'Brandenburg' Concerto No. 4 in G major

'Brandenburg' Concerto No. 4 in G major

BWV 1049 performed by the Netherlands Bach Society
conducted by Shunske Sato
Felix Meritis, Amsterdam

  • Menu
  • 1. Allegro
  • 2. Andante
  • 3. Presto

Behind the music

Story
Story
Extra videos
Extra videos
Credits
Credits

Blurring the boundaries

How Bach deliberately obscures the traditional concerto form

In this concerto, Bach is continually misleading us. Which instruments are the real soloists? Initially, the lead is taken by the two recorders, but after the introductory refrain it appears that the violin is the soloist. After the next refrain, the two recorders take over again, but they are soon trumped by the violin, which steals the show in a whirlwind of dizzying notes. And so it continues. The roles are always ambiguous, especially as far as the recorders are concerned.

In the solemn second movement, they are clearly the soloists, but in the third movement the same notes are regularly played by both. Bach deliberately obscures the usually clear contrast between soloists and ensemble. And as if wanting to underline this confusion, he starts the third movement as a fugue, a form in which all the parts are equal by definition. But just when we think it is turning into a real fugue, we hear another violin solo. Bach then goes on to intersperse the traditional alternation between tutti refrains and solo passages with fugue-like imitations. And so his play on the characteristic elements of the concerto form draws to a close in a suitably subversive and boundary-blurring way.

Brandenburg concertos, BWV 1046-1051
In March 1721, Bach sent a manuscript from Köthen to Berlin entitled ‘Six concertos with several instruments’ (Six concerts avec plusieurs instruments), dedicated to Christian Ludwig (1677-1734), Margrave of Brandenburg-Schwedt. In the preface, Bach stated that he had played for the margrave ‘a couple of years ago’ and had promised to send him ‘some of his compositions’. That was probably during a visit to Berlin in March 1719, when Bach had travelled to the Prussian capital to take receipt of a new harpsichord for the court in Köthen. The music that he sent to the margrave a couple of years later (which subsequently became known as the 'Brandenburg' Concertos) was Bach’s ultimate view of the most important large-scale instrumental genre of his day: the concerto.

A concerto nearly always involves a solo instrument (or combination of solo instruments) and an ensemble. The key idea is the alternation between one or more soloists and the whole ensemble, in a sort of light-hearted competition. In the six 'Brandenburg' Concertos, Bach explores every facet of this genre, with regard to both instrumentation and the way in which he handles the form. All the traditionally used string and wind instruments and the harpsichord appear as soloists, the musical forms range from court dances to near-fugues, and the relationship between the solos and tutti instruments is always shifting. Together, the six concertos thus form a virtuoso sample sheet of the Baroque concerto.

BWV
1049
Title
Concerto in G major
Epithet
'Brandenburg' Concerto No. 4
Genre
orchestral works
Serie
Brandenburg concertos
Year
1719-1720
City
Köthen
Occasion
Dedicated in 1721 to Margrave Christian Ludwig of Brandenburg
Special notes
Between 1735 and 1746, Bach arranged this Brandenburg concerto no. 4 as a harpsichord concerto (BWV 1057).

With support from

Bach fund of the Netherlands Bach Society, Felix Meritis

Extra videos

Shunske Sato and Heiko ter Schegget

“Violinist Shunske Sato apologizes to recorder player Heiko ter Schegget for the space he claims in this concerto.”

Vocal texts

Original

Translation

Credits

  • Release date
    2 October 2015
  • Recording date
    19 May 2015
  • Location
    Felix Meritis, Amsterdam
  • Violin and direction
    Shunske Sato
  • Recorder
    Heiko ter Schegget, Benny Aghassi
  • Violin 1
    Lucia Giraudo
  • Violin 2
    Pieter Affourtit
  • Viola
    Anneke van Haaften
  • Cello
    Lucia Swarts
  • Double bass
    James Munro
  • Harpsichord
    Siebe Henstra
  • Director and editor
    Lucas van Woerkum
  • Music recording, edit and mix
    Guido Tichelman, Bastiaan Kuijt
  • Camera
    Robert Berger, Simon Aarden, Maarten van Rossem
  • Lights
    Zen Bloot, Patrick Galvin
  • Camera assistant
    Uriel Matahelumual
  • Interview
    Onno van Ameijde
  • Producer concert
    Erik van Lith
  • Producer film
    Jessie Verbrugh
  • With support from
    Bach fund of the Netherlands Bach Society, Felix Meritis

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