Have a look at this. This is Bach beginning a canon in inversion. The follower is a 6th below the leader:
(If you can’t see that the shapes are inversions, hold up a mirror — seriously!) Yet here, only a few bars later, the imitation seems to be at a different interval:
The follower is no longer a sixth below, but a third. How rare! And going on, something else:
(We’re looking at the lower two voices in this picture, the quarter notes.) We see the canonic imitation has shifted yet again, to the interval of a second. What is happening? Dare I say… W.T.F. Bach?
This type of composition is, I believe, completely unique. I’d love to see another example elsewhere in music. Bach writes the chorale melody four times, and in all four appearances, finds a different interval at which inverted imitation works.
The man’s capacity to combine a single shape with itself, to abstract the DNA of the smallest musical cell, to spin it, lengthen it, shrink it, to construct a world from a grain of sand; this is late Bach.
We Rely On Listener Support! How to Donate to this Podcast:
The best way to support this podcast, is to become a paid subscriber at wtfbach.substack.com
Enough paid subscribers = exclusive content, monthly merchandise giveaways!
You can also make a one-time donation here:
Thank you for listening! Thank you for your support.
Reach us at Bach (at) WTFBach (dot com)
Share this post