This is one of the most beautiful pieces of Buxtehude - real "stylus fantasticus" - it takes you far from the daily worries - It is therefore worth living
J S Bach walked 200 miles to hear this great scandinavian organist -- it's a dead giveaway that Buxtehude was one or Mr. Bach's most influencial musicians.
The Bach Reader Hand T David Arthur Mendel recounts that by measuring it 65 miles. Central Germany in Leipzig to Lubeck in the Northernost island by the North Sea. Buxtehide was German not Scandinavian.. Buxtehide was Baroque and slightly older. Yes he was very much influenced. Had to get out of Leipzig to reclaim his musical sanity and went to visit him and did not come back didn't say he was leaving either. he was in fact denied the permission to go there at all. He was arrested and thrown in jail when they caught up with him. It is presumably at the time he wrote for the King of Prussia Das Musikalisches Opfer. Which he had hoped would gain him empliyment. It did not. It is a beautiful work. Lives in the BWV line up right near his concerti for three and four harpsichords and the orchestral suites about bwv1023 or 1050. Bach werkstatt gesellschaft verzeichniss. The numbering system of the society that catalogued it all.
@@stevewallschlaeger1379 Non capisco il commento. Bach andò nel 1703 da Arnstadt a Lubecca per ascoltare Buxtehude. Oggi sono 350 km. Probabilmente allora le strade tagliavano in mezzo ai campi e quindi la distanza poteva ridursi, ma non meno dei già detti 350 km. A piedi. O, probabilmente, chiedendo passaggi ai carrettieri, i trasportatori di merci. Buxtehude era nato in territorio danese, ma la famiglia di origine era sassone. E' stato il più grande musicista germanico della sua epoca ed effettivamente Bach da giovane imitò moltissimo lo stile di Buxtehude. Solo un fanatico o un cieco può negarlo. Molti lavori giovanili all'organo di Bach sono affini allo stile del danese.
@@stevewallschlaeger1379 This is plain nonsense. The distance between Arnstadt and Lübeck is 250 miles. Lübeck is a city on the German Baltic coast - not "in the Northernost island by the North Sea". Buxtehude was not "slightly older" - he was born almost 50 years before Bach. He travelled to Lübeck from Arnstadt in 1705 - not Leipzig. Bach went to Leipzig in 1723. You are saying "he was in fact denied the permission to go there at all".This is nonsense, as well. He got the permission to go to Lübeck and stay away for 4 weeks, but actually returned after 4 *months*. He was not arrested in Arnstadt (or Leipzig as you seem to believe). He was arrested, indeed. He was arrested in Weimar in 1717 „eod. die 6. Nov. (1717) ist der bisherige Concert-Meister und Hof-Organist Bach wegen seiner Halsstarrigen Bezeugung und zu erzwingenden Dismission auf der Land Richter-Stube arretieret und entlich den 2. Dezember darauf mit angezeigter Ungnade ihm die Dismission durch den Hofsekretär angedeutet und zugleich des arrests befreiet worden.“ What you're saying about the "Das Musikalisches Opfer" is even better. Bach compose it in 1747 after the famous visit to Friedreich II in May 1747. Of course, Bach did not hope it would gain him employment at Friedrich's court. Should you happen to write again, use fewer words and more learning.
@@stevewallschlaeger1379 Bach was not in office in Leipzig when he walked to Lübeck for it was in 1705, 18 years before arriving at Leipzig. As Buxtehude was from Denmark, Terry B Hanson was right to mention it.
I love BACH , but this Prelude he copied it note by note ; I don't blame my beloved J.Sebastian , but the Music Historians and Critics who don't clear this issue :( :(
Chromatiques de bel facture . Belle maîtrise et attaques rigoureuses .
This is one of the most beautiful pieces of Buxtehude - real "stylus fantasticus" - it takes you far from the daily worries - It is therefore worth living
Nice Performance ! Thanks for the post.
This composition is amazing
J S Bach walked 200 miles to hear this great scandinavian organist -- it's a dead giveaway that Buxtehude was one or Mr. Bach's most influencial musicians.
The Bach Reader Hand T David Arthur Mendel recounts that by measuring it 65 miles. Central Germany in Leipzig to Lubeck in the Northernost island by the North Sea. Buxtehide was German not Scandinavian.. Buxtehide was Baroque and slightly older. Yes he was very much influenced. Had to get out of Leipzig to reclaim his musical sanity and went to visit him and did not come back didn't say he was leaving either. he was in fact denied the permission to go there at all. He was arrested and thrown in jail when they caught up with him. It is presumably at the time he wrote for the King of Prussia Das Musikalisches Opfer. Which he had hoped would gain him empliyment. It did not. It is a beautiful work. Lives in the BWV line up right near his concerti for three and four harpsichords and the orchestral suites about bwv1023 or 1050. Bach werkstatt gesellschaft verzeichniss. The numbering system of the society that catalogued it all.
@@stevewallschlaeger1379 Non capisco il commento. Bach andò nel 1703 da Arnstadt a Lubecca per ascoltare Buxtehude. Oggi sono 350 km. Probabilmente allora le strade tagliavano in mezzo ai campi e quindi la distanza poteva ridursi, ma non meno dei già detti 350 km. A piedi. O, probabilmente, chiedendo passaggi ai carrettieri, i trasportatori di merci. Buxtehude era nato in territorio danese, ma la famiglia di origine era sassone. E' stato il più grande musicista germanico della sua epoca ed effettivamente Bach da giovane imitò moltissimo lo stile di Buxtehude. Solo un fanatico o un cieco può negarlo. Molti lavori giovanili all'organo di Bach sono affini allo stile del danese.
@@stevewallschlaeger1379 This is plain nonsense.
The distance between Arnstadt and Lübeck is 250 miles. Lübeck is a city on the German Baltic coast - not "in the Northernost island by the North Sea". Buxtehude was not "slightly older" - he was born almost 50 years before Bach. He travelled to Lübeck from Arnstadt in 1705 - not Leipzig. Bach went to Leipzig in 1723. You are saying "he was in fact denied the permission to go there at all".This is nonsense, as well. He got the permission to go to Lübeck and stay away for 4 weeks, but actually returned after 4 *months*. He was not arrested in Arnstadt (or Leipzig as you seem to believe). He was arrested, indeed. He was arrested in Weimar in 1717
„eod. die 6. Nov. (1717) ist der bisherige Concert-Meister und Hof-Organist Bach wegen seiner Halsstarrigen Bezeugung und zu erzwingenden Dismission auf der Land Richter-Stube arretieret und entlich den 2. Dezember darauf mit angezeigter Ungnade ihm die Dismission durch den Hofsekretär angedeutet und zugleich des arrests befreiet worden.“
What you're saying about the "Das Musikalisches Opfer" is even better. Bach compose it in 1747 after the famous visit to Friedreich II in May 1747. Of course, Bach did not hope it would gain him employment at Friedrich's court.
Should you happen to write again, use fewer words and more learning.
@@stevewallschlaeger1379 Bach was not in office in Leipzig when he walked to Lübeck for it was in 1705, 18 years before arriving at Leipzig. As Buxtehude was from Denmark, Terry B Hanson was right to mention it.
I love the stylus fantasticus in this piece!
Great stuff, thank you.
I'll have to go to visit that church. It's only 50 miles from where i live. Funny to learn about your own country from youtube.
Very nice recording! Thanks for posting! :-)
Bravo bravo bravo
Awesome recording - thank you for downloading
Marvellous!
I love BACH , but this Prelude he copied it note by note ; I don't blame my beloved J.Sebastian , but the Music Historians and Critics who don't clear this issue :( :(
Hello , which prelude for bach younare reffering to ??
I think Bach also stolen works of Bruhns
Love it, thank you. cazzie511
5:38
I'm feeling near to God !
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