Das alte Jahr vergangen ist (BWV 614): Difference between revisions
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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
In ''Das alte Jahr vergangen ist'' the music sounds melancholy and the text is associated with the close of the calendar year.<ref>Peter Williams, "Suggestions for Playing the Works of Bach: Motifs in the ''Orgelbuchlein''," ''The American Organist'' 18, (September 1984), 45.</ref> | In ''Das alte Jahr vergangen ist'' the music sounds melancholy and the text is associated with the close of the calendar year.<ref>Peter Williams, "Suggestions for Playing the Works of Bach: Motifs in the ''Orgelbuchlein''," ''The American Organist'' 18, (September 1984), 45.</ref> The English translation of the text is as follows:<BR> | ||
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==Registration and Organs== | ==Registration and Organs== |
Revision as of 17:15, 25 February 2015
from Das Orgelbüchlein by Johann Sebastian Bach
Background
In Das alte Jahr vergangen ist the music sounds melancholy and the text is associated with the close of the calendar year.[1] The English translation of the text is as follows:
<
Registration and Organs
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See the footnote in the "Notes" section at the bottom of the page [2]
Fingering and Pedaling
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Articulation and Phrasing
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Ornamentation
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Tempo and Meter
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Scores and Editions
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Recordings
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Free Online
James Kibbie, 1717 Trost organ, St. Walpurgis, Großengottern, Germany, using _____.
Pay to Listen
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Other Resources
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Notes
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