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Organs of J.S. Bach: A Handbook [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 216x165x18 mm, kaal: 653 g, 36 color photographs, 28 black and white photographs, 3 maps, 70 tables
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Apr-2012
  • Kirjastus: University of Illinois Press
  • ISBN-10: 0252078454
  • ISBN-13: 9780252078453
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 216x165x18 mm, kaal: 653 g, 36 color photographs, 28 black and white photographs, 3 maps, 70 tables
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Apr-2012
  • Kirjastus: University of Illinois Press
  • ISBN-10: 0252078454
  • ISBN-13: 9780252078453
The Organs of J. S. Bach is a comprehensive and fascinating guide to the organs encountered by Bach throughout Germany in his roles as organist, concert artist, examiner, teacher, and visitor. Newly revised and updated, the book's entries are listed alphabetically by geographical location, from Arnstadt to Zschortau, providing an easy-to-reference overview.
 
Includes detailed organ-specific information:
high-quality color photographs
each instrument's history, its connection to Bach, and its disposition as Bach would have known it
architectural histories of the churches housing the instruments
identification of church organists
 
Lynn Edwards Butler's graceful translation of Christoph Wolff and Markus Zepf's volume incorporates new research and many corrections and updates to the original German edition. Bibliographical references are updated to include English-language sources, and the translation includes an expanded essay by Christoph Wolff on Bach as organist, organ composer, and organ expert.
 
The volume includes maps, a timeline of organ-related events, transcriptions of Bach's organ reports, a guide to examining organs attributed to Saxony's most famous organ builder Gottfried Silbermann, and biographical information on organ builders.
 
Publication of this volume is supported by the American Bach Society.

Arvustused

"Replete with organ specifications, high-quality photographs, and lists of bibliographic sources.  Highly recommended."--Choice

 "We now have an English translation of the most comprehensive study of the Bach organs. This is a vital resource that will enrich the lives of many, and it provides an enlightening and exciting venture into the Bach realm."--Jack Mitchener, Oberlin College "Elegant and readily portable as 'a travel companion for the suitcase.'"--American Record Guide "This English translation and expansion of Wolff and Zeph's earlier research will be welcomed by all, but especially by performers, organ lovers, and those whose ability to glean technical details from German is less than idea."--Fontes Artis Musicae

Muu info

An expansive tour of the instruments that Bach knew
Foreword ix
Preface to the English Edition xi
Bach---Organist, Composer, Organ Expert: An Introductory Sketch xv
Timeline of Organ-Related Dates in Bach's Life xxi
Maps
xxvi
PART ONE The Organs of J. S. Bach
Preliminary Remarks
1(4)
Section A Organs with a Proven Connection to Bach
5(96)
Altenburg
5(3)
Ammern
8(1)
Arnstadt
8(5)
Berka (Bad Berka)
13(1)
Dorna
14(1)
Dresden
15(4)
Eisenach
19(3)
Erfurt
22(1)
Gera
23(3)
Gorlitz
26(1)
Gotha
27(3)
Halle (Saale)
30(3)
Hamburg
33(6)
Hohnstein
39(1)
Kassel
39(1)
Kothen
40(5)
Langewiesen
45(1)
Leipzig
46(12)
Lubeck
58(4)
Luneburg
62(6)
Muhlhausen
68(6)
Naumburg
74(4)
Ohrdruf
78(2)
Potsdam
80(3)
Sangerhausen
83(3)
Stontzsch
86(2)
Stormthal
88(2)
Taubach
90(1)
Weimar
91(4)
Weißenfels
95(3)
Weißensee
98(1)
Zschortau
98(3)
Section B Reference Organs from Bach's World
101(32)
Berlin
101(1)
Buttstadt
102(3)
Erfurt
105(2)
Frankfurt (Oder)
107(1)
Freiberg
108(5)
Gotha
113(1)
Grafenroda
114(2)
Lahm (Itzgrund)
116(1)
Liebertwolkwitz
117(2)
Lubeck
119(2)
Merseburg
121(3)
Potsdam
124(1)
Rotha
125(3)
Waltershausen
128(5)
Section C Overview
An Inventory of the Organs and Their Parts, Including Their State of Preservation
133(4)
PART TWO Organ Tests and Examinations
137(18)
Section A Johann Sebastian Bach's Organ Reports
139(10)
1 St. Blasius's Church, Muhlhausen, 1708
141(1)
2 St. Ursula's Church, Taubach, 1711
142(1)
3 Market Church of Our Lady, Halle, 1716
143(2)
4 St. Augustine's Church, Erfurt, 1716
145(1)
5 St. Paul's Church, Leipzig, 1717
145(2)
6 St. Nicholas's Church, Zschortau, 1746
147(1)
7 St. Wenceslas's Church, Naumburg, 1746
148(1)
Section B Instructions for Examining Organs
149(6)
PART THREE Organ Builders
155(24)
Section A Organ Builders with a Personal Connection to Bach
157(8)
Section B Organ Builders from the Sixteenth to Eighteenth Centuries Associated with Bach's Organs
165(9)
Section C Other Organ Builders and Organ-Building Firms
174(5)
Sources and Literature Cited 179(1)
Abbreviations 179(1)
Archival Sources 180(1)
Reference List 180(13)
Photograph Credits 193(2)
Translator's Note 195(2)
Index 197
Christoph Wolff is Adams University Professor at Harvard University and director of the Bach Archive in Leipzig. Markus Zepf, a musicologist and organist, is on the staff of the Germanic National Museum in Nuremberg. Lynn Edwards Butler, who has published numerous articles on the organ, is a practicing organist with special expertise in restored baroque organs in north and central Germany.