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Composers

Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685 - 1750)

Sample page — 404x Score — 147x
Tenore — 90x , Flauto traversiere — 104x , Basso — 91x

The ancient sources of Cantata “Herr Christ, der einge Gottessohn” [BWV 96], including the aria and online available on Bach digital, are: a) manuscript of the score, D-B Mus.ms. Bach P 179, Faszikel 1; b) manuscript of parts, D-LEb Thomana 96 (Depositum im Bach-Archiv). The critical edition by Matthias Wendt, Bärenreiter Verlag, 1990, Plate BA 5074, available on IMSLP, was also consulted.

Version 1.0
Sample page — 404x Score — 126x
Soprano — 95x , Flauto traversiere — 100x , Violino — 95x , Basso continuo / Organo — 97x
Aria - Versus 3 — 95x

The ancient sources of Cantata “Gelobet sei der Herr, mein Gott” [BWV 129], online available on Bach digital, are: a) manuscript of parts, D-LEb Thomana 129, Faszikel 1, with the autograph part of organ; b) manuscript of the score by C.F. Penzel, D-B Mus.ms. Bach P 950; c) manuscript of the score by C.F. Barth, D-B Mus.ms. Bach P 957; d) manuscript of parts by C.F. Penzel et al, D-B Mus.ms. Bach St 159. The critical edition by Alfred Dürr, Bärenreiter Verlag, 1967, Plate BA 5029, available on IMSLP, was also consulted.

Version 1.0
Sample page — 420x Score — 152x
Soprano — 97x , Flauto traversiere I — 107x , Flauto traversiere II — 104x , Flauto traversiere III — 100x , Basso continuo — 101x

Sources are: 1) Cantata „Schleicht, spielende Wellen, und murmelt gelinde“, BWV 206 [1724]: holograph manuscript of the score, Berlin, Staatsbibliothek, D-B Mus.ms. Bach P 42, Faszikel 1; 2) critical edition of the score: Neue Bach Ausgabe (NBA), Band 36 (Werner Neumann, 1963), IMSLP, 3) holograph manuscript of separate parts, Berlin, Staatsbibliothek, D-B Mus.ms. Bach St 80, Faszikel 1. The holograph sources are online available on Bach Digital (http://www.bachdigi­tal.de/).

Version 1.0
Sample page — 492x Score — 171x
Oboe / Flauto traversiere I / Oboe d'amore — 138x , Flauto traversiere II — 111x , Contralto — 107x , Basso continuo — 105x

Sources are: Sie werden euch in den Bann thun“, BWV 44 [1724]: autograph of the score, Berlin, Staatsbibliothek and the edition of the score, Neue Bach Ausgabe (NBA), I/12, S. 165 (Alfred Dürr, 1960), IMSLP. Cantata „Ihr, die ihr euch von Christo nennet“, BWV 164 [1725): autograph of the score, Berlin, Staatsbibliothek and the edition of the score, NBA (Walter Neumann), Band 21, IMSLP. Dramma per musica „Zerraißet, zersprenget, zertrümmert die Gruft“, BWV 205 [1725]: autograph of the score, Berlin, Staatsbibliothek and the edition of the score, BGA, band 11.2 (Wilhelm Rust, 1862).

Version 1.0
Sample page — 708x Score — 167x
Flauto traversiere — 131x , Contralto / Tenore — 105x , Basso continuo — 100x

Sources are: 1) Cantata „Es ist dir gesagt, Mensch,was gut ist“, BWV 45 [1726]: autograph score, Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin – Preußischer Kulturbesitz and the 1860 edition of the score, by Wilhelm Rust, BGA, band 10; 2)  Cantata „Ich armer Mensch, ich Sündenknecht“, BWV 55 [1726]: autograph score, Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin – Preußischer Kulturbesitz and the BGA edition of the score, by Wilhelm Rust, band 12. Sources are online available on Bach Digital (http://www.bachdigital.de/). BGA scores are also available on Petrucci Music Library.

Version 1.0
Sample page — 651x Score — 142x
Soprano — 99x , Violino I — 88x , Violino II — 89x , Viola — 95x , Oboe — 93x , Continuo — 102x
Recitativo — 93x , Aria con Oboe - Recitativo — 79x , Recitativo — 87x , Aria andante — 94x , Recitativo — 77x , Corale con viola obbligata — 84x , Recitativo — 99x , Aria - Allegro — 75x

Sources are: (a) the autograph manuscript of the score mu 6701.0731, RISM ID no.: 150201115, Det Kongelige Bibliotek (DK-Kk); (b) a later transcription of the score (1824), mu 9404.2682, RISM ID no.: 15020 5403, Det Kongelige Bibliotek (DK-Kk); (c) a collection of separate parts, Bach digital, ms. Bach St 459, Faszikel 1.

Version 1.0
Sample page — 675x Score — 123x
Flauto traversiere — 113x , Tenore — 92x , Basso — 96x
Frohe Hirten — 95x , Benedictus — 98x

Sources are: Aria „Frohe Hirten [BWV 248] [1734]: autograph score, and the edition of the score, BGA, band 5. „Benedictus“, BWV 232 [1734-49]: autograph score, a ms. by C. P. E. Bach and the BGA edition of the score.

Version 1.0
Sample — 500x Score — 111x
Choir — 94x , Hautbois — 98x , Violino I — 86x , Violino II — 96x , Viola — 90x , Violoncello / Continuo — 93x
Chorale — 90x

Sources of Cantata „Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe“, BWV 22 [1723] are: autograph score, Berlin, Staatsbibliothek and the 1855 edition of the score, BGA, band 5, editor William Rust.

Version 1.0
Sample — 622x Score — 143x
Flauto traversiere I — 112x , Flauto traversiere II — 103x , Contralto / Soprano — 101x , Basso — 102x

Sources are: Cantata „Geschwinde, ihr wirbelnden Winde“, BWV 201 [1729]: autograph score, Berlin, Staatsbibliothek and the 1862 edition of the score, BGA, band 24; Cantata „Ich bin in mir vergnügt“, BWV 204 [1726-27]: autograph score, Berlin, Staatsbibliothek and the BGA edition of the score, band 24; Cantata „Schweigt stille, plaudert nicht“, BWV 211 [1734]: autograph score, Berlin, Staatsbibliothek and the BGA edition of the score, band 24.

Version 1.0
Sample — 498x Score — 138x
Flauto traversiere — 114x , Tenore / Soprano — 97x , Basso — 101x , Violoncello piccolo — 98x

Sources are: BWV 113: 1876 edition of score of cantata „Herr Jesu Christ, du höchstes Gut“, BGA, band 24. The aria for tenor is in movement n. 5; BWV 114: ms., partly autograph, of separate parts of cantata „Ach, lieben Christen, seid getrost“, Bach-Archiv Leipzig, Leipzig. The editor consulted the 1876 edition of the score, Bach-Gesellschaft Aus­gabe, band 24. The aria for tenor is in movement n. 2; BWV 115: 1876 edition of score of cantata „Mache dich, mein Geist, bereit“, BGA, band 24. The aria for soprano is in movement n. 4.

Version 1.1
Sample — 545x Score — 151x
Cantus — 119x , Altus — 103x , Tenor — 122x , Bassus — 99x

The reference source is the original posthumous edition (1751) of Die Kunst der Fuge [BWV 1080], in the digitized collection of the Kongelige Bibliotek, Copenhagen. For this edition the editor consulted the 1878 version, by Bach Gesellschaft zu Leipzig (Band 25.1, editor Wilhelm Rust), which includes adjustments made by Bach himself on the first original and on the manuscript versions. The edition includes the score of the numbers from 7 to 16 and the separate parts with the keys most commonly used for practical performance with various instruments.

Version 1.0 with a new editorial format.
Sample — 482x Score — 159x
Flauto — 116x , Violino 1 — 106x , Violino II — 102x , Viola — 103x , Basso — 100x
Sinfonia — 104x

Source of Cantata “Non sa che sia dolore” [BWV 209] is the 1881 edition of Bach-Gesellschaft zu Leipzig, obtained from a ms by Johann Nikolaus Forkel (1749 – 1818), first Bach biographer. It is included in Band 29 - Kammermusik für Gesang. Bd.3. Cantate. Was mir behagt, ist nur die muntre Jagd. etc. (BWV 208-10, 194, 211012, 134a, 210a, 1040), editor Paul Graf Waldersee.

Version 1.0 with a new editorial format.
Sample — 598x Score — 145x
Cantus / Clavier I — 99x , Bassus / Altus / Clavier II — 95x , Tenor — 100x , Bassus — 95x

The reference source is the original posthumous edition (1751) of Die Kunst der Fuge [BWV 1080], in the digitized collection of the Kongelige Bibliotek, Copenhagen. For this edition the editor consulted the 1878 version, by Bach Gesellschaft zu Leipzig (Band 25.1, editor Wilhelm Rust), which includes adjustments made by Bach himself on the first printed original edition and on the manuscript versions. The edition includes the score of the last seven numbers of the 1751 edition, including Choral „Wenn wir in hoechsten Noethen“ and the separate parts with the clefs most commonly used for practical performance with various instruments.

New publication of version 1.0, previously published on October 11, 2009, with a revised editorial format.
Sample — 545x Score — 123x
Cantus — 121x , Altus — 104x , Tenor — 113x , Bassus — 110x
Contrapunctus I. — 114x , Contrapunctus 2. — 109x , Contrapunctus 3. — 90x , Contrapunctus 4. — 108x , Contrapunctus 5. — 109x , Contrapunctus 6. a 4 in Stylo Francese. — 113x

Source is the posthumous edition (1751) of „Die Kunst der Fuge“ [BWV 1080], available in the digital collection of Kongelige Bibliotek, Copenhagen. Also, the 1878 edition of Bach-Gesellschaft zu Leipzig (Band 25.1, editor Wilhelm Rust) has been consulted, since it takes into account corrections of Bach himself on the first version of printed edition and the autograph ms. Corrections from Band 25.1 are marked in brackets or with dashed lines.

Version 1.0 has been published on April 21, 2009. Version 1.5, which corrects some transcription errors and has a better editorial format, has been published on May 1, 2013.
Sample — 535x Score — 124x
Voce I — 103x , Voce II — 98x , Voce III — 94x

Source of „Ricercare n. 1 a tre voci“ [BWV 1079 n. 1], is the 1885 edition of Musikalisches Opfer edited by Bach-Gesellschaft in Leipzig (Band 31, editor Alfred Dörffel), based on the 1747 printed edition, supervised by Bach.

Version 1.0
Sample — 813x Score — 157x
Flauto traverso I — 125x , Flauto traverso II — 106x , Cembalo / Violoncello — 111x
Adagio — 109x , Allegro ma non presto — 97x , Adagio e piano — 102x , Presto — 96x

Source is the 1860 edition of volume 9, Bach-Gesellschaft zu Leipzig (Joh. Seb. Bach’s / Kammermusik / Erster Band), edited by William Rust. There are two versions of this Trio in G major: a) Trio für zwei Flöten und Bass (BWV 1039) and b) Trio for Cembalo and Viola da Gamba (BWV 1038), later arrangement from Trio BWV 1039. There is a ms of separate parts of this last trio (Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin), where the figured bass part is declared by Rust as being an autograph ms.

Version 1.0 was first published on February 11, 2009. On August 4, 2013, it was ripublished with a revised editorial format.
Sample — 467x sc — 108x
Soprano I — 112x , Soprano II — 103x , Basso I — 95x , Basso II — 99x
Canon a 4 — 98x

Source is the development (Auflösung) of “Canon a 4”, Musikalisches Opfer, 1885 edition, Bach-Gesellschaft zu Leipzig (Band 31, editor Alfred Dörffel), based on the 1747 printed edition revised by Bach himself. The original presents only the first part in french clef, followed immediately by a bass clef, without indication of entry points of the other parts.

Version 1.0 was first published on January 1, 2009. On August 2, 2013, it was published with a revised editorial format.
Score — 176x
Traversa — 140x , Violino — 105x , Basso continuo — 133x
Canon perpetuus — 100x

Source of „Canon perpetuus“ is the Musikalisches Opfer 1885 edition, Bach-Gesellschaft zu Leipzig (Band 31, editor Alfred Dörffel). The instrumentation is taken from the ms. of Trio in C minor (BWV 1079 no. 8), dated 1755, belonging to F. W. Rust, Cöthen Gymnasium alumnus, and later student of W. F. Bach (Vorwort of BGA edition, p. VIII).

Version 1.1 (January 20, 2013) corrects three transcription errors and gives a new editorial format. Version 1.0 was completed on January 15, 2010.
Sample — 565x Score — 124x
Soprano I — 120x , Soprano II — 96x , Alto — 96x , Tenore I — 93x , Tenore II — 108x , Basso — 94x
Ricercare a 6 — 134x

Reference source is the 1885 edition of Musikalisches Opfer, Bach-Gesellschaft zu Leipzig (Band 31, editor Alfred Dörffel), based on the 1747 printed edition of “Ricercare a 6 voci” edited by Bach.

Version 1.5 with a new editorial format and an error correction has been published on January 19, 2013. Version 1.0 has been published on December 14, 2008. Separate parts have been published with currently used clefs.
Sample — 815x Score — 162x
Flauto traverso — 117x , Violino I — 114x , Violino II — 112x , Viola — 114x , Basso — 119x
Ouverture — 93x , Rondeau — 93x , Sarabande — 92x , Bourrée I — 85x , Bourrée II — 88x , Polonaise - Moderato e staccato — 92x , Double — 93x , Minuet — 91x , Badinerie — 92x

Source of B minor Ouverture BWV 1067 is volume BGA31, Bach-Gesellschaft zu Leipzig, 1881-1885 edited by Alfred Dörffel.

Version 1.1
Sample — 588x Score — 176x
Flauto traverso — 138x , Violino — 124x , Cembalo — 128x , Basso — 120x
Largo — 111x , Allegro — 112x , Andante — 115x , Allegro — 98x

Reference source is the 1885 edition of Musikalisches Opfer, Bach-Gesell­schaft zu Leipzig (Band 31, editor Alfred Dörffel). The figured bass is based on the realization attributed to J. Ph. Kirnberger (Band 31 - Anhang).

Version 1.5 with a new editorial format and a general revision of slurs, ties and bass figures has been published on May 17, 2013. Version 1.0 has been published on March 6, 2008.