Preludium et partita del tuono terzo
BWV 833 performed by Menno van Delft
Mauritshuis, The Hague
Behind the music
Home-loving yet international
The cheerful and dancy character of this Prelude and Partita reflects the lustre of Vermeer
Johannes Vermeer’s life took place in Delft – from the cradle to the grave, as far as we know. Bach was a bit fonder of travel. But many of their contemporaries were real globetrotters. The French diplomat and art-lover Balthasar de Monconys is one example. He travelled all over Europe, and even made it to Egypt and Syria. In 1663, he was in Delft, where he paid a visit to Vermeer’s studio.
In 1695, when he was ten, Bach had lost both his parents and was taken in by his eldest brother Johann Christoph (1671-1721). His brother lived and worked nearly all his life in Ohrdruf, a village in Thüringen, where he held the post of organist. It could hardly have been more provincial, yet his musical horizons were very broad. The Prelude and Partita, BWV 833, has been preserved in a manuscript compiled by Johann Christoph containing music by Böhm, Buxtehude and Pachelbel, as well as trio sonatas by Albinoni and harpsichord suites by Nicolas Lebègue, copied from his Les pieces de clavessin (Paris: 1677). So it included music from way beyond the provincial borders.
The manuscript also contains an explanation about how to play various ornaments, copied from the Six suites de clavessin by Charles Dieupart, a French keyboard player who worked in England. His suites were printed in 1701 by Estienne Roger, in Amsterdam. So Johann Christoph’s manuscript collection suddenly turns out to be very international indeed. BWV 833 exudes the seventeenth-century French style of Lebègue. The Prelude and Courante, in particular, are richly ornamented. Bach’s suite thus forms a perfect combination with Lebègue’s suites and Dieupart’s explanation.
Monconys was also in Leipzig in 1663. He described how during a wedding at the St Nicholas Church the bride and other women and girls entered the church “to the sound of organs, trumpets and violins”. No wonder that Bach eventually ended up there, as it was a bit more interesting than Ohrdruf, after all.
- BWV
- 833
- Title
- Preludium et partita del tuono terzo
- Genre
- harpsichord works
- Year
- before 1707/1708
With support from
Deloitte
Extra videos
Vocal texts
Original
Translation
Credits
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- Release date
- 29 October 2020
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- Recording date
- 22 May 2020
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- Location
- Mauritshuis, The Hague
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- Harpsichordist
- Menno van Delft
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- Virginal
- Willem Kroesbergen, 1971 after Ruckers
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- Director and editor
- Gijs Besseling
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- Music recording
- Daan van Aalst, Bastiaan Kuijt, Pim van der Lee
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- Music edit and mix
- Guido Tichelman
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- Camera, lights
- Danny Noordanus
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- Assistant music recording
- Marloes Biermans
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- Producer
- Jessie Verbrugh
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- Acknowledgement
- Mauritshuis and the Nationaal Muziekinstrumenten Fonds for lending their virginal.
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- With support from
- Deloitte
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