- Title
- A critique of baroque performance practice with specific reference to the organ preludes and fugues by Johann Sebastian Bach
- Creator
- Murphy, Liesel
- Subject
- Bach, Johann Sebastian, 1685-1750 -- Organ music
- Subject
- Bach, Johann Sebastian, 1685-1750 -- Keyboard music
- Subject
- Performance practice (Music) -- History -- 17th century
- Subject
- Organ music -- History and criticism
- Subject
- Music -- 17th century -- Performance
- Date Issued
- 2009
- Date
- 2009
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- MMus
- Identifier
- vital:8509
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10948/1023
- Identifier
- Bach, Johann Sebastian, 1685-1750 -- Organ music
- Identifier
- Bach, Johann Sebastian, 1685-1750 -- Keyboard music
- Identifier
- Performance practice (Music) -- History -- 17th century
- Identifier
- Organ music -- History and criticism
- Identifier
- Music -- 17th century -- Performance
- Description
- This study aims to provide a critique of Baroque performance practice, with specific reference to the organ Preludes and Fugues of Johann Sebastian Bach. Drawing from the extensive body of literature pertaining to Bach’s keyboard music, a number of relevant issues are explored in so far as these may provide understanding of the manner in which the organ Preludes and Fugues should be performed today. These include: • The notion of Bach’s ‘generic’ keyboard works. Were the generic keyboard works as a whole intended to be performed on more than one keyboard instrument? The instrumental designations given by Bach in these works are a valuable source of information in answering this question. • The type of organ that was known to J.S. Bach and typical registration used in the Baroque, called the plenum. • Identification of the grey area that persists in the interpretation of Bach’s organ works with regard to registration, tempo, rhythm, articulation, phrasing, fingering and ornamentation. This study also engages with the current authenticity debate in musical performance as seen from the modernist and postmodernist points of view. The modernist ideal of authenticity is to “re-create” or “reconstruct” performances of Bach’s music with as much accuracy as the evidence of historical musicologists can provide. For the postmodernist, however, authenticity lies in embracing the human element of contingency in musical performance, along with a thorough grounding of such performance in historical evidence. In aligning itself with the postmodernist point of view, this study ultimately argues that we cannot learn everything there is to know about Baroque performance practice from books. Instead, in addition to historical evidence, we draw much of our understanding in this regard from our innate or tacit levels of knowing. In this regard the scholar of Bach’s organ works can draw valuable lessons from the levels of tacit knowledge of leading organ pedagogues and performers on the subject of Baroque performance practice.
- Format
- xi, 181 leaves
- Format
- Publisher
- Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
- Publisher
- Faculty of Arts
- Language
- English
- Rights
- Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
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