Wissenschaftliche Erforschung und künstlerische Anwendung
der Natürlichen Harmoniegesetze des Mikrokosmos der Musik
PETER HÜBNERKlassischer Komponist
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Peter Hübner
presents J.C. Bach
No. 3
Concerto for Harpsicord
Eb Opus 7 No. 5
1st Movement Allegro di molto
Interpretation No. 3
Timing: 83 bpm variable
PH’s Dynamic Philharmonic Orchestra
A Digital Studio Recording Under the Artistic and Technical Direction of the Composer.
Gesamtspielzeit: 09’57”
Peter Hübner speaks on his INTERPRETATIONS OF JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH
Bach’s works are among the most significant musical creations known to classical music literature.
I’m saying nothing new here, and this statement is a well-known tune – sung even by those who know nothing whatsoever about music and only parrot others to seemingly enhance their own public image.
But those who, as musicians and conductors or singers, treat Bach’s works with serious reverence will know what I mean.
We have to bear in mind that Bach, truly a musician’s musician, had to eke out his living by performing publicly with his band in a coffeehouse twice a week. Thus it is no coincidence that after his death, his wife died in the poor house.
Like every other great composer of serious classical music, Bach, too, had to face great to utmost resistance by the music experts of his time and generally had to organize and finance the performances of his works by himself.
He placed the highest demands on his musicians and never compromised, which makes it easy to understand that with a very limited number of willing musicians – whom he generally had to pay by himself – putting on performances was not an easy task at all.
That he was at all able to create such outstanding works under such circumstances, must be considered a miracle, and something we find to be the case as well with Mozart, Schubert, Beethoven, and even Brahms and Wagner, who were in very similar situations.
He had only very limited resources available to perform his works.
Thus, when modern-day musicians undertake to perform the works of this great master of music as “authentically” as possible – they understand that in general this means, above all, keeping the instrumentation limited to the modest and even sparsely manned ensembles Bach was able to muster and for which he had to score/orchestrate.
One has to be very clear about Bach’s limitations arising solely from his financial situation: Bach was unable to afford more.
Especially polyphony and the art of the fugue, masterfully controlled by Bach, offer room for entirely different instrumentation dimensions for orchestra and choir: here one could still find a chamber-music-like sound structures situation even with hundreds or even thousands of singers and musicians participating.
This is, after all, the great advantage polyphony has over homophony, in that it offers the possibility for structurally fine musical ramifications along with a correspondingly complex expressiveness.
It is my desire to try to provide the modern listener with an inner access to Bach’s music, and in particular to his high immanent achievements which reveal his good-natured character to us; for judging by the content of his music, Bach was in no way the kind of “ice-cold musical calculator” many a poor interpretation would have you believe, but instead an affectionate, big-hearted, benevolent and, despite all the pressure he endured, an intrinsically cheerful man – something he expresses holistically in his musical legacy.
It is this essence of Bach as a wise man I want to reveal – even it if may upset the occasional withered or mouldy critic, because this revelation of Johann Sebastian Bach as a human being does not correspond to his own narrow expectations.
P.S.:
In their systematics these Bach-works are also part of the music education system for conductors, musicians, singers, music teachers, music therapists, musicologists, music critics, and sound engineers, and/or sound technicians.