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J.S. Bach - BWV 565 - Toccata d-moll / D minor

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Uploaded by on Aug 20, 2009

Toccata & Fuga d-moll / D minor BWV 565

This is the toccata only BWV 565,1

composed by J.S. Bach (1685-1750)
performed by Kay Johannsen, organ

click here for the BWV 565,2 fugue: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W8S_m3JnUOo

click here for complete playlist: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=81F6CFF5713616B9

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Education

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Uploader Comments (toxiconegro)

  • it is discussed that this work may not be by bach

  • @12clar3412clar34

    To find proper evidence in these cases is always quite difficult. Yes, it ain't typical "Bachish" style in this one, but I think it's a vanguard work maybe composed by him in his early years or, according to your theory, by someone else.

    To be honest, I don't like it myself but it's one of the most popular works by Bach or the most popular one of all organ works, so that's why I did it as well.

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  • @tyu3456 I agree!

  • @snare310 then the organ must be just tuned that way. i can't imagine a performer learning a piece in a different key then what was written on purpose

  • @snare310 oops I mean to write this piece is up a half step, not just a step

  • @tyu3456 Very true, the differences of hard tempered tuning and equal tempered tuning can be easily heard in most older written music. However, this would affect the tuning down somewhere around half a step, but this recording is almost exactly up a step. This would make sense if it was toccata and fugue in E minor(and down a half step from the hard tempered tuning), but it is in D, implying it would be closer to c sharp minor.

  • @snare310 If you listen to other works by bach and other baroque composers like handel, you'll find that a lot of recordings bring the key down a half-step then what was actually written. The reasoning is that is apparently how they tuned their instruments back then.

  • @toxiconegro

    I think there might be a chance that this was original a work for the violin which is later transcribed to the organ.

  • this in Eb? haha Not trying to say anything rude, just an observation. Does anyone know why this is played in Eb?

  • @TooEarlyAndTooLate LMAO i lol'd

  • I tend to agree with the researchers who suppose that this is an arrangement of a lost solo violin composition - as in case with BWV 539. Indeed, there are many traces in the music itself that support the idea of the violin as the original instrument. And no matter what, the spirit is truly Bachian, no doubt of that :)

  • oh yeah of course it's not bach

    maybe it's dracula himself after all

    man could you quit whining and just listen to this

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