I see many people today performs J.Sebastian's works with pedal, Bach never saw pedal in hes life!? are u using pedal while playing Bach?
Yes. I use pedal for some of his pieces.Considering that Bach didn't write for piano, and that pianos weren't so popular in his time, I don't think whether or not he saw a pedal is really relevant. The piano has a pedal on it... so if and when the music sounds better with pedal, and we're playing on a piano, why not use it? If we wanted to play the piano like a harpsichord, we might as well as play the harpsichord. It'd sound better that way. (I love harpsichords!!!! ) That being said, my teacher tells me I tend to under-pedal all my pieces. I have to give her credit for most of my pedaling, especially in Bach...
I use it to make it sound better, and so do everyone else.
I don't believe in using pedal on any Baroque era pieces. It gives it that authentic sound. Here at college I have only heard of one Bach piece that a teach found acceptable for pedal. It was one of Bach chacones (sp?).
Ah yes, playing those Bach suites on the piano without pedal gives that totally authentic feeling!Walter Ramsey
Ah yes, playing those Bach suites on the piano without pedal gives that totally authentic feeling!
If you check Glenn Gould's DVD playing the partitas you'd see him using the pedal. About the chaconne, the pedal is generally accepted because Bach wrote the piece for solo violin (partita in d minor) and the piano transcriptions played are by Brahms (study no 5 for the left hand) and Busoni. Both works aren't a mere transcription but a reinterpretation of Bach's work in the virtuoso romantic language.
Well, according to reliable historical sources J.S. Bach has played at least twice on a pianoforte by Gottfried Silbermann, and it is well known that in the late twenties of the 18th century Bach gave very detailed advice to Silbermann on how to improve his instruments. So he was certainly familiar with the pianoforte and also with that particular mechanism, invented by Silbermann, that lifts the dampers! The only difference: it wasn't a pedal back then, first it was a hand stop and later (in Mozart's times) a knee lever.