m1469,I have a tendency to think of the prelude and fugue as 2 completely sepatate pieces meant to be played together. Although Bach did not write them to be played this way, he DID write the preludes for a single purpose: to prepare the listener's ear for the fugue, which is the main part of the entire thing. The line is broken at the break between the two pieces.Phil
Okay, I am back already . If the line is not broken between the two pieces, or very minimally anyway (maybe just a breath) then do you feel what you have said still applies ?My example above was Shostakovich's Prelude and Fugue in C Major, Op 87 no 1, where we leave the Prelude and enter the Fugue with an 'attacca'. Concievably, the transition could go without a break in sound.
Actually, what I said pertains only to the WTC. Romantic and modern Preludes and Fugues are built differently, so Shostakovich probably had something more integrated in mind.In the course of researching fugues, I came across Glazunov's Prelude and Fugue in D minor, Op.62. In that piece, (which also has not only an attacca, but no double bar at the end of the prelude) Glazunov actually fuses parts of the Prelude into the Fugue to build the coda. Phil