I dare to suggest that if it sounds like a good fugue then it probably is. When I decided to have a crack at algorithmic composition of fugues I didn't study any theory but just looked at and listened to the forty-eight like an alien looking at a jig-saw puzzle and formulated my own rules - amazing all the little patterns you notice that nobody seems to talk about in theories - and then translated these into a computer programme to write fugues. The results pleasantly surprised me. About one in five sounded all right and around one in fifty moved me a little. I put the exercise aside when Amiga went under in 1994. Matter of fact I'm having another go at it now, if I can ever finish the seemingly eternal algorithmic art code I'm also working on.
Nor can one find such a thing as a typical fugue […] if one wants to find a typical Bach fugue, one has to fabricate it. The result of this fabrication will be nothing other than what we know as a school fugue.
Music that is a fugue isn't a fugue because its music already?Of course its both. Its just that there is no fugue that follows the 'school model'. Even when one teaches about what a fugue is one should already say that the 'perfect' fugue or schoolmode fugue doesn't exist. There is always some kind of variation. One could almost make a case for this being part of the definition of a fugue.But still it is a strict form. That the border area between a fugue and a fugato or a canon is big and grey is just natural.
I don't think we will know that.But I am sure Bach knew what he was doing and what he wanted in some detail.I don't think Bach accidentally wrote that many fuges, his music in general shows too much control and conscious thinking. Bach obviously liked fugues in some way.
This "typical fugue" or school fugue as a concept/model came after Bach's WTC, not before, yes? The "school fugue" did not exist until people studied what these actual "fugues" were about, which people before them wrote out. So this concept was not based on anything exact, but only serves as a fundamental basis for understanding/inspiration to spring from I guess? Or is my history wrong? "Music theory" as we know it today did not exist in Bach's time, correct?Here is a silly question... Did Bach write "fugues" or did he simply write music ?(I am obssessed with fugues )
Theory is basically the history of the breaking of rules of theory.
3. Bach was very much into numerology and ciphers, and frequently would modify/plan a piece in order to have ciphers of his name included in it – or references to Christian theology. Like Beethoven, he was forever polishing and perfecting his pieces, and coming up with ameliorated versions of them.4. And let us not forget that he lived in an era where secret societies were rife (the free-masons, the rosicrucians, and so on) and influencing deeply political and cultural events. I would not be surprised if Bach was involved in such activities (I have read somewhere – but I wasn’t convinced – that just like Madonna, Bach was heavily into Kaballah Shocked – which certainly would be surprising considering his Lutheran upbringing). A very interesting reference if you would like to pursue this train of thought is Frances Yates “The Rosicrucian Enlightenment” (Routledge).
m1469 wrote:Yes. This is basically correct. Theory is always posterior – it has to be. Mozart had no knowledge of the theory that explains/codifies his works. Beethoven had no knowledge of the theory that formalises his works. Theory is basically the history of the breaking of rules of theory. Theory as we know it only started in the early 1700s when Rameau got an epiphany and published his “Treatise on Harmony”. One of the novelties in this work was the revolutionary idea that a major triad is still a major triad even when inverted. Up to then CEG, EGC and GCE were treated as different chords. Before Rameau, music theory was a set of arbitrary rules jealously guarded by guilds of musicians. The great secrecy encouraged the formation of very distinct styles and “schools”, each following different sets of rules. Rameau finished with all that.As for fugues, there are many other fugues besides Bach’s. And they are quite different as well. It could even be argued that Bach is a special case, and that his fugues are not that typical at all. How did he compose them? Did he had a plan, a formula? Of course we cannot know. However, there is some evidence that: 1. Bach would compose by inspiration – not by following models or formulas this does not preclude the possibilitiy that formulas were deeply embedded in his unconscious). 2. However, he would often modify his pieces according to formulas and models. 3. Bach was very much into numerology and ciphers, and frequently would modify/plan a piece in order to have ciphers of his name included in it – or references to Christian theology. Like Beethoven, he was forever polishing and perfecting his pieces, and coming up with ameliorated versions of them.4. And let us not forget that he lived in an era where secret societies were rife (the free-masons, the rosicrucians, and so on) and influencing deeply political and cultural events. I would not be surprised if Bach was involved in such activities (I have read somewhere – but I wasn’t convinced – that just like Madonna, Bach was heavily into Kaballah – which certainly would be surprising considering his Lutheran upbringing). A very interesting reference if you would like to pursue this train of thought is Frances Yates “The Rosicrucian Enlightenment” (Routledge).5. And here is a most wonderful book:James Gaines “An Evening on the Palace of Reason” (Fourth State). You can read a review here:https://books.guardian.co.uk/reviews/history/0,6121,1385499,00.htmlBest wishes,Bernhard.
I find it amazing that Bach and Satie were the only such musicians who indulged in all this secret society stuff... But Bach was lucky. They had h's in music then. We've got to find new ways of spelling our names... Did you know that he coded his monogram into his pieces? That's so amazing... I think that the best ways to explore a certain form, like the fugue, is to either play them or compose them. Perhaps a project to compose a fugue? One filled with PF symbols?
Do you guys have examples of these ciphers and monograms Bach used? I mean pieces in which he used them. That is so cool.