>
Bach's Numbers: Compositional Proportion and Significance

Bach's Numbers: Compositional Proportion and Significance

  • £23.59
  • Save £74


Ruth Tatlow
Cambridge University Press, 8/6/2015
EAN 9781107088603, ISBN10: 1107088607

Hardcover, 427 pages, 24.7 x 17.4 x 2.3 cm
Language: English

In eighteenth-century Germany the universal harmony of God's creation and the perfection of its proportions still held philosophical, moral and devotional significance. Reproducing proportions close to the unity (1:1) across compositions could render them beautiful, perfect and even eternal. Using the principles of her groundbreaking theory of proportional parallelism and the latest source study research, Ruth Tatlow reveals how Bach used the number of bars to create numerical perfection across his published collections, and explains why he did so. The first part of the book illustrates the wide-ranging application of belief in the unity, showing how planning a well-proportioned structure was a normal compositional procedure in Bach's time. In the second part Tatlow presents practical demonstrations of this in Bach's works, illustrating the layers of proportion that appear within a movement, a work, between two works in a collection, across a collection and between collections.

Part I. Foundations
1. Bach's numbers
2. Symmetry, proportion and parallels
3. Unity, proportions and universal harmony in Bach's world
4. Bars, compositional planning and proportional parallelism
Part II. Demonstrations
5. Three collections for strings
6. Four in two collections for keyboard
7. Two further collections for keyboard
8. Two small late collections
9. Two large late collections
10. Collections of concertos
11. Collections of organ works
12. Great passions and cantatas
13. Festive cut-and-paste projects
masses and oratorios
14. Lost blueprints
Appendix 1. Chronological index of musical doctrine.