Flute sonata in B minor

Flute sonata in B minor

BWV 1030 performed by Marten Root and Menno van Delft
Concertgebouw, Amsterdam

  • Menu
  • 1. Andante
  • 2. Largo e dolce
  • 3. Presto

Behind the music

Story
Story
Extra videos
Extra videos
Credits
Credits

A bit of a libertine

Bach may have written this sonata for the black sheep of the family

We know of only a handful of flute sonatas by Bach, and of those only the Sonata in B minor has survived intact in a manuscript by Bach himself. The identity of the flautist Bach envisaged in 1736/37 for this demanding piece filled with subtleties is shrouded in mystery. But there is no doubt whatsoever that it must have been written for an excellent musician. In 1724, it took a passing virtuoso – Gabriel Buffardin – to tempt Bach into using the instrument in one of his cantatas for the first time in Leipzig.

For the weekly concerts with his Collegium Musicum, Bach often called on the cream of Leipzig University’s music students. One of them was flautist Jacob von Staehlin, a fellow student of Carl Philipp Emanuel. Von Staehlin left for St Petersburg in 1735, so he probably did not play this sonata. But a later letter shows that he had really enjoyed playing flute duets in Leipzig with Carl’s younger brother Johann Gottfried Bernhard. This third Bach son, born in 1715, is barely mentioned in the Bach literature. This is hardly surprising, as he died young and no compositions are known by him. But it is not inconceivable that this son of Bach may have been the performer of the Sonata in B minor at the age of about twenty-one.

The fact is that although Johann Gottfried was very gifted musically, he also had a problematic character. Fifty years later, Von Staehlin referred to him in his letter as ‘windig’, i.e. a bit of a libertine. Johann Gottfried left his post as organist in Mühlhausen, after only a year and a half, leaving behind debts that his father cleared for him. Bach then found a new job for his son in Sangerhausen, from which he fled after a year, this time to an unknown destination, once again leaving debts behind him. Things did not turn out well for the black sheep of the family. In January 1739, Johann Gottfried enrolled as a law student in Jena, but he died four months later. Who knows how many more flute works Bach might have written had his son lived longer?

BWV
1030
Title
Sonata for harpsichord and traverso in B minor
Instrument
harpsichord, traverso
Genre
chamber music
Year
finished around 1736/37
City
Köthen/Leipzig
Special notes
Probably an arrangement of a sonata created in Köthen in the 1720's for another instrument than the flute. A version of the harpsichord part in G minor has also survived.

Extra videos

Marten Root on the sonata

“The whole range of the flute is used. Really, the piece plays as comfortably as can be.”

Marten Root on his instrument

“Marten Root explains why he plays this sonata on this particular instrument.”

Vocal texts

Original

Translation

Credits

  • Release date
    17 June 2016
  • Recording date
    17 October 2015
  • Location
    Concertgebouw, Amsterdam
  • Traverso player
    Marten Root
  • Harpsichordist
    Menno van Delft
  • Traverso
    Fridtjof Aurin after Jacob Denner, ca. 1720
  • Harpsichord
    Geert Karman after J.H. Gräbner, 1774
  • Film director and editor
    Dick Kuijs
  • Music production, editing and mix
    Everett Porter
  • Camera
    Martine Rozema, Caroline Nutbey
  • Camera assistant
    Marijn Kooy
  • Gaffer
    Tim Groot
  • Interview
    Gijs Besseling, Kasper Koudenburg
  • Producer concert
    Imke Deters
  • Producer film
    Jessie Verbrugh

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