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Sonata in G major for two flutes and basso continuo, BWV 1039

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Johann Georg Schreiber, 1720: Engraving of Katherinenstrasse in Leipzig. In the centre is Café Zimmermann, where the Collegium Musicum held weekly chamber music concerts

The Sonata in G major for two flutes and basso continuo, BWV 1039, is a trio sonata by Johann Sebastian Bach. It is a version, for a different instrumentation, of the Gamba Sonata, BWV 1027. The first, second and fourth movement of these sonatas also exist as a trio sonata for organ.

Historical context

This sonata, scored for two transverse flutes and continuo, is one of the few trio sonatas that can genuinely be attributed to Bach. Although traditionally thought to have been composed during Bach's period in Weimar or Cöthen, Bach scholars have revised that dating based on an analysis of the extant manuscripts and on stylistic considerations. According to Wolff (1994), the trio sonata was composed between 1736 and 1741 in Leipzig, where, since 1729, Bach had been director of the Collegium Musicum, a chamber music society performing weekly at the Café Zimmermann. The version for viola da gamba and harpsichord, BWV 1027, as well as the other two sonatas for this ensemble, are dated by Laurence Dreyfus, Christoph Wolff and others to the same period.

Movements

An itinerant flute maker, engraving by Michael Rössler, mid-18th century, Library of Congress

BWV 1039 has four movements:

  • Adagio
  • Allegro ma non presto
  • Adagio e piano
  • Presto

Trio sonata for organ

Apart from the sonata for viola da gamba and the trio sonata for two flutes and continuo, there is a third version of the sonata for organ—the trio sonata in G major in three movements (BWV 1027a and BWV 1039a). The first two movements are organ transcriptions of the first two movements of BWV 1039; while its last movement is a transcription of the fourth movement of BWV 1027. According to the Bach scholar Russell Stinson, the transcription for organ was not made by Bach, but probably by Johann Peter Kellner. Pieter Dirksen has surmised that although the Gamba sonata BWV 1027 corresponds to one of Bach's own autograph manuscript from 1740, the other sources, one of them with Bach's son Johann Gottfried Bernhard as scribe, probably date from 1735 or later. Stinson also thinks it possible that the organ arrangement could originate from a lost trio sonata in G major for two violins and basso continuo.

Selected recordings

The flautist Michel de la Barre, standing in a black wig, presides on a council with the viol player Marin Marais and other musicians, 1707: André Bouys, National Gallery

Two transverse flutes

Organ

Paul Hofhaimer playing a positive organ on a cart
  • Kevin Bowyer (organ), four movements, Vol. 8, Complete Organ Works of J. S. Bach, Nimbus Records
  • Günther Fetz, Rudolf Scheidegger (chamber organs), Edition Clarino

Other instruments

Notes

  1. Cyr 1989, p. 108
  2. Wolff 1994, pp. 227–234
  3. Rust 1860, pp. 260–273.
  4. Williams 2003, pp. 537–538
  5. ^ Dirksen 2010, p. 21, and online appendix Nos. 3–5
  6. Sonata, G BWV 1039 at Bach Digital.
  7. Dürr & Kobayashi 1998, p. 462.
  8. Stinson 1989
  9. Stinson 1992
  10. Wollny 1996

References

Scores, manuscripts and catalogues

Commentary

External links

Chamber music and orchestral works by, and transcriptions after, Johann Sebastian Bach
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