=^
t
^
13
^
3 2 1 3__
_
++.r:^
<*U^
tfp
212
3
2
tlr^r -.
13 5
^
1
M*^
3^11
-K
3 2
* ,
gg^S
^
1 3 4 2 1
1 3 _
1 2
2 4,
wt
'>,''r r f 5
39
zzl
12
1 3
F^l *
^ 5 ^
==
O: i l
*J.^ ^y
#
B3
3
43
13 i
^
32
= ^ 1 ^
'jf^ r r r ^
1
* - 1 0 -^
1
3
213
0
4
1 -
- 3
1^
-0BT-
Ef
12
'^^^rzT-
3^
1
^tt^
l'
1 -] ^
^"^
'
0
0
- 0
h-^^^^-^
I-,.
rw=
^0-^
214
=^=^
^^
0--=
rf-r-.
TT"
Invention 7 in E Minor
S. Bach
BWV 778
J^ 88-92
32
32
^m
^5
M
^S
csrat
1 3
1 2
-1
3SEE^3E
l^i^
2 1
3 4 12
(23)
32
32
Si
g-^r-Ji^
3
32
s
i^^
^EEEEEE
2 1
215
.<2
H^
'.'0-.
m~i
3 4 3 1 -^4 3 5
-^4
.^
m^^
.">
10-0
3 1 3
32
^^m^
ii^
^
32
14
1 2
zzz
^
>1<
S^pg3 V^JT^
12
12
12
= ^ ^
-iS^
\/^)..
* This toll is not in the 1723 version, but is in the 1720 MS. If it is omitted in perfonnance it ma} be
necessary to re-stnke the b, preferably on beats one and/or three.
216
2 1 2
18
mm^=m
3
is
B^^
2 12
2 12
32
i^^
^s
3
i
g^^ljJ-J^^a
13
217
4 2
32
mi
218
Invention 8 in F Major
B\\'\'77V
. I S . Bach
J 120
3
1 4
3
^^m
^^^m
3
219
'
14
1^
^ ^ ^
llSS
eit*
:^^
"^^TT^J
16
2 3 2 13 4
m^S
1
2 3
^mmfl
g
1
1 3 12
220
2 3 1
3 13 1
2
1
P:
*
W
<
1*
=,
1 2
^ 3
if
^
^
^m
-^
^
1
- ^
^^3
S S
5
"^i^O H f
25
S
^^^7^
221
^
4
12
1
4)
3
1 .^
ZZl
Pi^
.1
S^g#
J-J-TI-^^ 4*3-^5
iElJ
1 4
1 4
'^; "^
-^=-^
^^^^P^^^
1 4
31
33
F^^
1 2
^
3
222
Invention 9 in F Minor
B\\\'78()
J S. Bach
J^ 69-72
^
St *
3 2
mt^
^S
1
yr r r r r p y g ^ f
^
fey=F
1*
5
1 2
3~^-
?
'1
r'~'^JJjM^
iSt^
^
-^
1 3
ii
a^
i^j:^^^
WW^.
rjv|
^
1
11
S^i> .
S=^=-^
V^ ^i g- jH
' j ^^^ g p ^
1 2
12
t ^
^
^=3
224
m^ E L g r ^ ^ -
1(1
ski:
C^B
\^--
^
2
1,^
.^
i*
.'HJiH, j
.v^|'i>rr^
3
22
13
iJ
')\\>n
r\
^r=>^
^
2
225
(5
_4
24
Sk^^
r^^
^
f E E E ^ ^
W.-MMi
I>
\4
5;
3
53
1 3
kt=^
^
^
3
m i
Recapitulation
4
28
1*
'^- j'i> J
30
2 1
a>>
^i
=^)-i.ii.i'.m, - T O ^ FjhXn ^ ^, ^,
3
1 2
226
12
j^g
1 2 1
^- '.M 2 1 3 / 32 1 2 32
oo
Uv"
^
3
^
3 4
3 4
227
ff
1g_
Invention 9 in F Minor
BW \' 780 as i( appears m (he Bach (leseMschali lidilioii
ite^i^^
^
i:fe=g
te^
m^
S=:^
B
.
^m^Tftft
s1 *
J S Bach
228
ii^
^r^rttffm
te
S
' ^ = ^
-'b''i>]iJJ-Vi'W^
jst^
E3^
13
s1 *
Ji
^
229
'rSclrr?^_j
lo
OO
i^w
PS
^
g ^
IS
s1 *
jF^^^ jirrr^TT^rV
f-fif^ p ^Q^
ygrfrrr:j
S1^
y^"i,b f p t . . r |-
1^ ^
ff^ji^
^^m
i*
yft^^
230
E
i
26
g
3 5 g ^
28
^i^
in ^
';-bi'i,i-J- -
^ ^
T-#
>p
231
feSi
232
In\ention 10 in G Major
inV\' 781
I S . P,ach
' = 112^116
F=^
^
fe^
^Si
^
3
hi J r r 1=J=^
3^*~ff ^
2 1
^
( ^
(^1
^
1 2
1 3
233
1 3
1
13
32
(^)
^ i
-t
15
-v%:-
mM
1 = ^
1=^
12
17
r^=
3EE^
^
(-WJ
w
12
234
23)
32
,9
n.
\ -^
0-
12
_^_
ra*
21
f
I
^
3
. r
25
3 J
^ J
lo).
-A
0-
12
(21)
32
^ )
1 ^ )
r 1# i *
^J
.S
^r r . r
23
l^-f
1 ^ ^ >-
1 2
27
*.
* y *
235
1 2
m m
S mmM
4
29
m=m^-
0 r
3
32
:=at
? ^
-"^
236
Invention 11 in G Minor
inVV 782
J^ 88
34 5
J. S. Bach
4 3 2
(1:
^^^B
^"rj^gM
I
^^m
1
3 2 12 1IJ
1 ^^g
)M>ri^cn:rrj
3
5 2
2 3 2 3 4 3^^
i?
32
- ^ 3
^
^
f-^^
^s
'
gg
3 2 1
w^
^ ^
14
^ ^
5 1 3
* Ail ornaments in this Invention except the short trill on Ijeat 3 of m. 17 were
added by Bach at a later dale, according to the New Bach Edition
237
32
^S
51
31
~i
-I
238
Rocapitulation
22
3 2
1 5
: ^
3 1 2
' ^
^^fffrriij?^
3 1 2 32
3 ^
^
1^
PH f f i ^
^
^
^
^
239
Invention 12 in A Major
S. Bach
HW\'78.1
i^t^
^
BS
iB
^r^^
3 131 21
tJ-4r'rM, 14 3 21 T^'^
1 2132
*Dashed slurs are used in this movement to indicate that two notes of the same pitch aie to be grouped together but are
not intended to be lied.
**Slurs have not for the most part, been included for sixteenth^notes in this Invention. One who plays this piece should
bear m mind the fact that this is a light piece which would favor det;rched articulation, but notes in stepwise patterns are
more likely to be slurred and arpeggiated figures are more likely to be detached. In fingering this movement the goal
has been to allow each beat to be played as a unit whether the notes are sluned or detached.
240
11
2 12 31
312 1
"^
igi#
^ ^ ^ ^ ^
13
1 3
1 ^
*t
tfO
X^^-^-
*:
I
3
pr r r J-^-^yTJ
J i^'^^g
->tfj
iffliS
3 5
nm
^J.\ f* J J J S^X^^f^^
r .r^
^m
12
y=??^
10
1232
j^^^
0~
^
1
241
5 3
# ^ #
0~
o 4
32
t=s
I Jl*^ J J .^J J ^ J ,
16
^Ei
M:
;.
?-
=^
17
Ji'
y-^
.-)^tf,vrrrrp I
.^rf^f^p^
242
l U 'f
Recapilul.ition
18
-'
1 5
i
(\^
^-
g^^^
21
'1
(w)
AM
O
^
') *i rni
2
1 2
3
2
iSE
1
243
Invention 13 in A Minor
J. S. Bach
BWV 784
^= 96 100
m m
4
2
5
3
1
4 ^ 1 4 1 3 1
jmM^. H
ItolTr^^ ^tftEf^
3
m
g
t
3
1 4
i^Fi*
2 1 2
3 _
f^
15
=Zt=j^
244
^
3
.r^^r^fe^
M
5
2
5
1 2
rrf.r
=
2 4
3^
ff
->
3
'-.
:
'
. ^ 4
5 142
2
14
2 4
3 2 3 13 1
r^rrttrT^fl
1 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^?^^S
s
>
^-^?
f^f^fVv
1
12 4 1 4
^m m
'\>0
' -'
2 3 -1
i e^
1 5 12 4
1 5
-jf^=A
:^
i|3E
^
1
3
2
i^
1
2
3
Return of the motive in the tonic key.
1 4
3 2
3
1
IS
P=^^^
iffi
IF^^^ ^ & t f
1 5 2
3 1
Pe
1
16^
2 4
1 5
23 5
^fefiirrrr.^^
1 5
5
245
1 3
5
L-J
^^E^
Lf ^'"'
1
2
2 3
25 4 3)
^^m
1 3 1 4
2 3
13
4 1
4 2
20
14
1 4
^=1
2 1
w.t^
5 3
2 5
5 3
4 2
^^^9
^^^JigM^
12
3^7Jr^^j^4^'
15
^
3
246
s
wt
'./
Ov
r\
J. S. Bach
J^ 60
3
W^
-^
JJ0
4-J-4
2 1
*-^
sa
13
247
13
i iy=i 1
ffi
s
3
0 ' ^ V.*l'
-'
mp' m
i t^ i 4
5l
"n^^-^
^
yv
Elg=ff^
^ ^
ffl
S^^^^^:
1
J1J
i^
9
2
I1
4d
ft
^5^tl"
3 12
-->
^ ^^ fu
-^;=;^
m m
0-
S3
1 5
10
-^. J 0 '
I*
Pff
0
3
5 1
12
1 2
m :5 P ^
1
0 m 0
^
1
2
248
m
i
^
^
'
14
2 4
249
1 2
250
Invention 15 in B Minor
J^ 88
HWV 78(1
J. S, Bach
32
32
mm^^^
=^^F^=^m=i
:5
^
3 2 1 3
U'^
M^m^^^
'W
^=W^ J' ^ J g
yJa^JJ^.'^i^^
^
s ra
32
-w
12
-J
12
2 12
251
12
1 3 2
2 1
mmm
32
^P^ i
^
'
'
3 12
2 1
^ '
4 3
3 1
3
1 2
4^
^
12
1 2
i
12
32
^^*
3 .
i
m
w^4mm0
13
I. I
^e
1 1
WH~m
3 12
ffl^
^-^-W
-\
If:
^^^^s
4Y~!
^
2
252
4 2
15
iv"^ ' 2 3 1 2
5 2
5 2
MS
Wm
3
5''M^iH''^
S ^r^i
m M^n
-w
r L^
2
0 M0*
^i^
1 4
12
3 2
'W
-o^
^m
4
(i:
Slurs found in the 1720 and 1723 MSS.
253
3 2 3 1
3
(4 )
APPENDIX B
FORMAL CONSIDERATIONS, LEVEL OF DIFFICULTY
AND CONSEQUENT PLACEMENT IN THE
1720 AUTOGRAPH
254
Formal Considerations
...[I]t was characteristic of Bach that, while
in principle retaining the conventions of each genre
(such as the use of binary-form movements with dance
titles to form a suite), he transformed most of the
genres in which he worked by expanding the
traditional formal structures and admitting technical
and stylistic features borrowed from other genres.
Thus... few pieces follow any one model.'
[M]any of these pieces [i.e., the Inventions]
Schulenberg, 150. See also Ellwood Derr, "The Two-Part
Inventions: Bach's Composer's Vademecum", Music Theory Spectrum (1981)
3:26-48.
' Ibid., 20-21.
255
seem to reflect Bach's acceptance of galant elements- "sigh" figures, expressive "singing melodies"
into his keyboard polyphony. This is not to say that
the pieces are easy to play.... But the combination
of learned and popular elements has certainly helped
these pieces win their place in the canon of
pedagogic works still taught to keyboard players.'
[In the Inventions and Sinfonias, Bach] had
created two essentially new genres of keyboard music.
Unlike most earlier preludes, the Inventions are true
keyboard duettos, somewhat resembling older fughetti,
but differing in their technical preoccupations. Here
invertible counterpoint is of greater importance than
imitation per se, and thus the opening passages
usually involve imitation at the octave (or voice
exchange) rather than at the fifth. Instructional
two-part imitative pieces by earlier composers rarely
contain real modulations; most of the Inventions,
however, fall into sophisticated yet compact
modulating schemes comparable to Bach's larger fugal
works. The thematic material is generally lively, the
subjects very concise; thus, the Inventions have a
modern, galant character, although only the one in B
minor (BWV 7 86) has a texture clearly imitating that
of a solo sonata for, say, violin and continue."
The basic structural principles [of the
Inventions] are similar to those of Bach's larger
works but realized on a smaller scale; a single
phrase here may correspond to an entire section in a
larger... movement. For example, an opening phrase
generally leads to a cadence in the dominant (or
relative major)
[This is] analogous to the first
half that is, the portion preceding the double bar- of a dance movement or sonata form. The next phrase
corresponds to the beginning of the middle
("development") section, and after a third formal
articulation [which includes a return to tonic] the
piece has delineated a miniature three-part (or an
expanded three-phrase) form. Not every piece follows
precisely this plan; in Invention No. 9 (F-minor) the
first decisive cadence is delayed until the midpoint
(bar 17), giving it a binary design [which is
entirely appropriate for the formal requirements of a
sarabande], while No.2 (C-minor) is, for the most
part a strict canon. But the canonic pattern is
broken in order to articulate two crucial moments: an
arrival on the dominant (bar 11) and the return to
tonic (bar 23), the latter coinciding with a
Ibid., 149.
Ibid., 152.
256
257
Inventions
259
a fraa^L^ ? It^'^^t
'' ^^^^^ ^ ^^e theme itself or
nf TnlTT'
r ^^^ ^^^"^^ <^^^ f^ example, mm. 3 and 4
of I/iventio I, p.49). In the second triptych [Fmajor, G-ma^or, A-minor], all three themes are
constructed from arpeggio figurations and are
developed through extensive motivic transformations;
the central triptych [B-minor B-flat major, A-major
introduces a quasi-systematic fugue-like type of
alternation between subject-countersubject pairs and
episodes; the following one [triptych four; G-minor,
F-minor, E-major], while retaining the fugue-like
format of triptych III, is characterized by the
extensive use of chromaticism and syncopation;
finally triptych V [E-flat major, D-major,
Cminor] summarizes the technical devices exploited in
the preceding four groups and concludes with
inventlo
2, an almost continuous strict canon.''
Certain of the Two-Part Inventions
are based
on very broad melodic ideas, termed motives, and
others, on broader ideas termed subjects. Numbers
One, Four, Seven, Eight, Ten, and Thirteen were the
first composed, and these inventions (in C-major and
all its closely related keys) generally employ short
generating ideas, whereas the remainder employ longer
ones (although Numbers Three and Four have ideas of
approximately the same length). A contrapuntal
accompaniment to the opening idea is found in nine of
the fifteen Inventions.
"
Most of the Inventions
are sectional in nature
with sections defined either by conclusive-sounding
cadences or by recurrence of material which has been
modified through transposition and other means;
however, continuity is consistently maintained
through elision or rhythmic activity which persists
from the end of one section into the beginning of
another. All are characterized by motivic or thematic
unity in conjunction with tonal and contrapuntal
variety, and change of tonality is one of the
principal means by which contrast is achieved....'"
260