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            Wilhelm Friedemann BACH 
              (1710 - 1784)  
              Complete Organ Works 
              Fantasia in d minor (F 19 / BR WFB A 22) [7:00]  
              Eight fugues (F 31 / BR WFB A 81-88):  
              Fugue in C [1:48]  
              Fugue in c minor [2:17]  
              Fugue in D [1:17]  
              Fugue in d minor [1:23]  
              Fugue in E flat [2:52]  
              Fugue in e minor [2:36]  
              Fugue in B flat [0:56]  
              Fugue in f minor [4:06]  
              Nun komm, der Heiden Heiland, chorale prelude (F 38/1,1 / 
              BR WFB A 93) [1:28]  
              Christe, der du bist Tag und Licht, chorale prelude (F 38/1,2 
              / BR WFB A 94) [1:57]  
              Jesu, meine Freude, chorale prelude (F 38/1,3 / BR WFB A 
              95) [2:32]  
              Durch Adams Fall ist ganz verderbt, chorale prelude (F 38/1,4 
              / BR WFB A 96) [3:09]  
              Fugue in g minor (F 37 / BR WFB A 92) [2:18]  
              Fugue in F (F 33 / BR WFB A 90) [3:53]  
              Fugue in c minor (F 32 / BR WFB A 89) [6:13]  
              Wir danken dir, Herr Jesu Christ, chorale prelude (F 38/1, 
              5/ BR WFB A 97) [1:52]  
              Wir Christenleut han jetzund Freud, chorale prelude (F 38/1,6 
              / BR WFB 98) [1:04]  
              Was mein Gott will, das g'scheh allzeit, chorale prelude 
              (F 38/1,7 / BR WFB 99) [3:26]  
              Fantasia in c minor (F 15 / BR WFB A 18) [16:44]  
                
              Friedhelm Flamme (organ)  
              rec. 21-22 August 2009, Münsterkirche St. Alexandri at Einbeck, 
              Germany. DDD  
                
              CPO 777 527-2   
              [67:48]    | 
         
        
            
            
   
            
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          Wilhelm Friedemann BACH 
            (1710 - 1784)   Organ Works 
            Fugue in g minor (F 37 / BR WFB A 92) [2:40]   Jesu, meine Freude, 
            chorale prelude (F 38/1,3 / BR WFB A 95) [4:48]  
            Fugue in F (F 33 / BR WFB A 90) [5:18]   Nun komm, der Heiden 
            Heiland, chorale prelude (F 38/1,1 / BR WFB A 93) [2:13]  
            Fugue in c minor (F 32 / BR WFB A 89) [6:22]  
            Fugue in c minor (F deest / BR WFB deest) [5:36]   Durch Adams 
            Fall ist ganz verderbt, chorale prelude (F 38/1,4 / BR WFB A 96) 
            [4:35]  
            Fugue in F (F 36 / BR WFB A 91) [5:22]   Was mein Gott will, 
            das g'scheh allzeit, chorale prelude (F 38/1,7 / BR WFB 99) [3:09] 
             
            Fugue in c minor (F deest / BR WFB deest) [8:22]   Wir Christenleut 
            han jetzund Freud, chorale prelude (F 38/1,6 / BR WFB 98) [1:23] 
             
            Fugue in B flat (F deest / BR WFB deest) [4:52]   Wir danken 
            dir, Herr Jesu Christ, chorale prelude (F 38/1,5 / BR WFB A 97) 
            [2:26]  
            Fugue in D (F deest / BR WFB deest) [2:50]   Christe, der du 
            bist Tag und Licht, chorale prelude (F 38/1,2 / BR WFB A 94) [2:18] 
             
            Fugue in B flat (F deest / BR WFB deest) [3:37]  
            Fugue in a minor (F deest / BR WFB deest) [5:30]  
              
            Julia Brown (organ)  
            rec. 26 August 2009, Pacific Lutheran University, Tacoma, Washington, 
            USA. DDD  
              
            NAXOS 8.570571 [72:29]   | 
         
         
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                  By all accounts Wilhelm Friedemann Bach was the greatest organist 
                  of his time in Germany. The music critic Christian Friedrich 
                  Daniel Schubart stated: "Undoubtedly the greatest organist of 
                  the world! He is a son of the world-famous Sebastian Bach and 
                  has reached - if not surpassed - his father's virtuosity." He 
                  then goes on to describe his features: "a fiery genius, a creative 
                  imagination, originality and inventiveness, a stormy quickness, 
                  and the magical power to enchant every heart with his play on 
                  the organ". Bach's oeuvre for the organ bears witness to that 
                  description, and it is a great shame that so little of his art 
                  has come down to us.   
                   
                  The CPO disc promises us "the complete organ works" by Wilhelm 
                  Friedemann Bach. This has to be taken with a grain of salt. 
                  To begin with, it is not easy to make a clear distinction between 
                  pieces for any keyboard and compositions specifically intended 
                  for the organ. Obviously pieces for two manuals and pedal can 
                  only be played at the organ. Those include the seven chorale 
                  preludes and the two Fugues in F and g minor respectively 
                  which Friedhelm Flamme included in his recording. Inexplicably 
                  he did not include the Fugue in F (F 36 / A 91) which 
                  Julia Brown has recorded. On the other hand Flamme plays several 
                  pieces which don't require a pedal; these include the Fantasias 
                  in d minor and c minor which open and respectively 
                  close, his programme. Also no pedal is required in the Eight 
                  Fugues (F 31 / A 81-88), but here Friedemann has specifically 
                  indicated that they can be played either at the "Clavier" (any 
                  keyboard without pedals) or the organ.  
                     
                  Although these two discs contain duplications, they also complement 
                  each other in that both offer pieces which don't appear on the 
                  other disc. The two Fantasias I have just mentioned are absent 
                  from Julia Brown's disc - she played them at the harpsichord 
                  on Naxos 
                  8.570530 - whereas she included various fugues which are 
                  not in the two catalogues of Wilhelm Friedemann Bach's oeuvre. 
                  The reason is that they are not considered authentic. It is 
                  rather odd that this is not mentioned in the liner-notes. Authentic 
                  or not, it is nice to have them available, even though they 
                  have been recorded before - for instance by Leo van Doeselaar 
                  on Etcetera KTC 2503, 1984.  
                     
                  One can understand that they are considered doubtful, as some 
                  are very baroque in style and not very different from Johann 
                  Sebastian's fugues. The Fugue in B flat (track 16) is 
                  a good example. But that in itself doesn't tell against their 
                  authenticity. Listening to the chorale preludes one will notice 
                  their rooting in a past even before J.S. The cantus firmus 
                  is virtually unornamented, and Friedemann makes use of so-called 
                  Vorimitation in which the chorale melody is anticipated 
                  in the other voices. It was not only used by Sebastian but is 
                  also a feature of the chorale preludes by Johann Pachelbel (1653-1706). 
                  Other fugues begin in a rather old-fashioned manner but then 
                  turn towards the fashion of the time towards the end. This is 
                  typical of Wilhelm Friedemann who in his oeuvre moves to and 
                  fro between the various styles of his time.  
                     
                  The number of fugues he composed is remarkable and this is considered 
                  one of the reasons he fell from grace towards the end of his 
                  career. The form of the fugue had become largely obsolete, and 
                  when Friedemann attempted to get the Eight Fugues printed, 
                  publishers refused. These are very likely characteristic of 
                  his style of playing, and that could well have been the reason 
                  that in the last stage of his life he wasn't in much demand 
                  as an organist any more. It is assumed that he mostly improvised 
                  during his public concerts; that is probably the reason so little 
                  organ music by him has been preserved.  
                     
                  The duplications allow us to compare the interpretations of 
                  these two organists which are quite different. A look at the 
                  track-lists reveals that Julia Brown is consistently slower 
                  than Friedhelm Flamme. It is mostly not possible to decide which 
                  tempo is right. The Fugue in F (F 33 / A 90), for instance, 
                  works in both performances quite well. The slower reading by 
                  Julia Brown lends it a kind of gravity and seriousness which 
                  suits its character as it is reminiscent of the fugues in Sebastian's 
                  Well-tempered Clavier. Elsewhere the slow tempo works 
                  against the music, for instance in the Fugue in c minor 
                  (track 6) where the trills are unnatural. One could probably 
                  characterise Ms Brown's performances as analytical: every detail 
                  is exposed, thanks not only to the relatively slow tempi but 
                  also the registration which is mostly modest and allows for 
                  every single voice to be followed.  
                     
                  The differences between these two discs are also due to the 
                  organs. Julia Brown plays an instrument built by Paul Fritts 
                  and Company in 1999, which was clearly inspired by the German 
                  baroque organ. Friedhelm Flamme also plays a modern organ by 
                  Martin Hillebrand dating from 2008. Here new stops have been 
                  built in the style of the 18th century, particularly based on 
                  the disposition of the organ by Christian Vater which was built 
                  in this church in the 1730s. Some pipework from the organ Carl 
                  Giesecke had built in the same church in the 1860s has been 
                  incorporated into this organ. Because of that the sound is quite 
                  different, mellower and less penetrating than the sound of the 
                  organ Julia Brown plays. I don't want to choose between them. 
                  The Eight Fugues come off beautifully at the Hillebrand. 
                  So do the chorale preludes, but in these somewhat old-fashioned 
                  pieces the Fritts organ is probably closer to what Bach had 
                  at his disposal in his earlier years.  
                     
                  Both booklets leave something to be desired. I have already 
                  identified that the doubtful authenticity of several pieces 
                  in Julia Brown's recording is not mentioned. Otherwise the liner-notes 
                  are not very specific about the various pieces. The CPO booklet 
                  contains some general information about Wilhelm Friedemann as 
                  an organist, but little analysis of the music. The track-lists 
                  should have given the numbers in Peter Wollny's catalogue as 
                  well, in particular as Falck's catalogue is out of date. I have 
                  added them on the basis of the work-list in New Grove. 
                   
                     
                  Both recordings have their merits and those who have an interest 
                  in Wilhelm Friedemann's music shouldn't miss either of them. 
                     
                   
                  Johan van Veen  
                  http://www.musica-dei-donum.org  
                  https://twitter.com/johanvanveen  
                     
                   
                 
               
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