Arranged by Lyndell Leatherman. For Organ. The FJH Sacred Organ Library. Medleys...(+)
Arranged by Lyndell
Leatherman. For Organ.
The FJH Sacred Organ
Library. Medleys/Titles
include: The Majesty and
Power of His Name (Diadem
and Coronation-All Hail
the Power of Jesus'
Name); Treasures Bring,
Anthems Sing(We Three
Kings and What Child is
This?); Where Sorrow and
Love Flow Mingled Down
(When I Survey the
Wondrous Cross and
Beneath the Cross of
Jesus); The Joys Awating
(Jerusalem, My Happy Home
and When I Can Read My
Title Clear); Morning
Tribute (Morning Has
Broken and When Morning
Gilds the Skies); An
Ever-Present Comfort (All
Will Be Well and God Will
Take Care of you);
Amazing, Infinite Love
(The Love of God and My
Savior's Love); Adoration
to the King (We Worship
and Adore You/O Come, Let
Us Adore Him/Joyful,
Joyful, We Adore Thee).
Sacred. Level: Early
Advanced. Book. P
Easy, Yet Beautiful, All-Organ Arrangements by Bob Rollins. Arranged by Bob Roll...(+)
Easy, Yet Beautiful,
All-Organ Arrangements by
Bob Rollins. Arranged by
Bob Rollins. Creative
Concepts Publishing. Size
9x12 inches. 128 pages.
Published by Creative
Concepts.
Composed by William Batchelder Bradbury, William Howard Doane and Hugh Wilson. A...(+)
Composed by William
Batchelder Bradbury,
William Howard Doane and
Hugh Wilson. Arranged by
Robert J. Powell. For
organ. 21st Century.
Moderately Easy.
Published by MorningStar
Music Publishers
Composed by Douglas E Wagner. For organ solo, 3-staff. Sacred, Eastertide, Holy ...(+)
Composed by Douglas E
Wagner. For organ solo,
3-staff. Sacred,
Eastertide, Holy Week,
Lent, Palm/Passion
Sunday. Intermediate.
Published by Lorenz
Publishing Company
Organ - advanced SKU: HL.49045437 For Organ. Composed by Enjott Sc...(+)
Organ - advanced
SKU:
HL.49045437
For
Organ. Composed by
Enjott Schneider. This
edition: Saddle
stitching. Sheet music.
Organ Large Works.
Classical. Softcover.
Composed 2016. 48 pages.
Duration 24'. Schott
Music #ED 22668.
Published by Schott Music
(HL.49045437).
ISBN
9790001162715. UPC:
841886029088.
9.0x12.0x0.168
inches.
On the
occasion of the
quincentenary of
Reformation Day in 2017,
the composer Enjott
Schneider thoroughly
studied Martin Luther the
individual and all his
contradictions. The
result is a brilliant,
demanding organ symphony
which is perfect for
concerts on the subject
of Reformation and Martin
Luther.The composer
describes the five
movements of the symphony
as follows:'1st
movement:Wir glauben all
an einen Gott with its
quintuplet-like beginning
is very Gregorian in
style, outlining the
range of Lutheran
emotionalism between the
Middle Ages and the
modern era. The
irrationality of faith
ultimately has priority
over any thought and
evidence. At the
beginning of the
movement, sounds of
knocking on wood remind
of the nailing of the
Ninety-Five Theses to the
doors of churches in
Wittenberg. The chorale
melody sometimes hides
with an almost rough
medieval saltarello,
referring to Luther's
robustness and vitality
with which he knew to
carry away even common
people.2nd movement:In
1530, the electoral
prince of Saxony
presented to Luther at
Coburg Castle the golden
signet ring with the
Luther rose which became
the symbol of his
theology of grace. A
white heart with black
cross is fixed on a
five-petalled rose. To
him, white is the colour
of angels and ghosts,
black stands for the pain
of crucification: The
just shall live by faith,
but by faith in the
Crucified. But the fact
that the rose and the
heart are the dominating
symbols shows how
Catholic Marian piety
remained an ingredient of
Luther's spirituality
throughout his life. In
line with the dominant
five-petal structure of
the rose, this movement
was composed, to a large
extent, in accordance
with the floating,
lyrical rhythm in 5/8
time.3rd movement:The
omnipresence of death and
dying - from the plague
and war to the
never-ending dangers of
daily life - was an
essential part of the
world view of that time.
Fears ensued that might
heighten into the
grotesque, e.g. in the
pictures of Hieronymus
Bosch. The Danse macabre
was a popular motif in
those years. Luther's
chorale Mitten wir im
Leben sind / mit dem Tod
umfangen from 1524
(Enchiridion from Erfurt)
is based on the Gregorian
chant Media vita in morte
sumus created in France
around 750 and, with its
idea of transience,
inspired a simplistic
air.4th movement:The
famous confession
delivered at the Diet of
Worms in 1521, I stand
here and can say no more.
God help me. Amen, are
not Luther's words but
the version later used as
text for a pamphlet.
However, it represents
quite plainly the
straightforwardness and
inevitability of his
mission. Musically, it
was made into a perpetuum
mobile, i.e. a dogged,
ostinato and never-ending
musical air.5th
movement:The Mighty
Fortress, on the other
hand, is one of the great
symbols of Martin Luther
which, with its shining C
major key, embodies the
Protestant ideology and
willful nature of the
Reformation unlike any
other song. Heinrich
Heine called it the
Marseille anthem of the
Reformation, Friedrich
Engels the Marseillaise
of the Peasants' Wars.
This disputability is not
thought through to the
end but rather
interrupted: With a
jubilant birdcall version
of the melody, the finale
shows a rather
chamber-music-like side
of the ideals of freedom
of Christians.'.
Organ SKU: BR.EB-9300 (Plainte sur la perte de la reflexion musicale)<...(+)
Organ
SKU:
BR.EB-9300
(Plainte sur la perte
de la reflexion
musicale). Composed
by Klaus Huber. Arranged
by A. Digby and M.
Sattelberger. Solo
instruments; stapled.
Edition Breitkopf. World
premieres: I version for
flute: Wiesbaden, 1972.
Music post-1945; New
music (post-2000). Score.
Composed 1972. 20 pages.
Duration 20'. Breitkopf
and Haertel #EB 9300.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9300).
ISBN 9790004187647. 9
x 12 inches.
World
premieres:I version for
flute: Wiesbaden, 1972II
version for piano: Nyon,
1972III version for var.
insts.: Cologne, May 29,
1976VI version for
accordeon: Fribourg, June
25, 1987VIII version for
violoncello Tokyo:
October 14, 1989X version
for organ: Stuttgart,
March 28, 2018This work
(A Breath of the
Untimely) was first
written for solo Flute
and dedicated to Aurele
Nicolet. Its bears the
subtitle Lament on the
Loss of Musical Thought -
some Madrigals for Solo
Flute or Flute with any
other Instruments. This
serves as a playing
instruction but doubles
at the same time as an
outmoded programme: it
refers back to the
musical origin of the
opening lamenting motif,
a tradition which was
once of its time but is
not of our time - namely
the Lamento genre which
gave the title to the
Chaconne in Purcell's
opera Dido and Aeneas.
Almost simultaneously I
wrote a second version
for Piano (for Piano
one-and-a-half hands),
which already formulates
possible approaches for
the performer, in some
detail, to the indicated,
quasi-canonic version of
the piece in the
programme. The multiple
version Ein Hauch von
Unzeit III realizes a
concrete version of a
formal state which floats
between strict canon and
aleatoric principles:
each of the musicians who
are spread throughout the
hall introduces their own
idiomatic translation of
the flute part. And so
the music exists,
omnipresent, not only
spatially throughout the
hall, but also formally
in a sort of fluctuating
simultaneity. For that
reason, it was my express
wish to any potential
interpreter that they
should construct entirely
their own version of the
piece. A healthy number
of musicians have
responded to my
suggestion - versions of
the piece have now been
made for guitar
(Cornelius Schwehr,
Gunther Schneider),
accordion (Hugo Noth),
double bass (Fernando
Grillo), violin
(Hansheinz Schneeberger),
viola, violoncello, and
double bass (trio basso,
Koln), violoncello
(Michael Bach), trombone
(Andrew Digby) and,
created by myself, a sung
version for voice (to
words by Georg Wilhelm
Friedrich Hegel und Max
Bense), and for viola.The
most important
requirement for the whole
piece is absolute
stillness, which should
as far as possible
emanate from the
performer. The pauses are
occasionally in this
respect the most
important element. These
may, if one can find the
necessary stillness,
become very long.Ein
Hauch von Unzeit (A
Breath of the Untimely) -
time almost
dissolves!(Klaus Huber,
1989/2014 - translation:
David
Alberman)CD:Jean-Luc
Menet (Bass flute)CD
Traversieres
120.270Jean-Luc Menet
(fl)CD STR
37039Bibliography:Zimmerm
ann, Heidy:
Zeitgestaltung im
Kompositionsprozess bei
Klaus Huber - dargestellt
anhand von Skizzen, in:
Mnemosyne. Zeit und
Gedachtnis in der
europaischen Musik des
ausgehenden 20.
Jahrhunderts, hrsg. von
Dorothea Redepenning und
Joachim Steinheuer,
Saarbrucken: Pfau 2006,
S. 90-109
World
premiere: Stuttgart,
Hospitalkirche, March 28,
2018.
(Voluntaries (without Pedal)). Edited by Alexander Schreiner. For Organ. Book; O...(+)
(Voluntaries (without
Pedal)). Edited by
Alexander Schreiner. For
Organ. Book; Organ -
Method or Collection;
Worship Resources.
Alfred's Classic
Editions. Sacred. 184
pages. Published by
Alfred Music Publishing
Composed by Gerald Near (1942-). For organ. Chant-Based. Catholic Sequences, Com...(+)
Composed by Gerald Near
(1942-). For organ.
Chant-Based. Catholic
Sequences, Complete Mass,
Pentecost, Trinity,
Communion. Medium.
Published by Aureole
Editions
Arranged by Hal H. Hopson. Church-Worship, Funeral, Funeral & Memorial, Wedding ...(+)
Arranged by Hal H.
Hopson. Church-Worship,
Funeral, Funeral &
Memorial, Wedding and
Sacred. Print Music
Collection (Book). 407
pages. Published by Hope
Publishing Company.
Level: (Moderate).
By Various. Edited by Meuser, Michael / Berning, Thomas / Kohlmann, Mathias / De...(+)
By Various. Edited by
Meuser, Michael /
Berning, Thomas /
Kohlmann, Mathias /
Degott, Matthias / Kolle,
Martin / Walter, Meinrad
/ Geismann, Wilm.
Occasions: Eucharist,
Communion, Feasts of the
Blessed Virgin Mary,
Hymns in praise of the
Virgin Mary, Mourning,
Death; Use during church
year: Advent, Lent and
Passiontide, Easter and
Eastertide, Christmas.
Collection. 224 pages.
Published by Carus Verlag
(German import).
Organ SKU: BR.EB-9305 Urtext - Critical Source Edition of the Free Org...(+)
Organ
SKU:
BR.EB-9305
Urtext
- Critical Source Edition
of the Free Organ
Works. Composed by
Dietrich Buxtehude.
Edited by Harald Vogel.
Solo instruments;
Softbound. Edition
Breitkopf.
Renaissance/early
Baroque; Baroque. Score.
84 pages. Breitkopf and
Haertel #EB 9305.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9305).
ISBN 9790004187692. 12
x 9 inches.
This
edition is the result of
Harald Vogel's many years
of practice as an
organist and
musicologist. The music
text is based on a
reevaluation of 17th- and
18th-century manuscripts
containing the free organ
and keyboard works by
Buxtehude. They
originated during a
transitional phase
between the traditional
letter tablature and the
staff notation still in
use today. Since many
works have survived only
in transcriptions for
staff notation, the
editor was confronted
with a high error rate,
which he carefully
analyzes in the
Einzelanmerkungen. During
the preparation of the
edition, the editor
always kept sight of the
performance practice, but
still, the image of the
sources is never
distorted (e. g. by
superfluous rests,
beaming not conforming to
the sources and the
unhistorical adjustment
of time signatures) and
stays very close to the
compositional notation,
the letter tablature. The
flexible use of three
staves and the
differentiated
distribution of the
voices on the staves
allow for an
approximation in reading
conventions of historical
notation with its
resulting information
about hand division.
Grouping the free organ
repertoire into works
with obbligato pedal and
works for manuals, this
edition is organized in
two volumes. The first
subvolume (I/1, EB 9304)
contains the Preface and
the Preludes, whereas the
second subvolume (I/2, EB
9305) contains Toccatas,
Ostinato works,
alternative versions and
a comprehensive Critical
Commentary (in German
only). Volume II (EB
9306) contains
Buxtehude's free organ
and keyboard works
(manualiter) with the
corresponding texts
(Preface and Critical
Commentary).Until 1971,
Harald Vogel worked on a
dissertation (with Georg
von Dadelsen, Hamburg) on
Die Fuge um Bach. Besides
the description of the
inclusion of triple
measures into the C
notation and the
irregularities of the
voice mutation in the
polyphonic structures,
this also included a
discussion about the
justification of the
inner textual criticism.
With the inner textual
criticism, deviations in
parallel passages are
unified. The North German
fugue style, reaching a
peak in Buxtehude's work,
is characterized by a
constant diversity of
details in subject and
polyphonic progressions.
One of the indicators of
the fantastic style is
the dissolution of the
polyphonic structures at
the ends of the fugues,
evident in Buxtehude's
work.In this edition, a
musical text is presented
that avoids the
uniformity of detail not
conforming to the
sources. However, there
are many examples of
transcription and cursory
errors, which are
analyzed in a methodical
systematic manner. About
the editor: As an
organist, professor,
organ expert, and
scholar, Harald Vogel has
rendered outstanding
services to the
interpretation of early
music and especially to
historical performance
practice concerning the
organ for decades. He has
received numerous awards,
including an ECHO Klassik
as Instrumentalist of the
Year (2012), honorary
doctorates from Lulea
University of Technology
(Sweden, 2008) and
Oberlin College (USA,
2014), as well as the
Buxtehude Prize of the
City of Lubeck (2018).
Harald Vogel is the
author and editor of
numerous scholarly
publications and
editions. Through his
lifelong performance
practice, he can look
back on an extensive
discography, including
the complete recording of
Buxtehude's organ works,
which he recorded in
various locations with
historical organ
instruments of the North
German organ building
tradition in Scandinavia,
North Germany and the
Netherlands.
pure
source edition (no
mixture of different
transmissions);
comprehensive commentary
(Vol. I/2 & II) (with
texts about the sources,
chronology, use of keys,
liturgic placement as
well as detailed critical
remarks, incl. music
examples (in German
only)); good page
turnsflexible division of
voices (on 2 or 3
systems, good
legibility); contains
facsimiles. Contains the
Critical Commentary of
the subvolumes I/1 and
I/2.
Organ SKU: BR.EB-9304 Urtext - Critical Source Edition of the Free Org...(+)
Organ
SKU:
BR.EB-9304
Urtext
- Critical Source Edition
of the Free Organ
Works. Composed by
Dietrich Buxtehude.
Edited by Harald Vogel.
Solo instruments;
Softbound. Edition
Breitkopf.
Renaissance/early
Baroque; Baroque. Score.
108 pages. Breitkopf and
Haertel #EB 9304.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9304).
ISBN 9790004187685. 12
x 9 inches.
This
edition is the result of
Harald Vogel's many years
of practice as an
organist and
musicologist. The music
text is based on a
reevaluation of 17th- and
18th-century manuscripts
containing the free organ
and keyboard works by
Buxtehude. They
originated during a
transitional phase
between the traditional
letter tablature and the
staff notation still in
use today. Since many
works have survived only
in transcriptions for
staff notation, the
editor was confronted
with a high error rate,
which he carefully
analyzes in the
Einzelanmerkungen. During
the preparation of the
edition, the editor
always kept sight of the
performance practice, but
still, the image of the
sources is never
distorted (e. g. by
superfluous rests,
beaming not conforming to
the sources and the
unhistorical adjustment
of time signatures) and
stays very close to the
compositional notation,
the letter tablature. The
flexible use of three
staves and the
differentiated
distribution of the
voices on the staves
allow for an
approximation in reading
conventions of historical
notation with its
resulting information
about hand division.
Grouping the free organ
repertoire into works
with obbligato pedal and
works for manuals, this
edition is organized in
two volumes. The first
subvolume (I/1, EB 9304)
contains the Preface and
the Preludes, whereas the
second subvolume (I/2, EB
9305) contains Toccatas,
Ostinato works,
alternative versions and
a comprehensive Critical
Commentary (in German
only). Volume II (EB
9306) contains
Buxtehude's free organ
and keyboard works
(manualiter) with the
corresponding texts
(Preface and Critical
Commentary).Until 1971,
Harald Vogel worked on a
dissertation (with Georg
von Dadelsen, Hamburg) on
Die Fuge um Bach. Besides
the description of the
inclusion of triple
measures into the C
notation and the
irregularities of the
voice mutation in the
polyphonic structures,
this also included a
discussion about the
justification of the
inner textual criticism.
With the inner textual
criticism, deviations in
parallel passages are
unified. The North German
fugue style, reaching a
peak in Buxtehude's work,
is characterized by a
constant diversity of
details in subject and
polyphonic progressions.
One of the indicators of
the fantastic style is
the dissolution of the
polyphonic structures at
the ends of the fugues,
evident in Buxtehude's
work.In this edition, a
musical text is presented
that avoids the
uniformity of detail not
conforming to the
sources. However, there
are many examples of
transcription and cursory
errors, which are
analyzed in a methodical
systematic manner. About
the editor: As an
organist, professor,
organ expert, and
scholar, Harald Vogel has
rendered outstanding
services to the
interpretation of early
music and especially to
historical performance
practice concerning the
organ for decades. He has
received numerous awards,
including an ECHO Klassik
as Instrumentalist of the
Year (2012), honorary
doctorates from Lulea
University of Technology
(Sweden, 2008) and
Oberlin College (USA,
2014), as well as the
Buxtehude Prize of the
City of Lubeck (2018).
Harald Vogel is the
author and editor of
numerous scholarly
publications and
editions. Through his
lifelong performance
practice, he can look
back on an extensive
discography, including
the complete recording of
Buxtehude's organ works,
which he recorded in
various locations with
historical organ
instruments of the North
German organ building
tradition in Scandinavia,
North Germany and the
Netherlands.
pure
source edition (no
mixture of different
transmissions);
comprehensive commentary
(Vol. I/2 & II) (with
texts about the sources,
chronology, use of keys,
liturgic placement as
well as detailed critical
remarks, incl. music
examples (in German
only)); good page
turnsflexible division of
voices (on 2 or 3
systems, good
legibility); contains
facsimiles. The
corresponding Critical
Commentary is contained
in Volume I/2 (EB
9305).
Organ SKU: BR.EB-9306 Urtext - Critical Source Edition of the Free Org...(+)
Organ
SKU:
BR.EB-9306
Urtext
- Critical Source Edition
of the Free Organ
Works. Composed by
Dietrich Buxtehude.
Edited by Harald Vogel.
Solo instruments;
Softbound. Edition
Breitkopf.
Renaissance/early
Baroque; Baroque. Score.
84 pages. Breitkopf and
Haertel #EB 9306.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9306).
ISBN 9790004187708. 12
x 9 inches.
This
edition is the result of
Harald Vogel's many years
of practice as an
organist and
musicologist. The music
text is based on a
reevaluation of 17th- and
18th-century manuscripts
containing the free organ
and keyboard works by
Buxtehude. They
originated during a
transitional phase
between the traditional
letter tablature and the
staff notation still in
use today. Since many
works have survived only
in transcriptions for
staff notation, the
editor was confronted
with a high error rate,
which he carefully
analyzes in the
Einzelanmerkungen. During
the preparation of the
edition, the editor
always kept sight of the
performance practice, but
still, the image of the
sources is never
distorted (e. g. by
superfluous rests,
beaming not conforming to
the sources and the
unhistorical adjustment
of time signatures) and
stays very close to the
compositional notation,
the letter tablature. The
flexible use of three
staves and the
differentiated
distribution of the
voices on the staves
allow for an
approximation in reading
conventions of historical
notation with its
resulting information
about hand division.
Grouping the free organ
repertoire into works
with obbligato pedal and
works for manuals, this
edition is organized in
two volumes. The first
subvolume (I/1, EB 9304)
contains the Preface and
the Preludes, whereas the
second subvolume (I/2, EB
9305) contains Toccatas,
Ostinato works,
alternative versions and
a comprehensive Critical
Commentary (in German
only). Volume II (EB
9306) contains
Buxtehude's free organ
and keyboard works
(manualiter) with the
corresponding texts
(Preface and Critical
Commentary).Until 1971,
Harald Vogel worked on a
dissertation (with Georg
von Dadelsen, Hamburg) on
Die Fuge um Bach. Besides
the description of the
inclusion of triple
measures into the C
notation and the
irregularities of the
voice mutation in the
polyphonic structures,
this also included a
discussion about the
justification of the
inner textual criticism.
With the inner textual
criticism, deviations in
parallel passages are
unified. The North German
fugue style, reaching a
peak in Buxtehude's work,
is characterized by a
constant diversity of
details in subject and
polyphonic progressions.
One of the indicators of
the fantastic style is
the dissolution of the
polyphonic structures at
the ends of the fugues,
evident in Buxtehude's
work.In this edition, a
musical text is presented
that avoids the
uniformity of detail not
conforming to the
sources. However, there
are many examples of
transcription and cursory
errors, which are
analyzed in a methodical
systematic manner. About
the editor: As an
organist, professor,
organ expert, and
scholar, Harald Vogel has
rendered outstanding
services to the
interpretation of early
music and especially to
historical performance
practice concerning the
organ for decades. He has
received numerous awards,
including an ECHO Klassik
as Instrumentalist of the
Year (2012), honorary
doctorates from Lulea
University of Technology
(Sweden, 2008) and
Oberlin College (USA,
2014), as well as the
Buxtehude Prize of the
City of Lubeck (2018).
Harald Vogel is the
author and editor of
numerous scholarly
publications and
editions. Through his
lifelong performance
practice, he can look
back on an extensive
discography, including
the complete recording of
Buxtehude's organ works,
which he recorded in
various locations with
historical organ
instruments of the North
German organ building
tradition in Scandinavia,
North Germany and the
Netherlands.
pure
source edition (no
mixture of different
transmissions)
comprehensive commentary
(Vol. I/2 & II) (with
texts about the sources,
chronology, use of keys,
liturgic placement as
well as detailed critical
remarks, incl. music
examples (in German
only))good page
turnsflexible division of
voices (on 2 or 3
systems, good
legibility)contains
facsimiles.
Organ SKU: BR.EB-9415 Urtext - Critical Source Edition of the Free Org...(+)
Organ
SKU:
BR.EB-9415
Urtext
- Critical Source Edition
of the Free Organ
Works. Composed by
Dietrich Buxtehude.
Edited by Harald Vogel.
Solo instruments;
Softbound. Edition
Breitkopf.
Renaissance/early
Baroque; Baroque. Score.
192 pages. Breitkopf and
Haertel #EB 9415.
Published by Breitkopf
and Haertel (BR.EB-9415).
ISBN 9790004188897. 12
x 9 inches.
This
edition is the result of
Harald Vogel's many years
of practice as an
organist and
musicologist. The music
text is based on a
reevaluation of 17th- and
18th-century manuscripts
containing the free organ
and keyboard works by
Buxtehude. They
originated during a
transitional phase
between the traditional
letter tablature and the
staff notation still in
use today. Since many
works have survived only
in transcriptions for
staff notation, the
editor was confronted
with a high error rate,
which he carefully
analyzes in the
Einzelanmerkungen. During
the preparation of the
edition, the editor
always kept sight of the
performance practice, but
still, the image of the
sources is never
distorted (e. g. by
superfluous rests,
beaming not conforming to
the sources and the
unhistorical adjustment
of time signatures) and
stays very close to the
compositional notation,
the letter tablature. The
flexible use of three
staves and the
differentiated
distribution of the
voices on the staves
allow for an
approximation in reading
conventions of historical
notation with its
resulting information
about hand division.
Grouping the free organ
repertoire into works
with obbligato pedal and
works for manuals, this
edition is organized in
two volumes. The first
subvolume (I/1, EB 9304)
contains the Preface and
the Preludes, whereas the
second subvolume (I/2, EB
9305) contains Toccatas,
Ostinato works,
alternative versions and
a comprehensive Critical
Commentary (in German
only). Volume II (EB
9306) contains
Buxtehude's free organ
and keyboard works
(manualiter) with the
corresponding texts
(Preface and Critical
Commentary).Until 1971,
Harald Vogel worked on a
dissertation (with Georg
von Dadelsen, Hamburg) on
Die Fuge um Bach. Besides
the description of the
inclusion of triple
measures into the C
notation and the
irregularities of the
voice mutation in the
polyphonic structures,
this also included a
discussion about the
justification of the
inner textual criticism.
With the inner textual
criticism, deviations in
parallel passages are
unified. The North German
fugue style, reaching a
peak in Buxtehude's work,
is characterized by a
constant diversity of
details in subject and
polyphonic progressions.
One of the indicators of
the fantastic style is
the dissolution of the
polyphonic structures at
the ends of the fugues,
evident in Buxtehude's
work.In this edition, a
musical text is presented
that avoids the
uniformity of detail not
conforming to the
sources. However, there
are many examples of
transcription and cursory
errors, which are
analyzed in a methodical
systematic manner. About
the editor: As an
organist, professor,
organ expert, and
scholar, Harald Vogel has
rendered outstanding
services to the
interpretation of early
music and especially to
historical performance
practice concerning the
organ for decades. He has
received numerous awards,
including an ECHO Klassik
as Instrumentalist of the
Year (2012), honorary
doctorates from Lulea
University of Technology
(Sweden, 2008) and
Oberlin College (USA,
2014), as well as the
Buxtehude Prize of the
City of Lubeck (2018).
Harald Vogel is the
author and editor of
numerous scholarly
publications and
editions. Through his
lifelong performance
practice, he can look
back on an extensive
discography, including
the complete recording of
Buxtehude's organ works,
which he recorded in
various locations with
historical organ
instruments of the North
German organ building
tradition in Scandinavia,
North Germany and the
Netherlands.
pure
source edition (no
mixture of different
transmissions)
comprehensive commentary
(Vol. I/2 & II) (with
texts about the sources,
chronology, use of keys,
liturgic placement as
well as detailed critical
remarks, incl. music
examples (in German
only))good page
turnsflexible division of
voices (on 2 or 3
systems, good
legibility)contains
facsimiles.
By Johann Christoph Bach, Johann Sebastian Bach. Edited by Christoph Wolff. Orga...(+)
By Johann Christoph Bach,
Johann Sebastian Bach.
Edited by Christoph
Wolff. Organ Music
(hymns); Use during
church year: Easter and
Eastertide. Collection.
80 pages. Published by
Carus Verlag (German
import).