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David Goode - Bach: Trio Sonatas No. 3, 4, 5 & 6 (2024)

Posted By: delpotro
David Goode - Bach: Trio Sonatas No. 3, 4, 5 & 6 (2024)

David Goode - Bach: Trio Sonatas No. 3, 4, 5 & 6 (2024)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 222 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 125 Mb | 00:53:45
Classical | Label: East Props Music

The organ sonatas, BWV 525–530 by Johann Sebastian Bach are a collection of six sonatas in trio sonata form. Each of the sonatas has three movements, with three independent parts in the two manuals and obbligato pedal. The collection was put together in Leipzig in the late 1720s and contained reworkings of prior compositions by Bach from earlier cantatas, organ works and chamber music as well as some newly composed movements. The sixth sonata, BWV 530, is the only one for which all three movements were specially composed for the collection. When played on an organ, the second manual part is often played an octave lower on the keyboard with appropriate registration. Commentators have suggested that the collection might partly have been intended for private study to perfect organ technique, some pointing out that its compass allows it to be played on a pedal clavichord. The collection of sonatas is generally regarded as one of Bach's masterpieces for organ. The sonatas are also considered to be amongst his most difficult compositions for the instrument.

David Goode - Johann Sebastian Bach on the 1714 Silbermann Organ of Freiberg Cathedral (2011)

Posted By: Designol
David Goode - Johann Sebastian Bach on the 1714 Silbermann Organ of Freiberg Cathedral (2011)

David Goode - J.S. Bach on the 1714 Silbermann Organ of Freiberg Cathedral (2011)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 371 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 187 Mb | Artwork included
Genre: Classical | Label: Signum Classics | # SIGCD261 | Time: 01:20:24

David Goode performs a grand selection of some of Bach's best organ works - including the famed Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor - providing modern listeners with a unique chance to hear Bach's music as congregations of that period may have done. The Gottfried Silbermann organ of Freiberg cathedral is one of a handful of such 18th-century instruments (built during Bach's lifetime) to have remained largely unmodified to this day. Bach's work as an organ inspector shows that he tested and inaugurated a number of Silbermann's organs in Germany and, although there is no record that he played this instrument, its sound is undoubtedly one that Bach would have recognised and composed for.