[go: nahoru, domu]

Jump to content

User:Noyamama/Prelude and Fugue in F minor, BWV 857

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

the Well-Tempered Clavier I

Noyamama/Prelude and Fugue in F minor, BWV 857
Prelude and Fugue N.12

BWV 857 The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I

Fa mineur

F major

Prelude
Metric 4/4
Fugue
Voices 4
Metric 4/4
External Links
(en) Partitions et informations sur IMSLP
(en) La fugue jouée et animée (bach.nau.edu)

The Prelude and Fugue in F minor (BWV 857) is the twelfth pair of preludes and fugues from the first book of The Well-Tempered Clavier by Johann Sebastian Bach, compiled around 1722.

The prelude is imbued with a touching melancholy. The four-part fugue is pathetic, unusually long, and one of the most strongly thought out in the collection.



\version "2.18.2"
\header {
  tagline = ##f
}

\score {
  \new Staff \with {
%fontSize = #-2
  }
<<
  \relative c' {
    \key f \minor
    \time 4/4

     %% INCIPIT CBT I-12, BWV 857, fa mineur
     << { s4*0^\markup{Prélude} f16 aes c f g, f' e g aes, c f e f4 } \\ { f,4 g aes f'16 c bes aes } >> \bar ".."

     \skip 8*1
     \override Staff.Clef.extra-offset = #'( -1 . 0 )
      \clef bass
     \relative c' { r4^\markup{Fugue} c4 des c b e f bes, a aes g2 
{ 
 % suppression des warnings :
 #(ly:set-option 'warning-as-error #f)
 #(ly:expect-warning (_ "stem does not fit in beam")) %% <= à traduire éventuellement
 #(ly:expect-warning (_ "beam was started here")) %% <= à traduire éventuellement
  \set stemRightBeamCount = #1
  f4*1/2[ s]
}
    }
  }
>>
  \layout {
     \context { \Score \remove "Metronome_mark_engraver" 
     \override SpacingSpanner.common-shortest-duration = #(ly:make-moment 1/2) 
   }
  }
  \midi {}
}
En bas de page, le manuscrit autographe de l'incipit du prélude en fa mineur.

Prelude

[edit]

The prelude, noted common time, contains 22 measures.

The first half of the first notebook of the Well-Tempered Clavier concludes with an imposing pair. Bach obviously attached a lot of value to this prelude, whose serious tone is close to the cantata BWV 12 “Weep, moan, suffer, renounce”.

It is one of the most touching preludes, of a "gray melancholy", made up of a very free polyphonic of the broken chords, in often virtual voice and without silences, a masterpiece that some have seen intended for the organ due to the abundance of slurs and the coda pedal. It is not written in four strict voices, but the held quarter notes represent the additional voice. The theme reappears in the tonic key, on a dominant pedal just before the coda.


Fugue

[edit]

The four-part fugue, notated ,common time 58 measures long, is one of the most strongly thought out in the collection and unusually long.

The subject is almost a figured chorale theme, it includes ten chromatic notes in quarter notes, over an octave and three measures and completes the path from dominant to tonic. With the response that adds F-sharp and E-flat, all notes in the chromatic scale are heard. It is a very unusual subject and only comparable with that of the 24th fugue.

The ornamentation of the penultimate note is only interpretative conjecture, because no sign of ornamentation or trill (as in the B minor fugue), is authentic and in some cases impossible to achieve, although a short trill can emphasize the presence of the subject in an intermediate voice (for example bar 36).


\version "2.18.2"
\header {
  tagline = ##f
}

\score {
  \new Staff \with {

  }
<<
  \relative c' {
    \clef bass
    \key f \minor
    \time 4/4

     %% SUJET fugue CBT I-12, BWV 857, fa mineur
     r4 c4 des c b e f bes, a aes g2
{ 
 % suppression des warnings :
 #(ly:set-option 'warning-as-error #f)
 #(ly:expect-warning (_ "stem does not fit in beam")) %% <= à traduire éventuellement
 #(ly:expect-warning (_ "beam was started here")) %% <= à traduire éventuellement
  \set stemRightBeamCount = #1
  f4*1/2[ s]
}

  }
>>
  \layout {
     \context { \Score \remove "Metronome_mark_engraver" 
     %\override SpacingSpanner.common-shortest-duration = #(ly:make-moment 1/2) 
}
  }
  \midi {} 
}


Almost directly, the two counter-subjects follow which are systematically combined with the subject in a regular inversion. The first (measures 4) opposes its four incises to the subject and travels an octave. This figure called “sighs” then appears in almost every measure of the work. The octave jump to the bass is only present in the exposure, but is not maintained afterwards.


\version "2.18.2"
\header {
  tagline = ##f
}

\score {
  \new Staff \with {
    \remove "Time_signature_engraver"
  }
<<
  \relative c {
    \clef bass
    \key f \minor
    \time 4/4

     %% CONTRE-SUJET fugue CBT I-12, BWV 857, fa mineur
     \partial 2 \parenthesize r16 b16^\markup{\tiny "Contre-sujet 1"} c d ees4 r16 c16 d ees f4 r16   ees16 f g aes4 r16 g16 a b c4~ c8 b16 a b4\prall 
{ 
 % suppression des warnings :
 #(ly:set-option 'warning-as-error #f)
 #(ly:expect-warning (_ "stem does not fit in beam")) %% <= à traduire éventuellement
 #(ly:expect-warning (_ "beam was started here")) %% <= à traduire éventuellement
  \set stemRightBeamCount = #1
  c4*1/2[ s]
}

  }
>>
  \layout {
     \context { \Score \remove "Metronome_mark_engraver" 
     %\override SpacingSpanner.common-shortest-duration = #(ly:make-moment 1/2) 
}
  }
  \midi {} 
}


The second, stated for the first time at the end of measure 7, reinforces the first. The three motifs combined form a whole full of dissonance and severity. Although the design is a invertable counterpoint, not all possible combinations of the subject and its countersubjects are used. The bridges are also freely permutable, the first two (measures 10–13 and 16–19) providing the material for the others (five), with the exception of measures 37 to 40, inspired by the material of the first counter-subject.


\version "2.18.2"
\header {
  tagline = ##f
}

\score {
  \new Staff \with {
    \remove "Time_signature_engraver"
  }
<<
  \relative c' {
    \key f \minor
    \time 4/4

     %% CONTRE-SUJET 2 — fugue CBT I-12, BWV 857, fa mineur
     \partial 8
     ees8^\markup{\tiny "Contre-sujet 2"} d ees16 f g f e d c4 \clef bass g16\rest bes16 aes g f4 r16 f16 g aes bes4. aes16 g aes4

  }
>>
  \layout {
     \context { \Score \remove "Metronome_mark_engraver" 
     %\override SpacingSpanner.common-shortest-duration = #(ly:make-moment 1/2) 
}
  }
  \midi {} 
}


The exposition presents the subject successively to the tenor, alto, bass (with the two counter-subjects henceforth except measure 40) and after three measures of a harmonic march, to the soprano to whom Bach boldly entrusts the subject (measure 13) and not the expected answer. The following entries are made two by two steps more: in tenor, in three voices (measures 19), bass (measure 27); in alto in A-flat major (measure 34), tenor without countersubjects (measure 40); in soprano in E-flat major, three voices (measure 47) and in bass (measure 53). The contours of the voices are confused on the two staves, due to the numerous crossings of voices of the different motifs.

Note that the bass interrupts twice for long bars (19–27 and 47–53) before reappearing as the subject. Towards the end of the second development (bars 27–46), the tenor enters alone, without the two countersubjects (bar 40).

This fugue presents a lack of clear division between exposition and episodes. It consists of individual entries of the subject joined by bridges of a few measures, but poorly developed and never articulated as separate passages.


Interspersed between each return of the subject, the bridges/diversions in steps (measures 22–25; 31–33; 50–52) bring relaxation in a perfectly diatonic treatment. It is therefore the support of opposition and contrast, with the chromatic and tense subject, forming “two principles”. The form of this fugue thus evokes the rondo. To preserve the register in which the subject is presented, these entertainments are in three voices, except the last (bars 43–47). But in this entertainment the soprano only uses his lowest register, which gives the impression of another voice when the subject returns.

The rhythmic pattern in dactyls is borrowed from the first bridge between the subject and the first counter-subject. This rhythm, widely used in cantatas, is called by Albert Schweitzer "the motif of joy", but here it is full of serenity and imbued with peace of mind.

Relation between Prelude and Fugue

[edit]

The prelude “leaves a presentiment in the shadows” of the subject in very elongated notes (coda, bars 16–20).


\version "2.18.2"
\header {
  tagline = ##f
}

\score {
  \new Staff \with {
    \remove "Time_signature_engraver"
  }
<<
  \relative c' {
    \clef bass
    \key f \minor
    \time 4/4
    \tempo 4 = 56

     %% PRÉLUDE CBT I-12, BWV 857, fa mineur — Coda
     << { s1*2 b2 e f4 bes,! aes2 g f } \\ { c2 des c1~ c~ c~ c } >>

  }
>>
  \layout {
     \context { \Score \remove "Metronome_mark_engraver" 
     %\override SpacingSpanner.common-shortest-duration = #(ly:make-moment 1/2) 
}
  }
  \midi {} 
}


Bibliography

[edit]
  • Hugo Riemann, 1890 (in German) (1893). Analysis of J.S. Bach's Wohltemperirtes clavier. Vol. 1. Translated by John South Shedlock. Londres / New York: Augener & Co. / G. Schirmer. p. 208. Riemann1893.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • Cecil Gray (1938). Forty-Eight Preludes and Fugues of J.S .Bach (pdf). Oxford University Press. p. 45–49. OCLC 603425933. Gray1938. {{cite book}}: More than one of |pages= and |page= specified (help).
  • Hermann Keller, 1965(in German) (1973). Le clavier bien tempéré de Johann Sebastian Bach (pdf). Études (in French). Paris: Bordas. p. 91–95. OCLC 373521522. Keller1973. {{cite book}}: More than one of |pages= and |page= specified (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • François-René Tranchefort (dir.) (1987). Guide de la musique de piano et de clavecin. Les Indispensables de la musique (in French). Paris: Fayard. p. 29–30. ISBN 978-2-213-01639-9. OCLC 17967083. Tranchefort1987. {{cite book}}: More than one of |pages= and |page= specified (help).
  • Guy Sacre (1998). La musique pour piano. Bouquins (in French). Vol. I (A-I). Paris: Robert Laffont. p. 204–205. ISBN 2-221-05017-7. Sacre1998. {{cite book}}: More than one of |pages= and |page= specified (help).
  • Robert Levin (clavecin, clavicorde, orgue et piano-forte) (trad. Anne Paris-Glaser), « Bach, Clavier bien tempéré, livre I : BWV 846-849 », Hänssler Edition Bachakademie, vol. (102 à) 117, 2000 (OCLC 705291495).
  • David Ledbetter (2002). Bach’s Well-tempered Clavier. New Haven/London: Yale University Press. p. 329–332. ISBN 0-300-09707-7. OCLC 5559558992. Ledbetter2002. {{cite book}}: More than one of |pages= and |page= specified (help).
  • David Schulenberg (2006). The keyboard music of J.S. Bach. New York: Routledge. p. 199–238. ISBN 0-415-97399-6. OCLC 63472907. Schulenberg2006. {{cite book}}: More than one of |pages= and |page= specified (help).

[[Category:1722 compositions]] [[Category:Compositions in F minor]] [[Category:The Well-Tempered Clavier]] [[Category:Articles with authority control information]]