Bach Quodlibet BWV 524 Sato, Netherlands Bach Society
Bach s Quodlibet BWV 524, here performed by the Netherlands Bach Society for All of Bach, has not been completely preserved. Although the Quodlibet translated as as you like it does have text, even if we had all the music (it is a fragment of one of the rare early Bach autograph works), it would still be difficult for us to make sense of it. Bach wrote the crazy little piece in 1707, maybe for his own wedding to his first wife Maria Barbara Bach. We hear about Salome and Dominus Johannes, which may refer to Bachs sister and the preacher Johann Lorenz Stauber, respectively, and about the Güldene Krone in Arnstadt, a respectable house where Bach probably lived for a while before moving to Mühlhausen. But whatever the reason behind it, this little work has everything you might expect of the ohsoserious Bach: refined counterpoint, a chaconne, an ironic psalmody and a resolute fugue about a kneading trough. Its anybodys guess Recorded for the project All of Bach on 10 October 2020 at TivoliVredenb
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