Fuge (Fugue) g-moll, J. S. Bach by Schweitzer バッハ『小フーガ』
Uploader Comments (anonymat21)
Top Comments
-
God gifted this man with unlimited mind and intelligents, my how he use it. Music, theology, music, ministry, medicine, on and on. Outstanding!!1
-
Dr. Albert Schweitzer was a great humanitarian who went to Africa (Lambarené) to build a hospital care for the poorest people in the world, in a time when noone did this. A kind of modern saint. Besides, a great Bach interpreter.
All Comments (47)
-
Not a great interpretation. Interesting for the time but we have learned so much more about Baroque style and aesthetics since then.
-
we are currently studying this XD
-
I used to have some of these, too - I got to know this piece by listening to this recording.
Not that organ's different: the church was bombed out in WWII and the organ on which these records were made was utterly destroyed.
-
I used to have some of these, too - I got to know this piece by listening to this recording.
Not that organ's different: the church was bombed out in WWII and the organ on which these records were made was utterly destroyed.
-
Bach Werke-Verzeichnis- Inventory of Bach's works.
-
Schweitzer's teacher, Widor, was taught by a teacher who was taught by an organ teacher who....learned from Bach himself. So Schweitzer truly knows how this music should be played. Slowly.
-
BWV -- the Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis (Bach Works Catalogue) is the numbering system identifying compositions by Johann Sebastian Bach (Wikipedia).
-
@TheDjparagon : Good on yah mate !
-
@anonymat21 : I cannot hear barking in this video !
-
I have all of these 78s of the All Hallows recordings.Brilliant!Also been to All Hallows Barking At The Tower....not the same organ but a wonderful space for recitals.
What BWV ist it, please ?
Organiste06 3 years ago
It is BWV578.
anonymat21 3 years ago
Anyone know where this was played?
pcmendes1973 3 years ago
It was played and recorded at All Hallows, Barking by the Tower.
anonymat21 3 years ago