[Magnatune : we are not evil] [Free trial: only $15 per month] [login] [info]
JS Bach Inventions and Sinfonias by Janine Johnson Janine Johnson : JS Bach Inventions and Sinfonias.
Harpsichord and fortepiano classics.


Despite the sophistication of the Inventions and Sinfonias, and their value as teaching pieces of performance and compositional technique, these works were not published in Bach's lifetime, but rather in 1801, 51 years after his death. The "simple" version we are all presently accustomed to comes from this 1801 publication (Neue Bach Ausgabe), though we now are aware of other handwritten copies, including by Johann Sebastian Bach himself. Begun as teaching pieces for his own son, Wilhelm Friedemann, they were likely finished in Leipzig, where he moved in 1722.

Perhaps "finished" is not quite the right word, as Bach continued to tinker with them. It is evident to me that as teaching pieces, personal instruction by Bach would have been invaluable to his pupils, as improvised ornamentation would have been encouraged, hence the varying versions that have come down to us. It is my opinion that the simpler versions were kept as such to allow for the freedom to exercise one's own taste in regards to ornamentation (within reason). Unlike Francois Couperin, who was annoyed at anyone's altering of his text, Bach expected it.

In the pupils' versions I am working from I find it interesting that in many, suggested ornamentation of the main subject only appears at the beginning. I would think the student was expected to extend the logic through the entire piece, though in my performance, I mostly stick to the text, so that you, the listener, can hear what was passed down to us. In a few cases I do carry the ornamentation a bit further, (see above) but am pretty discreet. In several of the later Sinfonias, the students' ornamentation is heavy throughout, as is also true in Bach's final versions.

The two most radically different works, in Bach's hand, are Invention #1 with triplets, and Sinfonia 5, highly ornamented in the French style. In the case of Sinfonia 5, I wonder if my simple performance is even remotely correct. I suspect not.

In this performance, I also do not play every conceivable ornament. Sinfonia 12, for example, has some appogiaturas in the subject (appearing only once), that I personally don't care for, though I suppose one could get used to them, and maybe even like them if they were carried out in all voices. The same holds true of an appogiatura in the opening subject in Sinfonia 14, which to me sounds like an interruption. It all eventually boils down to taste.

I hope you enjoy this, and those of you who play, I hope this inspires you to be more free and creative with these pieces. I also feel that sticking to these pupils' versions is not essential, nor was Bach's true intent, though they are quite instructive to us now.JJ


Songs:

1. Invention 1 in C major (Johann Sebastian Bach)
2. Invention 1 in C major BFA (Johann Sebastian Bach)
3. Invention 2 in c minor (Johann Sebastian Bach)
4. Sinfonia 1 in C major (Johann Sebastian Bach)
5. Sinfonia 1 in C major P219 (Johann Sebastian Bach)
6. Sinfonia 2 in c minor (Johann Sebastian Bach)
7. Sinfonia 2 in c minor P219 (Johann Sebastian Bach)
8. Invention 3 in D major BFA (Johann Sebastian Bach)
9. Invention 4 in d minor (Johann Sebastian Bach)
10. Sinfonia 3 in D major (Johann Sebastian Bach)
11. Sinfonia 2 in D major P219+ (Johann Sebastian Bach)
12. Sinfonia 4 in d minor (Johann Sebastian Bach)
13. Sinfonia 4 in d minor P219 (Johann Sebastian Bach)
14. Invention 5 in Eb Major (Johann Sebastian Bach)
15. Invention 5 in Eb Major BFA (Johann Sebastian Bach)
16. Sinfonia 5 in Eb Major (Johann Sebastian Bach)
17. Sinfonia 5 in Eb Major BFA+ (Johann Sebastian Bach)
18. Invention 6 in E major (Johann Sebastian Bach)
19. Invention 7 in e minor CWFB (Johann Sebastian Bach)
20. Sinfonia 6 in E major (Johann Sebastian Bach)
21. Sinfonia 6 in E major P219 (Johann Sebastian Bach)
22. Sinfonia 7 in e minor (Johann Sebastian Bach)
23. Sinfonia 7 in e minor P219 (Johann Sebastian Bach)
24. Invention 8 in F Major (Johann Sebastian Bach)
25. Invention 9 in f minor BFA (Johann Sebastian Bach)
26. Sinfonia 8 in F Major HG+ (Johann Sebastian Bach)
27. Sinfonia 9 in f minor (Johann Sebastian Bach)
28. Sinfonia 9 in f minor P 219 H (Johann Sebastian Bach)
29. Invention 10 in G Major (Johann Sebastian Bach)
30. Invention 10 in G Major BFA (Johann Sebastian Bach)
31. Invention 11 in g minor (Johann Sebastian Bach)
32. Invention 11 in g minor BFA (Johann Sebastian Bach)
33. Sinfonia 10 in G Major (Johann Sebastian Bach)
34. Sinfonia 11 in g minor (Johann Sebastian Bach)
35. Sinfonia 11 in g minor P219 H (Johann Sebastian Bach)
36. Invention 12 in A Major P219 HG (Johann Sebastian Bach)
37. Invention 13 in a minor (Johann Sebastian Bach)
38. Sinfonia 12 in A Major (Johann Sebastian Bach)
39. Sinfonia 13 in a minor (Johann Sebastian Bach)
40. Sinfonia 13 in a minor P219 HG (Johann Sebastian Bach)
41. Invention 14 in Bb Major (Johann Sebastian Bach)
42. Sinfonia 14 in Bb Major (P219) (Johann Sebastian Bach)
43. Invention 15 in b minor (Johann Sebastian Bach)
44. Invention 15 in b minor HG (Johann Sebastian Bach)
45. Sinfonia 15 in b minor P219 (Johann Sebastian Bach)

Listen to: the entire album.


License Harpsichord and fortepiano classics by Janine Johnson for your project.
Play the music of Janine Johnson in your restaurant or store.

Release date: 6/16/2009
Janine Johnson lives in California USA

Tagged as: Classical, Baroque, Instrumental, Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach, Harpsichord


Recommended albums:
  1. Amber Sands by Claudia Schwab: Irish, Indian, Swedish and Eastern European music styles overlaid with Austrian yodelling
  2. Silicon Sandwich by Music Inside: funky bubbling electronic pop
  3. Musical Evolution by Music of the Spheres: small Baroque chamber ensemble
  4. Across The Night by Rildrim: electronic music becomes poetry
  5. Plus by Tokee: dark ambient with an alchemical twist
  6. Bootstrap Physics by Timothy Vajda: viola da gamba in a contemporary context
  7. Sound of Seventy Three by Sound of Seventy Three: expansive guitar-driven post-rock with trip-hop tinged remixes
  8. Indian Summer of the Lute by Ireen Thomas: Lute sonatas from Mozart's time
  9. First Album by Thursday Group: melodic composed progressive Jazz
  10. Soliloquies by Gonzalo X Ruiz: baroque oboist extraordinaire
  11. L ere du petrole by Soleil Vert: composed electronic music contrasted with ambient nature
  12. JS Bach Keyboard Works by Katherine Shao: beautiful Bach on three different beautiful harpsichords
  13. La Domna Ditz - Songs of the Trobairitz by Rossignol: spare and lyrical medieval troubadour songs
  14. Timeless by David Modica: layers of lush acoustic guitar
  15. The Lost Mode by The Lost Mode: medieval music meets living modal music traditions
  16. Barbara Strozzi - Diporti di Euterpe by Paul Beier: solo lute of the Italian renaissance.
  17. Vihuela Duets of Valderrabano by Duo Chambure: Spanish renaissance vihuela duets
  18. Lunatic Binge (instrumental) by CrimsonFaced: guitar-edged industrial electrorock
  19. Essential Scarlatti by Colin Booth: solo harpsichord music
  20. Dark Harpsichord Music by Colin Booth: solo harpsichord music

Downloads:
  • MP3: High quality MP3 variable-bit-rate files. Most people download these: they are audiophile files that play everywhere.
  • ALAC: Perfect quality Apple Lossless format files. If you use iTunes or an iPod, get these. They're an exact audio copy of the original CD, and include the CD artwork and artist info. This is the same format as High Definition audio provided by the iTunes store.
  • AAC: High quality Apple Audio Codec files. If you use iTunes or an iPod, these files sound great and include CD art and artist info. This is the standard format provided by the iTunes music store.
  • WAV: Perfect quality WAV files. This format works everywhere, and is an exact audio copy of the original CD. It sounds fantastic. Album art and artist info is unfortunately not possible with this format.
  • FLAC Perfect quality open source FLAC files. This is an open source audio format. It is an exact copy of the original CD, and includes CD artwork and artist info. Works great on Linux, VLC and many audio players based on open source.
  • OGG: High quality open source OGG files. This is an open source audio format. It is a compressed (smaller file size) version of the original CD, and includes CD artwork and artist info. Works great on Linux, VLC and many audio players based on open source.
  • 128k: Medium quality 128K MP3 files. These are medium audio quality MP3 files that will work on every device. The audio quality is good enough for most uses. These files are intended for cases where you want to conserve disk space.