Thursday, October 30, 2008

The Fugue

The Fugue was an instrumental form, diligently cultivated in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, a movement, founded upon a given Subject, repeated sometimes in one part, sometimes in another, and enriched with all the clever contrapuntal devices the ingenuity of its composer could suggest.

The Fugue was successfully introduced by Lulli into nearly all the Overtures to his once celebrated Operas, and employed with infinitely greater effect by Handel and Bach, who used it freely in their choral, as well as their instrumental compositions, and brought it to a state of perfection which has never since been equaled. Bach's Wohltemperirte Klavier contains Forty-eight Preludes and Fugues of inimitable beauty: while, among Handel's Overtures and Choruses, we find innumerable specimens of the style which have always been regarded as his grandest and most sublime conceptions. Corelli has also left us some fine instrumental examples.

Haydn's Miracle Symphony No.102

They call Joseph Haydn the father in music. He is considered to be, indirectly, the father of both the symphony and the string quartet, hav...