With the French Suites and the English Suites, the six Partitas for Harpsichord form Bach’s trilogy of keyboard suites. He must have thought of them as an essential part of his creative development, because he himself arranged for their publication in Leipzig between 1726 and 1731, when he compiled them and had the complete collection printed as Opus 1 under the title Clavier-Übung bestehend in Praeludien, Allemandien, Couranten, Sarabanden, Giguen, Menuetten und anderen Galanterien (Exercises for the Keyboard Consisting of Preludes, Allemandes, Courantes, Sarabandes, Gigues, Minuets and other Galanteries). The title Clavier-Übung had been used before, between 1689 and 1692, by Johann Kuhnau, Bach’s predecessor as Cantor at the Church of Saint Thomas in Leipzig. Should it be considered Bach’s homage to his illustrious forerunner? Was Bach encouraged by the very favorable response that had been received by the seven suites in Kuhnau’s Neue Clavier-Übung? In any case, his Partitas were a success in terms of sales, if we are to believe Johann Nikolaus Forkel, who said that “keyboard compositions of such excellence had never been seen or heard before.”
In 1731, Bach held the exhausting position of Cantor at the Thomaskirche in Leipzig. He had reached the age of forty and composed such essential works as the first book of the Well-Tempered Clavier, but he had not yet published any of his compositions.
Although modestly titled “Exercises for the Keyboard”, the six Partitas, offered by their composer “to music lovers as refreshment for their spirits,” are works of an altogether astonishing richness and complexity. Like all of Bach’s instrumental suites, they are organized around the four traditional dances of the dance suite – allemande, courante, sarabande and gigue – but here the composer reaches the summit of his art in his handling of the suite for keyboard. He goes beyond the strict framework and achieves a complete and original synthesis of the major European styles, Italian and French in particular, that had heretofore characterized the suite. One of his major innovations is the insertion between the conventional dances of several “galanteries”, which are lighter pieces or dances such as minuet, scherzo, burlesca or passepied, and by introducing each Partita with an extensive overture. Bach’s Partitas for keyboard represent his final contribution to the dance suite form, just as this genre began to run out of steam in the face of the increasing popularity of the sonata.
Press
Crescendo
The technical and expressive capacity of the musician is exceptional; he knows it and he makes use of it. The intelligence and fluidity of the discourse are such that the obvious happiness of the harpsichordist when playing this music is completely shared.
Thought-through in depth, this interpretation leaves nothing to chance and attempts to respect the tempo and character of each dance. The harmonic design and perfect balance of contrapuntal fugal passages are impressive. The rhythm drive of the whole is also remarkable.
La Vie
Of striking richness and complexity, Bach’s Partitas for harpsichord demand perfect technical mastery of the performer. To this essential quality, Bruno Procopio adds two valuable assets: accurate, balanced playing, and luminous, clear phrasing.