Bach - 2.phrasing
Bach - 2.phrasing
Bach - 2.phrasing
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Bach
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Performing Bach's Keyboard Music -
Phrasing
By George A. Kochevitsky
New York City
BECAUSEititwould
wouldseemofproper
seem tothedefine
ambiguity
the term:to define of the often the term: loosely used word "phrasing,"
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equally plausible solutions - that is, points at which one "feels" that one
phrase ends and another begins.
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evolves the theory of "polyphonic accents" in Bach playing (accents hori-
zontal, rather than vertical; kinetic and motor, rather than heavy and
step-wise).
The writer does not share the theory that Bach's music is alien to the
metro-rhythmical structure. There are cases, however, where the tension
of Bach's horizontal line overbalances the significance of the metrical
division. (See Example 4.)
An example (often referred to) is the C-major fugue from the Well-
Tempered Clavier , Book I, where the shifting of the subject seemingly
obliterates the bar lines. Upon close analysis, one realizes that these neces-
sary displacements are observed only in several stretto sections and, thus,
do not prove the point.
Concerning the performance of such pieces, Cone states that the per-
former's "orientation within the measure should be effected more by the
actual musical profile than by applied accentuation, which," he goes on to
state, "[was], after all, unavailable on two of Bach's favorite instruments."6
Here, one might argue that since dynamic accentuation was impossible on
these instruments, most certainly the necessary accentuation was achieved
by agogic means - that is, by effecting the slightest prolongation or delay
upon the note to be stressed.
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meets the conceptions which are to be found somewhere between these
extreme points. As for the performer-interpreter - he may find it advan-
tageous to mix and, at times, even to try to reconcile, apparently contra-
dictory views concerning Bach phrasing.
Footnotes
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Ex. 3. J. S. Bach, Inventio I, meas. 1-2.
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