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Originally dismissed as curiosities, J. S. Bach's Cello Suites are now understood as the pinnacle of composition for unaccompanied cello. This handbook examines how and why Bach composed these highly innovative works. It explains the characteristics of each of the dance types used in the suites and reveals the compositional methods that achieve cohesion within each suite. The author discusses the four manuscript copies of Bach's lost original and the valuable evidence they contain on how the Suites might be performed. He explores how, after around 1860, the Cello Suites gradually entered the concert hall, where they initially received a mixed critical and audience reception. The Catalan cellist Pablo Casals extensively popularized them through his concerts and recordings, setting the paradigm for several generations to follow. The Cello Suites now have a global resonance, influencing music from Benjamin Britten's Cello Suites to J-pop, and media from K-drama to Ingmar Bergman's films.
J. S. Bach’s tenure as Capellmeister in Cöthen, with its focus on secular music, afforded an opportunity to explore the violin and cello as solo instruments. While his Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin represent the pinnacle of an established German tradition, the Cello Suites are among the earliest music composed for unaccompanied cello and may have been inspired partly by unaccompanied music for viola da gamba (pièces de viole). Bach’s Violin Solos and Cello Suites are both “opus collections”—sets of (usually six) pieces exemplifying his mastery of a particular genre or instrument. An obituary coauthored by Carp Philipp Emanuel Bach and Johann Friedrich Agricola illustrates the special importance the composer attached to these pieces. While Bach was best known during his lifetime as an organist, he had intimate knowledge and full mastery of the violin. There is no record of Bach playing cello, but his composition of virtuoso suites that draw a maximum musical effect from such minimal instrumental resources suggest an intimate knowledge of that instrument. Moreover, during Bach’s lifetime, an instrument called “viola da spalla”—considered a type of cello but played similarly to the violin—could have enabled a violinist to play the Cello Suites.
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