Movements/SectionsMov'ts/Sec's | 3 Movements |
---|---|
Composition Year | 1740 ca. (not later than ca.1763; see below) |
Genre Categories | Sonatas; Trios; For 2 flutes, continuo; |
Contents |
Complete Score
*#323465 - 2.65MB, 15 pp. - -) (- V/C*/V* - 2613×⇩ - Wilson Music Library
PDF scanned by US-Nau
Wilson Music Library (2014/4/28)
PDF scanned by US-Nau
Wilson Music Library (2014/4/28)
PDF scanned by US-Nau
Wilson Music Library (2014/4/28)
|
Work Title | Trio in D major |
---|---|
Alternative. Title | Sonata; Trio a 2 Flauti e Cembalo Sigr W. F. Bach (from an early copy) |
Composer | Bach, Wilhelm Friedemann |
Opus/Catalogue NumberOp./Cat. No. | F.47 / B13 |
I-Catalogue NumberI-Cat. No. | IWB 52 |
Key | D major |
Movements/SectionsMov'ts/Sec's | 3 Movements |
Year/Date of CompositionY/D of Comp. | 1740 ca. (not later than ca.1763; see below) |
First Publication. | 1933 |
Composer Time PeriodComp. Period | Baroque |
Piece Style | Baroque |
Instrumentation | 2 Flutes and Continuo |
Manuscript Sources | mss copy of the parts, partially anonymous/unknown, partially by F. Baumann 18th-century copy LOC ca.1763 mss copy by Johann Christian Bach and "Copyist of Halle" |
Most Baroque works we call "trio sonatas" were (it seems) called "sonatas" by their composers, and absent good evidence that "trio" was a contemporary name for them and not a later attachment, this is how we tag them. The early (18th-century, judges the Library of Congress) copy that does in fact so name it is probably sufficient to the task, though; the ca.1763 copy made partially by his brother Johann Christian, partially by an anonymous Halle copyist, held by S.A. Berlin, even moreso. - Schissel (note: the Zimmermann edition is mentioned as having been used for a concert in 1935 or so, in a contemporary (that is, 1935-or-so) issue of "The Sinfonian of Phi Mu Alpha".)