Aaah, Bach is always a great therapy for the mind and psyche. It is literally a balm for the soul. Thank you for the recording and long live Bach's work!
Remarkable sound that Wentz creates - sort of liquid & mellow without loss of precision. Tempos alone also give (my ear/brain) a sense of a new dimension to these wonderful pieces. As per BC notes, perhaps impossible to judge Bach's total intent, but one imagines he looks down from the empyrean, listens, & smiles.
My grandfather was a student of a student of Bach - verified. I can quickly tell a piece is Bach and it too is felt in the soul. Grandpa was a composer/arranger in Germany and US - still being played widely in Germany.
He...Had a Loving mommy who sang to him while he was still forming on her belly... She was the original lightning rod to Music of the Gods and Goddesses..which Bach channeled from The musical Heavens.. As Bach heard infinity and Ecstatic Joy coming from God to him in the beautiful form of music Nature's way of allowing humans to Touch God!!!!⚠️🌏🌎🌍🌙🌙🌎☄️☄️ Then Imagine how much more music we have yet to CREATE And how many New young Bach's will arrive on the Musical scene In our future!!‼️‼️
That's the point that he, Bach Was trying to make.. That music for him was God himself And The Goddesses too Singing to Bach to Channel God❗❗‼️‼️⚠️🌙🌙🛐🛐🛐🛐🛐🛐🌓🌓🌛🌛🌛🌛🌛💯💯
Wow...So refreshing. I love the way they work together to keep tempo with all those lovely rubato. I don't usually like rubato driven performance in Baroque music, but this sounds very convincing for my surprise. I can see notes popping out from music sheets to dance with joy....creating three dimensional depth that sends a chill in my spine. I have also never listened to A minor sonata so intensely...with my eyes wide open with curiosity despite of the audio media. The beginning of E major sonata feels like swimming in warm water that heals every part of my body and spirit. The sound of flute is rich and round...I'm glad I clicked this. Thank you so much.
I've listened to this video several times in the past few days. I truly love it, and I think it contains the best recording of the Musical Offering I've ever heard.
I love listening to Jed Wentz’s interpretations. They are always wonderfully creative and stunning. He inspires me to approach my Bach with a playfulness and willingness to experiment. Thank you!
Nunca se bebe lo suficiente de BACH ...I Siempre hay una angustia hermosa, angustiosa calma, este temblor lleno de luz, puerta secreta que te lleva a tí, un mar que no retumba, un sol que no molesta...Insaciable belleza, alegría y paz pero también hastío, desesperación y congoja sin término, al mismo tiempo ...
Es el espíritu profundamente cristiano de Bach. La lucha de San Pablo en Romanos 7: la flaqueza humana y el dolor por un lado, que lo lleva a buscar el poder y la restauración que sólo pueden venir de Dios y en los cuales hay gozo indecible y paz perfecta. No me canso de oír a Bach.
Because Bach is boring, dreary, headache-inducing, methodical, mechanical, outdated, irrelevant German music. NOT!!! Just kidding!!!!! But a lot of people (the other 99% of humanity) do feel this way.
Muy hermoso y sublime. Estoy muy feliz porque también estoy leyendo a E. Fromm, "El miedo a la libertad", preciosa lectura y bella música celestial. Gracias por compartirlo. Saludos desde Guatemala.
All the giant artists are found in ''brilliant classics''....specially those of Baroque music which is my preferred music age....Thanks to ''Brilliant Classics""
Is it just me in saying this: There's something lofty and elegant of the harpsichord. It possesses a historical quality speaking of past meetings and discussions among the European elites, in ball rooms of grandeur. Lit up by hundreds of candles, and a fire place in each corner of the performance and guest meeting areas. There is an earth sense to the instrument...a musicologist will put me in my place...Ha ha >
In the opening seconds I thought, wait, is this alto flute, with music transposed down?? But no, it's at pitch (415 tuning notwithstanding). It's just that this particular traverso he uses, and the way he plays it, gives an incredibly dark, mellow, round tone that makes it seem lower than it actually is. Even in the high registers it's never shrill, and the low and mid registers have a roundness I'm not used to hearing even from other traversos. Bravo to this and to their interpretations!
I went to a piano to see whether it was transposed down! It's all in the tone, I can hear not talent, but hours of practice in that tone, beautiful indeed.
Let's see how many countries have Bach reached. I am listening to Bach from Bangladesh. Which part of the world from you are? Please leave your country's name in the reply section.
Хрестоматийно известный шедевр Баха требует абсолютной математически выверенной точности в выборе удержании темпа, передачи темпо-ритмических параметров, динамической палитры, нюансировки..
Europeans: This is only one example of your heritage. You must remember and realize about the accomplishments of your ancestors! As they created our civilization, We must secure and defend it!
Bach created all this BWK in a time when there was no Health Insurance, no eletrical heating, no labor contracts.......Maybe our problem today is the excess of certainty...Beijos pra todos.
And so he died at age 65 after being blinded in the last years of his life after an unsuccessful eye surgery. Maybe with today's health insurance and level fo care, electrical heating or labour contracts he would have lived to be 85, with full command of his facilities, giving us 30% more of his wonderful music than what we already have.
Both his parents died from illness before he was 10. If it wasnt for his older brother he would have been a homeless orphan. His first wife died from acute illness. At least 6 of his children died in childhood. His widow died in poverty because the obstacles of war prevent her from receiving support from her children. Every year in Leipzig Bach had to fight the city council for the music budget. He also worried about finding employment for his sons and his students. No, life was not a utopia back then.
@@marks.8823 if u interpret the OP in a different way, it is still revile. It would implying thete is no genius and creativity today because there isnt enough suffering and uncertainty.
gotaderocio71 That’s intentional; it represents a lost section. See here for more details: imslp.org/wiki/Flute_Sonata_in_A_major,_BWV_1032_(Bach,_Johann_Sebastian)
I am living proof of this. At 75 years old, I have listened to Bach almost every day of my life, I must have heard at least once each of his works, even the cantatas, and not only did this not convert me, it did not prevent me from losing my faith at the age of 25, and never regretting it! This concert of preachers and church mice that make him the fifth evangelist is irritating: if there is one thing in the world that hears more nonsense than a painting in a museum, it is Bach's music on UA-cam! These flute sonatas are not religious music at all. When Bach was in Weimar and Köthen, he wrote music that was completely secular, because that's what his boss told him to do. In Leipzig, he wrote church music: he was paid for it. And we know that he was much happier in Weimar and Köthen than in Leipzig, where he was constantly in conflict with the Town Council, formed of narrow-minded bourgeois bigots. In addition to his work as a musician and organist, he had to supervise brats at St. Thomas's school, and he should have taught Latin, but I don't think he did. Bach had no college education, and that may explain part of his genius: he is not completely imbued with the fashionable ideas, he digests them, he interprets them in his own way. When I compare Bach's Magnificat to that of his predecessor Kuhnau, I get the impression that Kuhnau was more "fashionable" than Bach. I don't dispute that Bach believed in God like almost everyone else in his time, but we forget too much that most composers of music in the 18th century, especially in Germany, were small-time employees who had little say in the matter, and that if many of them made religious music, it was because it was one of the only ways to monetize their talent and keep the pot boiling.
Thus saith the Lord: Wherefore He saith, "Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light." Ephesians 5 : 14 "...Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world." John 1: 29 Jesus loves you!
Гениально эти сонаты исполняли великие советские музыканты Александр Корнеев(флейта) и В. Бахчиев(клавесин). После них уже не в жилу слушать, когда уровень слабоват((
It scares me to think that there are Internet basement dwellers with huge collections of droning synthesizer music that they'd rather listen to over this. Why go to some obscure Bandcamp page to listen to video game music knockoffs when this exists? Might as well experience the real deal.
maybe it is a kind of intellectual pride; like they can't humble their intellects enough to heed the judgement of the ages that Bach, Mozart and Beethoven are the greatest classical musicians-and maybe we must give, if I might risk the expression, *the palm of victory*, to Bach, as he was greatly admired by and prior in time to both Mozart and Beethoven. I mean maybe they are wise enough to understand that much popular music is poisonous at worst, and boring at best, but too vain to submit to the judgement of ancestors.
@@lukehall8151 Wise? Mostly just dumb. In fairness, if "education" might have introduced them to Bach & the masters, as children, they might have opened themselves to classics. It's also possible to draw some pleasure & interest from many forms of music. Toscanini liked jazz, Andre Previn & Wynton Marsalis play & compose in both genres. Guitarists like the Romeros, Narciso Yepes, Luis Maravillas play flamenco & classical at a high level.
Why would appreciating electronic music that uses synthesizers scare you? This classical chamber music is awesome, and synthesizer music can be as well. And I hope you don't mean to belittle videogame music, because some truly remarkable music has been made by videogame composers. Some of it is even classically-based. You sound a bit more sheltered and close-minded that those "basement-dwellers," if you ask me. If you open your mind to more genres, you will reap a richer enjoyment from the very diverse world of music that exists today. I can go from techno, to metal, to videogame soundtracks, to chamber music and more depending on my mood.
@@Synathidy You missed my point. In the first sentence, I said that it scares me when people would rather listen to uninspired electronic synth music instead of this, meaning people whose minds are closed to classical and Baroque music, but listen to something that very poorly attempts to imitate it on old electronic equipment. I love a lot of different kinds of electronic (mostly ambient) music, but people who listen to that stuff will often dismiss classical music as "boring" or "too happy" or the like, which is really ignorant.
Nous sommes dans une période covidienne où les égarés asymptomatiques de l'art sonore et de la poésie passent à côté de ça pour écouter de clinquants rappeux dont les travaux délétères, d’une pauvreté verbale dont rien n’approche et réservés à une élite restreinte, déroulent comme des confettis torsadés de pénibles architectures bruitistes et vulgaires sans éclairs ni ambition artistique.. Quelle pitié¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Bach has found a way to let God to you through music
What a beautiful and sharp observation.
Bach has left an indelible mark, humanity is grateful for this great man.
Yes
Bach's music is truly a gift from the Lord Jesus
Aaah, Bach is always a great therapy for the mind and psyche. It is literally a balm for the soul. Thank you for the recording and long live Bach's work!
Remarkable sound that Wentz creates - sort of liquid & mellow without loss of precision. Tempos alone also give (my ear/brain) a sense of a new dimension to these wonderful pieces. As per BC notes, perhaps impossible to judge Bach's total intent, but one imagines he looks down from the empyrean, listens, & smiles.
Bach never fails to surprise, intrigue, and make life worth living.........the stuff of dreams.....
how did he create such a music that will never end
it's like infinite space
I can not understand it, I can only feel it with my soul
My grandfather was a student of a student of Bach - verified. I can quickly tell a piece is Bach and it too is felt in the soul. Grandpa was a composer/arranger in Germany and US - still being played widely in Germany.
He...Had a Loving mommy who sang to him while he was still forming on her belly...
She was the original lightning rod to Music of the Gods and Goddesses..which Bach channeled from
The musical Heavens..
As Bach heard infinity and
Ecstatic Joy coming from
God to him in the beautiful form of music
Nature's way of allowing humans to
Touch God!!!!⚠️🌏🌎🌍🌙🌙🌎☄️☄️
Then
Imagine how much more music we have yet to CREATE
And how many New young
Bach's will arrive on the
Musical scene
In our future!!‼️‼️
That's the point that he, Bach
Was trying to make..
That music for him was
God himself
And
The Goddesses too
Singing to Bach to
Channel God❗❗‼️‼️⚠️🌙🌙🛐🛐🛐🛐🛐🛐🌓🌓🌛🌛🌛🌛🌛💯💯
@@flyingdancer9118 GOD IS OILS...Our Innermost Loving SELF
What a beautiful comment
Wentz's sound is absolutely gorgeous. This is a beautiful recording. Thanks for sharing it!
Wow...So refreshing. I love the way they work together to keep tempo with all those lovely rubato. I don't usually like rubato driven performance in Baroque music, but this sounds very convincing for my surprise. I can see notes popping out from music sheets to dance with joy....creating three dimensional depth that sends a chill in my spine.
I have also never listened to A minor sonata so intensely...with my eyes wide open with curiosity despite of the audio media.
The beginning of E major sonata feels like swimming in warm water that heals every part of my body and spirit. The sound of flute is rich and round...I'm glad I clicked this. Thank you so much.
Thank you Brillant Classics , magnifique Bach : Complète Flute Sonatas, une très belle interprétation avec Jed Wentz et Michael Borgstede virtuoses
I've listened to this video several times in the past few days. I truly love it, and I think it contains the best recording of the Musical Offering I've ever heard.
Wow, thank you!
This is so deeply etched in my memory that I can anticipate almost every note... and still enjoy it!
I love listening to Jed Wentz’s interpretations. They are always wonderfully creative and stunning. He inspires me to approach my Bach with a playfulness and willingness to experiment. Thank you!
Jed Wentz et Michael Borgstede une nouvelle fois absolument convaincants, enthousiasmants irrésistibles !❤️❤️❤️👏
Nunca se bebe lo suficiente de BACH ...I Siempre hay una angustia hermosa, angustiosa calma, este temblor lleno de luz, puerta secreta que te lleva a tí, un mar que no retumba, un sol que no molesta...Insaciable belleza, alegría y paz pero también hastío, desesperación y congoja sin término, al mismo tiempo ...
Es el espíritu profundamente cristiano de Bach. La lucha de San Pablo en Romanos 7: la flaqueza humana y el dolor por un lado, que lo lleva a buscar el poder y la restauración que sólo pueden venir de Dios y en los cuales hay gozo indecible y paz perfecta. No me canso de oír a Bach.
Magistral. Perfect. Brilhante. Genius.
In oure centuri J.S.Bach will be Grandest & Greatest Rock composer - musician !!!
Extraordinaria versión de estas sonatas.
Thanks for uploading the video.
5:35 how can someone give a thumbs down to this? to that interpretation, TO BACH?????
Horror!!!
@@ramonruizcontreras7779
😎 I Agree !!!
Because Bach is boring, dreary, headache-inducing, methodical, mechanical, outdated, irrelevant German music.
NOT!!! Just kidding!!!!!
But a lot of people (the other 99% of humanity) do feel this way.
It is the Internet🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️
never gave a f**k to thumbs...,
Tesoro único, entrañable, asombroso, bellísimo...
Totalmente de acuerdo.
Every single note is Divine....
Muy hermoso y sublime. Estoy muy feliz porque también estoy leyendo a E. Fromm, "El miedo a la libertad", preciosa lectura y bella música celestial. Gracias por compartirlo. Saludos desde Guatemala.
God's gift to us through J.S Bach and our wonderful performers.
Actually 01:07:02 etc (Largo - Vivace - Adagio - Presto) is BWV 1039 and
01:17:24 etc (Adagio - Allegro ma non presto - Adagio - Presto) is BWV 1038.
Obrigada! “Ande como se o chão estivesse repleto de sons de flauta...”
Carlos Drummond de Andrade
Wunderbar! Danke!
Amazing performance! :) Thank you!! :)
Wondeful music❤❤❤
bellísima interpretación
Thank you. Thank you. What a delightful treasure.
I can feel my brain cells repairing themselves
All the giant artists are found in ''brilliant classics''....specially those of Baroque music which is my preferred music age....Thanks to ''Brilliant Classics""
Thanks for listening!
Perfect
music gets no better
pure joy
Prachtig!
La belleza... gracias por la música...
Is it just me in saying this: There's something lofty and elegant of the harpsichord. It possesses a historical quality speaking of past meetings and discussions among the European elites, in ball rooms of grandeur. Lit up by hundreds of candles, and a fire place in each corner of the performance and guest meeting areas. There is an earth sense to the instrument...a musicologist will put me in my place...Ha ha >
Magique !
Nice, very nice.
Gracias !
Merci
brilliant
BRAVISSIMI.
спассибо!!
Sublime music
stupendous
In the opening seconds I thought, wait, is this alto flute, with music transposed down?? But no, it's at pitch (415 tuning notwithstanding). It's just that this particular traverso he uses, and the way he plays it, gives an incredibly dark, mellow, round tone that makes it seem lower than it actually is. Even in the high registers it's never shrill, and the low and mid registers have a roundness I'm not used to hearing even from other traversos. Bravo to this and to their interpretations!
I went to a piano to see whether it was transposed down! It's all in the tone, I can hear not talent, but hours of practice in that tone, beautiful indeed.
Baroque pitch ❤️
An organic non-mechanical interpretation ...alive not dead.
Edificante experiencia
Qué hermosura.....
Let's see how many countries have Bach reached. I am listening to Bach from Bangladesh. Which part of the world from you are? Please leave your country's name in the reply section.
Canada!!
Australia
MC Fioti of Brazil made a dope song from remixing Bach’s flute
And yes, she loves flute music too :-)
The Wentz dude kind of looks like Tony Iommi. And that's awesome.
Me lembro...nao Sei o que...a musica me leva,me eleva,um déja vu
Maravilha!
P E R F E C T I O N
amazing how mutch performer can make of notes on a paper
almost as good as "Claptone". HA HA HA HA!!! Thanks a bunch guys..what a gift.
It seems that BWV 1038 and 1039 have been wrongly numbered, both are in G major. BWV 1038 should be BWV 1039 and the other way around.
👍😊
🙏
The harpsichord on that Sonata in B Minor, BWV 1030: IV. Presto though....
It's pretty awesome.
The tempo fluctuations in the Allamande give me a headache and aren't necessary to create interest.
I would be much oblige if you can tell me the names of the music of Kenneth Clark's Pursuit of Happiness. I am anxious to purchase the cds.
Que lindooo
de acuerdo, bellisimo, sublime, es musica de los dioses y no de este mundo
S.D.G.
Хрестоматийно известный шедевр Баха требует абсолютной математически выверенной точности в выборе удержании темпа, передачи темпо-ритмических параметров, динамической палитры, нюансировки..
Бах - гений
Europeans:
This is only one example of your heritage.
You must remember and realize about the accomplishments of your ancestors!
As they created our civilization,
We must secure and defend it!
mio nonno è un flauto
8:35 (own reference) again thank you :))
Bach created all this BWK in a time when there was no Health Insurance, no eletrical heating, no labor contracts.......Maybe our problem today is the excess of certainty...Beijos pra todos.
And so he died at age 65 after being blinded in the last years of his life after an unsuccessful eye surgery. Maybe with today's health insurance and level fo care, electrical heating or labour contracts he would have lived to be 85, with full command of his facilities, giving us 30% more of his wonderful music than what we already have.
Both his parents died from illness before he was 10. If it wasnt for his older brother he would have been a homeless orphan. His first wife died from acute illness. At least 6 of his children died in childhood. His widow died in poverty because the obstacles of war prevent her from receiving support from her children. Every year in Leipzig Bach had to fight the city council for the music budget. He also worried about finding employment for his sons and his students. No, life was not a utopia back then.
i think the two previous replies completely missed the point of the original comment.
@@marks.8823 if u interpret the OP in a different way, it is still revile. It would implying thete is no genius and creativity today because there isnt enough suffering and uncertainty.
Del 16:35 a 16:40 no se escucha.
gotaderocio71 That’s intentional; it represents a lost section.
See here for more details:
imslp.org/wiki/Flute_Sonata_in_A_major,_BWV_1032_(Bach,_Johann_Sebastian)
I M M E N S O B A C H !
Bach was motivated to write exceptional music through HIS belief in a deity. But to say that his music brings us to believe in a God is a stretch!
I am living proof of this. At 75 years old, I have listened to Bach almost every day of my life, I must have heard at least once each of his works, even the cantatas, and not only did this not convert me, it did not prevent me from losing my faith at the age of 25, and never regretting it!
This concert of preachers and church mice that make him the fifth evangelist is irritating: if there is one thing in the world that hears more nonsense than a painting in a museum, it is Bach's music on UA-cam!
These flute sonatas are not religious music at all. When Bach was in Weimar and Köthen, he wrote music that was completely secular, because that's what his boss told him to do. In Leipzig, he wrote church music: he was paid for it. And we know that he was much happier in Weimar and Köthen than in Leipzig, where he was constantly in conflict with the Town Council, formed of narrow-minded bourgeois bigots. In addition to his work as a musician and organist, he had to supervise brats at St. Thomas's school, and he should have taught Latin, but I don't think he did.
Bach had no college education, and that may explain part of his genius: he is not completely imbued with the fashionable ideas, he digests them, he interprets them in his own way. When I compare Bach's Magnificat to that of his predecessor Kuhnau, I get the impression that Kuhnau was more "fashionable" than Bach.
I don't dispute that Bach believed in God like almost everyone else in his time, but we forget too much that most composers of music in the 18th century, especially in Germany, were small-time employees who had little say in the matter, and that if many of them made religious music, it was because it was one of the only ways to monetize their talent and keep the pot boiling.
Thus saith the Lord:
Wherefore He saith, "Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light."
Ephesians 5 : 14
"...Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world."
John 1: 29
Jesus loves you!
Amen, and Amen
Someone pleas tel me the instrument in frist song .
Where is BWV1033?
So, that's not right! Where's list of composition names?!
05:36
Wow 16:36 .....very odd ....now I have to check score 😂😂😂😂
♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
💙🕊🌈🎶🧚🏼
Zamechatel'nyy
Гениально эти сонаты исполняли великие советские музыканты Александр Корнеев(флейта) и В. Бахчиев(клавесин). После них уже не в жилу слушать, когда уровень слабоват((
It makes me forget that "Despacito" is heard by millions of I don´t know what species
It scares me to think that there are Internet basement dwellers with huge collections of droning synthesizer music that they'd rather listen to over this. Why go to some obscure Bandcamp page to listen to video game music knockoffs when this exists? Might as well experience the real deal.
maybe it is a kind of intellectual pride; like they can't humble their intellects enough to heed the judgement of the ages that Bach, Mozart and Beethoven are the greatest classical musicians-and maybe we must give, if I might risk the expression, *the palm of victory*, to Bach, as he was greatly admired by and prior in time to both Mozart and Beethoven.
I mean maybe they are wise enough to understand that much popular music is poisonous at worst, and boring at best, but too vain to submit to the judgement of ancestors.
@@lukehall8151 Wise? Mostly just dumb. In fairness, if "education" might have introduced them to Bach & the masters, as children, they might have opened themselves to classics. It's also possible to draw some pleasure & interest from many forms of music. Toscanini liked jazz, Andre Previn & Wynton Marsalis play & compose in both genres. Guitarists like the Romeros, Narciso Yepes, Luis Maravillas play flamenco & classical at a high level.
Why would appreciating electronic music that uses synthesizers scare you? This classical chamber music is awesome, and synthesizer music can be as well. And I hope you don't mean to belittle videogame music, because some truly remarkable music has been made by videogame composers. Some of it is even classically-based.
You sound a bit more sheltered and close-minded that those "basement-dwellers," if you ask me. If you open your mind to more genres, you will reap a richer enjoyment from the very diverse world of music that exists today. I can go from techno, to metal, to videogame soundtracks, to chamber music and more depending on my mood.
@@Synathidy You missed my point. In the first sentence, I said that it scares me when people would rather listen to uninspired electronic synth music instead of this, meaning people whose minds are closed to classical and Baroque music, but listen to something that very poorly attempts to imitate it on old electronic equipment. I love a lot of different kinds of electronic (mostly ambient) music, but people who listen to that stuff will often dismiss classical music as "boring" or "too happy" or the like, which is really ignorant.
Too bad Michael Borgstede is a traitor living in Tel Aviv🤢Nice music, though
Nous sommes dans une période covidienne où les égarés asymptomatiques de l'art sonore et de la poésie passent à côté de ça pour écouter de clinquants rappeux dont les travaux délétères, d’une pauvreté verbale dont rien n’approche et réservés à une élite restreinte, déroulent comme des confettis torsadés de pénibles architectures bruitistes et vulgaires sans éclairs ni ambition artistique.. Quelle pitié¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Я РРУСКИЙ ПОПРЕТЕ ВЗАДУ МИМИМКА !!
often out of tune