Anyone interested in learning the rules of harmony, how notes and chords fit together, need look no further than the music of Johann Sebastian Bach. He invented most of those rules. So maybe it's only natural that one of the early rule-breakers was one of his own children, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach. C.P.E. Bach respected his father, but took his own music off in several new directions. In today's show, a couple of works by C.P.E. Bach, from a recent concert in London.
Episode Playlist
Hour 1
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach: Rondo in D Minor
Mikhail Pletnev, piano
Robert Pearsall: Lay a Garland
musica intima
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach: Sinfonia in E, Wq. 182/6, H. 662
The Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Roger Norrington, conductor
Queen Elizabeth Hall, London, England
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach: Harpsichord Concerto in C, Wq. 20, H. 423
Steven Devine, harpsichord, the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Roger Norrington, conductor
Queen Elizabeth Hall, London, England
Johann Sebastian Bach: Duetto in E Minor, BWV 802
Paul Jacobs, organ
Alice Tully Hall, New York City
Frederic Chopin: Mazurka No. 15 in C, Op. 24, No. 2
Martha Argerich, piano
Chopin and his Europe International Music Festival, Warsaw, Poland
Hour 2
Ottorino Respighi: Song and Dance, from Brazilian Impressions
The Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Jesus Lopez-Cobos, conductor
Domenico Scarlatti: Sonata in D Minor, K. 141
Martha Argerich, piano
Semperoper, Dresden, Germany
Domenico Scarlatti: Keyboard Sonata in D Minor, K.90, L.106, P.9
Avi Avital, mandolin, Jakob Koranyi, cello, Kenneth Weiss, harpsichord, Paul O'Dette, lute
Alice Tully Hall, New York City
Ernest Chausson: Poeme for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 25
Yossif Ivanov, violin, the Lausanne Chamber Orchestra, Jesus Lopez Cobos, conductor
Metropole Hall, Lausanne, Switzerland
Gyorgy Ligeti: Old Hungarian Ballroom Dances
The Chicago Chamber Musicians
Gottlieb Hall, Chicago
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