

A celebration of dance
Bach’s four Orchestral Suits (or Overtures) exemplify ‘real’, practical dances and must surely have accompanied dance in some of the environments in which the composer worked. They are outstanding in their witty motivic detail and pacing of our aural (and indeed physical) expectations. Even in these most practical of pieces there is always a sense, as so often with Bach, that they are also ‘about’ dance – they invite our contemplation and memory of movement in the very act of hearing them.
With the Four Orchestral Suites — to be recorded in January 2021 and scheduled for release in October 2021 — Dunedin Consort completes its Bach ‘Masterworks’ collection, a series lauded as ‘nothing short of sensational’ (Gramophone).
Release date: October 2022
Johann Nikolaus Forkel, Bach’s first biographer, wrote that the composer infused his music with dance elements to a degree far exceeding that of his predecessors or contemporaries, diversifying the character of each piece and even rendering his fugues dance-like in their phraseology and movement. This assessment might seem unexpected to those who have come to understand Bach as the most supremely cerebral and intellectually challenging of composers. But perhaps this common conception sometimes distracts us from Bach’s understanding of human movement in space and time. His music surely draws not only our ears but also our entire bodies, along with the ongoing experience of his polished musical textures.
In fact, dance – vilified by the Puritans and Pietists as distracting us from serious spiritual pursuits – was appreciated by the orthodox Lutheran culture in which Bach spent so much of his life. Many claimed that dance, like music, would develop the sensual, emotional and physical aptitudes of participants, refining and disciplining these to cultivate a more integrated personality. Following Platonist ideals, proponents of dance felt that organised and socialised movement of the body reconciled the inner and outer natures of the conscientious practitioner.
Bach’s four Orchestral Suits (or Overtures) exemplify ‘real’, practical dances and must surely have accompanied dance in some of the environments in which the composer worked. They are outstanding in their witty motivic detail and pacing of our aural (and indeed physical) expectations. Moreover, even in these most practical of pieces there is always a sense, as so often with Bach, that they are also ‘about’ dance – they invite our contemplation and memory of movement in the very act of hearing them.
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