Bach’s French Suite No. 5, BWV 816.
I researched three
articles from JSTOR to help me create an educated interpretation of Bach’s
French Suite No. 5 BWV 816 for my first MA recital. These are my findings.
Eric McKee – Influences of the Early Eighteenth-Century social Minuet
on the Minuets from J. S. Bach’s French Suites, BWV 812-817.
- · Difficult to appreciate the central role of dance in eighteenth century European life. Most popular form of social entertainment. Pervaded all levels of society and served a wide range of social functions.
- · What was required of the music to make it danceable? How did the practical necessities of the dance affect the structure of the music? What might composers have learned from composing dance music?
- · Most common form of the social minuet was the menuet ordinaire, standard form from the Court of Louis XIV to the French Revolution. Organising component of the minuet and of all French court dances is the step-unit - a collection of individual steps, hops or springs, and involves at least two changes of weight from one foot to another.
- · In the minuet, the principal step-unit is the pas de menuet - contains four changes of weight, always beginning with the right foot (RLRL). The pas de menuet takes six beats in 3/4 time to complete and begins on the upbeat with a bending of the knees, which prepares the dancer for a rise or spring on the downbeat.
- · Step-units combined to form symmetrical floor patterns called figures. Typically compromised four to eight step-units, thus requiring eight to sixteen bars of music to complete. Since each figure comprises eight step-units, and the step-unit involves two bars, the eight-bar musical strains would need to be repeated to conform to the sixteen-bar figures.
- · Most scholars today are of the opinion that for minuet music to be danceable there needs to be some congruence between the musical structure and the choreography of the dance. Julia Sutton (1985) believes that there was complete congruence between the music and the dance at all levels of structure. Wendy Hilton (1981), Sarah Reichart (1984) allows for large level conflicts between dance figures and musical strains, while maintaining the need for congruence at lower levels. Tilden Russell (1983) believes that ‘there was no one-to-one relation between the dance and the [phrase structure of the] music’.
- · As a general rule, when the dance and music were composed for a specific occasion or when a dancer was given prior notice as to what music would be played, there often was complete agreement between the music and the dance.
- · Debate over the provenance of the posthumously-applied modifier ‘French’ in the title ‘French Suites’, both the use of French dance titles and the simpler, more elegant, galant melodies and contrapuntal treatment of the dance music, especially in comparison with Bach’s earlier English Suites and later Partitas, do suggest a connection with the dances of the French court.
- · Although the various dance types appearing in Bach’s French Suites were not specifically intended for dancing, it would be a mistake to assume that they are unsuitable for dancing. Depending on the degree of stylisation, some are clearly more suited than others. As a general rule, older dance types that were out of fashion as social dancers were subject to greater stylisation.
- · Of all the dances contained in the French Suites, the minuets are among the least stylised, showing little substantive differences from functional minuets of the time. This is not surprising, given the fact that the minuet was among the newest and by far the most popular of the social court dances used in the suites.
- · Bach’s practical knowledge of the minuet as it was danced is evidenced by the presence of a strong, unambiguous and consistently held two-bar hypermetre in every minuet of the set. This is a musical characteristic that defines the minuet apart from the other dance types of the suites, both new and old. While other dances may at times project a strong sense of hypermetre, very few do it as clearly or as consistently as the minuets.
This article allows me to
understand the importance of dance in the eighteenth century and offers me a
greater appreciation of the steps involved to dance a minuet. Even though this
particular minuet would not have been intended for dancing, I hope to be able
to portray the dance-like character through my use of stylisation and
articulation.
David Temperley – What’s Key for Key? The Krumhansl-Schmuckler
Key-Finding Algorithm Reconsidered.
- · The Gavotte from Bach’s French Suite No. 5.
- · Widely agreed that modulations typically involve “pivot chords,” chords that are compatible with both the previous key and the following one.
- · In the Bach Gavotte, the D major chord in the second half of measure 9 could either be considered as I of D or V of G. This would imply that key sections generally overlap by at least one chord.
- · The current approach holds out another possibility, however, which is that pivot regions are essentially a diachronic phenomenon. It is not that a chord is understood as being in two keys at one time, but rather it is first interpreted in one way, based on the previous context, and then in another way, under the influence of the following context.
- · There is nothing in the program that actively searches for, or prefers, such diachronic pivot effects, but they often do seem to emerge at points of modulation.
This article reminds me to consider the tonal colour of each chord,
especially with regard to any modulations that overlap through the use of a
pivot chord.
Stephen A. Crist – Review.
- · Demonstration that Bach frequently emulated his models in a highly idiosyncratic manner. This serves as a corrective to the long-held and widespread notion that Bach was the ‘perfecter’ of musical genres.
- · The truism notes correctly that Bach worked within a strongly defined set of conventions, and that he is not known to have invented wholly new genres and forms.
- · Suggests that Bach effected the culmination of these genres: that he inherited compositional models and, by dint of his extraordinary intellectual and musical powers, brought them to full maturity or perfection.
- · Bach did not handle the materials of music in a neutral manner – simply ‘cleaning them up’, as it were. Rather he often adopted the phrase ‘composing against the grain’. By this he means that frequently ‘Bach can be seen to intervene against the received idea behind a style or genre, therby altering its value and identity.’
- · Comparison of the Allemande from the French Suite in G major (BWV 816) with a true French allemande by Louis Marchand brings to light the peculiar features of Bach’s movement. Since Bach repeatedly takes French stylistic features and reinterprets them to his own ends, Dreyfus views this movement as ‘music composed by a surly foreigner, one who works not in respectful homage, but who…translates so as to betray.’
This article reminds me that Bach’s French suite is not completely
accurate with regards to its origins and stylistic features of the dances at
the time. Because Bach experimented while composing this suite and didn’t
necessarily follow the social norm, it allows me the freedom to explore different
interpretations in my practice.
Bibliography
Crist, Stephen A, ‘Review’, Journal of the American Musicological Society, Vol. 52, No. 3
(University of California Press: 1999), pp. 627-633.
McKee, Eric, ‘Influences of the Early
Eighteenth-Century Social Minuet on the Minuets from J. S. Bach’s French
Suites, BWV 812-817’, Music Analysis, Vol.
18, No. 2 (1999), pp. 235-260.
Temperley, David, ‘What’s Key for Key? The
Krumhansl-Schmuckler Key-Finding Algorithm Reconsidered’, Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal, Vol. 17, No. 1
(University of California Press: 1999), pp. 65-100.
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