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harpsichord, to be inserted into a performance of J.S. Bach's 3rd Brandenburg
Concerto | | Premiered
March 6, 2004 by the YPCO, directed by Linda Ghidossi-DeLuca Rebekah Davis,
keyboard soloist Sonoma State University Rohnert Park, California |
This cadenza represents
part of an attempt to reestablish some of the bravura tradition of the late Baroque,
so easily passed over in modern interpretations of the period's music. A case
in point is the 3rd Brandenburg Concerto, which supplies a simple cadence as a
stepping-stone between its two movements. On nearly every recording of this piece,
one will hear the reverential yet unimaginative error of playing the score exactly
as written, with two blunt chords executed with the utmost seriousness, then leading
directly on into the next movement. Yet what is called for in style of the period
(if not the score itself) is an extended improvisation by the continuo player,
more than the few feeble arpeggios that are often heard.
Goss's cadenza
melds some of the muscular, intellectual style of J.S. Bach with other influences
from the period, including Frescobaldi, Scarlatti, and a touch of Couperin, blended
together with a sensibility and flair borrowed from the approach of Bach's son
Karl Phillip Emmanuel. The overall effect is to evoke the younger Bach in a mischievous
mood, alternately eliciting groans and intrigued sighs from an attentive father
as the themes of the concerto are whimsically run through a series of transformational
episodes. These are in essence private jokes, referring to some of the works like
the Well-Tempered Clavier upon which the Bach boys cut their virtuosic teeth. |