Bach - 6f.embellishments VII
Bach - 6f.embellishments VII
Bach - 6f.embellishments VII
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Bach
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Performing Bach's Keyboard Music -
Embellishments,
Part VII, The Turn and the Slide
Part VIII, Compound Ornaments
Part IX, Additional Remarks
By George A. Kochevitsky
New York City
The Turn
The execution of the Bach turn does not usually present a problem
to the performer. Sometimes, however, if the performer tries to decipher
the turn (or any other ornament) "correctly" (i.e., strictly, according to
"the rules"), forbidden parallel fifths or octaves result. Such a situation
occurs in the sixteenth measure of the F-Minor Invention (see Example 4a)
where "correct" deciphering brings about parallel fifths. This same turn is
written out in full notes in Wilhelm Friedeman Bachs Clavier-Bchlein
(see Example 4b). J. N. Forkel's version of the same ornament appears
in his edition of the Bach Inventions (see Example 4c).1
Bach himself frequently wrote out his turns in full notes. Examples
of this kind are to be found in Variation 13 of the Goldberg Variations ;
in the Gigue from the French Overture ; in the fugues in c-sharp major,
d minor, and g major from the first book of the Well-Tempered Clavier,
and in the Fugue in E Minor from the second (1744) book.
The Slide
The term "slide" refers to a rapid and smooth sliding through two
conjunct lower accessory notes to the main note. There are various means
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of indicating this ornament (see Example 5). Sometimes Bach wrote out
the slide in ordinary notes. (See, for instance, the slide in the third meas-
ure of Gavotte II from the French Overture [Example 6].)
The Bach slide is usually played on the beat. However, there is evi-
dence that this was not always the case: J. D. Heinichen, writing in 1728,
noted that when the beginning of the slide on the beat results in parallel
fifths or octaves, then it should be played before the beat; some of the
manuscripts of the Fugue in G Minor from the Well-Tempered Clavier ,
Book 11, employ a sign indicating a slide to be played before the beat; and
some eighteenth-century copies of this same piece write out the slide in
full, and before the beat. (See Examples 7a and 7b.) 2
Compound Ornaments
The compound ornaments indicated in Bach's keyboard pieces present
no particular problems for the performer. Bach himself indicated proper
executions for some of them in his "Table," and logical decipherments for
the others are not difficult to find.
Heinrich Nicolaus Gerber (Bach's student during the years 1725 and
1726) wrote out in full certain ornaments indicated in Bachs Invention in
E Minor (see Example 9). Gerbers decipherings are, indeed, remarkable
- the following examples from his realization of the group of ornaments
encountered in measures 7-9 being of special interest to the topic at hand:
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sign to that indicating a trill with ascending prefix and then
deciphered as a trill with descending prefix!
Additional Remarks
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In general, it would seem best, in Bach, to omit "implied" ornaments,
rather than to add extra ornaments. Aside from the fact that Bach seems
to have been extraordinarily precise (for his time) in indicating orna-
ments, it is also true that in the case of piano performance, the modern
instrument is not so suitable to the execution of ornaments as were the
older instruments - i.e., the harpsichord and the clavichord. For this
reason, it would seem legitimate in piano performances (especially in the
performance of fast pieces) to simplify or to abbreviate some ornaments,
as follows:
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each). One should practice these in sequence; keeping identical fingers
for identical combinations, listening carefully, and checking any accidental
unevenness. It is more convenient to trill with non-adjacent fingers ( 1-3,
2-4). Such a fingering facilitates forearm rotation; and it is, also, easier
to innervate non-adjacent fingers in this way.
It follows that there may be more than one plausible solution for the
deciphering of an ornament and, thus, some room for individual taste and
preference, even in the execution of Sebastian Bach s ornaments.
Footnotes
1 The author wishes to point out that parallel fifths occur in the decipherin
turn in measure 16 of the F -Minor Invention in the Alfred edition. (See, a
author's article dealing with the inverted mordent in BACH , Vol. VI, No.
22-27.) Here, the editor, W. A. Palmer, evidently overlooked these paral
does, however, bring to the reader's attention the above-mentioned exampl
W. F. Bach's Clavier-Bchlein. Palmer's deciphering differs only rhythm
from the incorrect one shown above in Example 5 c.
2 See Johann David Heinichen, Der Generalbass in der Composition (D
Author's Ausgabe, 1728), p. 527.
3 See Rudolf Steglich, "Preface" and "Notes," in J. S. Bach, Inventionen u
fonien (Munich-Duisburg: G. Henle, 1954).
4 Gerold Frotscher, Auffhrungpraxis alter Musik (Locarno: Heinrichshofe
p. 111.
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5 See Rosalyn Tureck, An Introduction to the Performance of Bach, "Further Notes
on Ornamentation" (London: Oxford University Press, I960), Vol. I, pp. 9-10.
6 See Jorg Demus, " Bach am Klavier," in " sterreichische Musikzeitschrift," Janu-
ary, 1954.
Musical Examples
Ex. 2. The Turn Between a Dotted Note and Its Shorter Ancillary Note
Exs. 3a, 3b, 3c, 3d. Bach, English Suite in F Major , Prelude , meas. 12,
As Written and As Played in Various Ways
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Ex. 7a. Bach, Fugue in G Minor , Well-Tempered Clavier , Bk. II,
meas. 83, as indicated in Some Manuscript Copies
Exs. 10a, 10b, 10c, lOd. Various Decipherings of the Ornament Sign in
Bach s Invention 1 in Major, meas. 1, upper voices
A New "Department"
A new "department" will make its initial appearance in the January
1976 issue of BACH. Beginning with that issue, one or two books and/or
recordings concerned with Bach or his times will be reviewed. Addresses
of publishers, as well as bibliographic information, will be included, but
no price listings will be given.
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