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Dieterich Buxtehude

 
Dieterich Buxtehude

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Dieterich Buxtehude



 
 
Dieterich Buxtehude (Dietrich, Diderich) (c. 1637 – 9 May 1707) was a German-Danish organist
Organist

An organist is a musician who plays any type of organ . An organist may play organ repertoire, play with an musical ensemble or orchestra, or accompany one or more singers or instrumentalist....
, lutenist and a highly regarded composer of the Baroque
Baroque

In the the arts, the Baroque was a Western cultural Epoch , starting roughly at the beginning of the 17th century in Rome, Italy. It was exemplified by drama and grandeur in Baroque sculpture, Baroque painting, literature, Baroque dance, and Baroque music....
 period. His organ works comprise a central part of the standard organ repertoire
Organ repertoire

The organ repertoire consists of music written for the Organ . Because it is one of the oldest musical instruments in existence, written organ repertoire spans a time period almost as long as that of written music itself....
 and are frequently performed at recitals and church services. He wrote in a wide variety of vocal and instrumental idioms, and his style strongly influenced many composers, including Johann Sebastian Bach
Johann Sebastian Bach

Johann Sebastian Bach was a German composer and organ whose sacred and secular works for choir, orchestra, and solo instruments drew together the strands of the Baroque music period and brought it to its ultimate maturity....
 and Gustav Mahler
Gustav Mahler

Gustav Mahler was a Bohemian-born Austrian composer and conducting. He was best known during his own lifetime as one of the leading orchestral and operatic conductors of the day....
.






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Encyclopedia


Dieterich Buxtehude (Dietrich, Diderich) (c. 1637 – 9 May 1707) was a German-Danish organist
Organist

An organist is a musician who plays any type of organ . An organist may play organ repertoire, play with an musical ensemble or orchestra, or accompany one or more singers or instrumentalist....
, lutenist and a highly regarded composer of the Baroque
Baroque

In the the arts, the Baroque was a Western cultural Epoch , starting roughly at the beginning of the 17th century in Rome, Italy. It was exemplified by drama and grandeur in Baroque sculpture, Baroque painting, literature, Baroque dance, and Baroque music....
 period. His organ works comprise a central part of the standard organ repertoire
Organ repertoire

The organ repertoire consists of music written for the Organ . Because it is one of the oldest musical instruments in existence, written organ repertoire spans a time period almost as long as that of written music itself....
 and are frequently performed at recitals and church services. He wrote in a wide variety of vocal and instrumental idioms, and his style strongly influenced many composers, including Johann Sebastian Bach
Johann Sebastian Bach

Johann Sebastian Bach was a German composer and organ whose sacred and secular works for choir, orchestra, and solo instruments drew together the strands of the Baroque music period and brought it to its ultimate maturity....
 and Gustav Mahler
Gustav Mahler

Gustav Mahler was a Bohemian-born Austrian composer and conducting. He was best known during his own lifetime as one of the leading orchestral and operatic conductors of the day....
. Buxtehude, along with Heinrich Schütz
Heinrich Schütz

Heinrich Sch?tz was a German composer and organ , generally regarded as the most important German composer before Johann Sebastian Bach and often considered to be one of the most important composers of the 17th century along with Claudio Monteverdi....
, is considered today to be the most important German composer of the mid-Baroque.

Life


Early years in Denmark

He is thought to have been born with the name Diderich Buxtehude. Scholars dispute both the year and country of his birth, although most now accept it taking place in 1637 in Helsingborg
Helsingborg

Helsingborg Helsingborg is the centre of a region of about 300,000 inhabitants of north-west Sk?ne. This arguably makes the Helsingborg area the fourth largest metropolitan area in Sweden....
, Skåne
Skåne

Scania is a geographical region on the southernmost tip of the Scandinavian peninsula, a traditional provinces of Sweden in the Kingdom of Sweden, before 1658 a province in the Kingdom of Denmark and part of the historical lands of Denmark....
, at the time part of Denmark
Denmark

Denmark is a Scandinavian country in northern Europe and the senior member of the Kingdom of Denmark. It is the southernmost of the Nordic countries....
 (but now part of Sweden
Sweden

Sweden , officially the Kingdom of Sweden , is a Nordic countries on the Scandinavian Peninsula in Northern Europe. Sweden has land borders with Norway to the west and Finland to the northeast, and it is connected to Denmark by the ?resund Bridge in the south....
). His obituary stated that "he recognized Denmark as his native country, whence he came to our region; he lived about 70 years". Others, however, claim that he was born at Oldesloe
Bad Oldesloe

Bad Oldesloe is a town located in the northern Germany state of Schleswig-Holstein. It is the capital of the Stormarn Kreis .The area has been inhabited since mesolithic times....
 in the Duchy of Holstein
Holstein

Holstein is the region between the rivers Elbe and Eider River. It is part of Schleswig-Holstein, the northernmost state of Germany.Holstein once existed as the County of Holstein , the later Duchy of Holstein , and was the northernmost territory of the Holy Roman Empire....
, which at that time was a part of the Danish Monarchy (but is now in Germany). Later in his life he Germanized his name and began signing documents Dieterich Buxtehude.

Lübeck: Marienkirche

He was an organist, first in Helsingborg
Helsingborg

Helsingborg Helsingborg is the centre of a region of about 300,000 inhabitants of north-west Sk?ne. This arguably makes the Helsingborg area the fourth largest metropolitan area in Sweden....
 (1657-1658), then at Elsinore
Elsinore

Helsing?r is a city in Helsing?r municipality on the northeast coast of the island of Zealand in eastern Denmark. It is known internationally as the setting of William Shakespeare's Hamlet, whence the spelling 'Elsinore' originated....
 (Helsingør) (1660-1668), and last from 1668 at the Marienkirche in Lübeck
Lübeck

L?beck is the second largest city in Schleswig-Holstein, in northern Germany, and one of the major ports of Germany. It was for several centuries the "capital" of the Hanseatic League and because of its Brick Gothic architectural heritage is on UNESCO's list of World Heritage Sites....
, where he succeeded Franz Tunder
Franz Tunder

Franz Tunder was a German composer and organist of the early to middle Baroque music era. He was an important link between the early German Baroque style which was based on Venetian school models, and the later Baroque style which culminated in the music of Johann Sebastian Bach; in addition he was formative in the development of the choral...
 and married Tunder's daughter Anna Margarethe (1668). His post in the free Imperial city of Lübeck afforded him considerable latitude in his musical career and his autonomy was a model for the careers of later Baroque masters such as George Frideric Handel
George Frideric Handel

George Frideric Handel was an England Baroque music composer of Germany birth who is famous for his operas, oratorios, and concerto grosso. His life and music may justly be described as "cosmopolitan": he was born in Germany, trained in Italy, and spent most of his life in England....
, Johann Mattheson
Johann Mattheson

Johann Mattheson was a German composer, writer, lexicographer, diplomat and music theory.Mattheson was born and died in Hamburg. He was a close friend of George Frideric Handel, although he nearly killed him in a sudden quarrel, during a performance of Mattheson's opera Cleopatra in 1704....
, Georg Philipp Telemann
Georg Philipp Telemann

Georg Philipp Telemann was a German Baroque music composer, born in Magdeburg. Self-taught in music, he studied law at the University of Leipzig....
 and Johann Sebastian Bach
Johann Sebastian Bach

Johann Sebastian Bach was a German composer and organ whose sacred and secular works for choir, orchestra, and solo instruments drew together the strands of the Baroque music period and brought it to its ultimate maturity....
. In 1673 he reorganized a series of evening musical performances, initiated by Tunder, known as Abendmusik
Abendmusik

Abendmusik is an evening concert, usually performed in a church.Specifically, this designation refers to a series of performances at the Marienkirche, L?beck of L?beck, Germany, begun in the 17th century and lasting until 1810....
, which attracted musicians from diverse parts and remained a feature of the church until 1810. In 1703, Handel and Mattheson both traveled to meet Buxtehude. Buxtehude was old, and ready to retire, by the time he met them. He offered his position in Lübeck to Handel and Mattheson but stipulated that the organist who ascended to it must marry his eldest daughter, Anna Margareta. Both Handel and Mattheson turned the offer down and left the day after their arrival. In 1705, J.S. Bach, then a young man twenty years old, walked from Arnstadt
Arnstadt

Arnstadt is a town in Ilm-Kreis, Thuringia, Germany, situated on the Gera River. It is one of the oldest towns in Thuringia and is nicknamed Das Tor zum Th?ringer Wald, The Gate to the Thuringian Forest....
 to Lübeck, a distance of more than 400 kilometers (250 US miles), and stayed nearly three months to hear the Abendmusik, meet the pre-eminent Lübeck organist, hear him play, and as Bach explained "to comprehend one thing and another about his art."

Works

For a complete list of Buxtehude's works, see List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude
List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude

The Buxtehude-Werke-Verzeichnis is the catalogue and the numbering system used to identify musical works by Dieterich Buxtehude. It was created by Georg Karst?dt and published in mid-1970s as Thematisch-Systematisches Verzeichnis der Musikalischen Werke von Dietrich Buxtehude....
.


General introduction

The bulk of Buxtehude's oeuvre consists of vocal music, which covers a wide variety of styles, and organ works, which concentrate mostly on chorale settings and large-scale sectional forms. Chamber music constitutes a minor part of the surviving output, although the only works Buxtehude published during his lifetime were fourteen chamber sonatas. Unfortunately, many of Buxtehude's compositions have been lost. The libretto
Libretto

A libretto is the text used in an extended musical work such as an opera, operetta, masque, sacred or secular oratorio and cantata, Musical theater, and ballet....
s for his oratorio
Oratorio

An oratorio is a large musical composition including an orchestra, a choir, and solo ists. The oratorio was somewhat modeled after the opera. Their similarities include the use of a choir, soloists, an ensemble, various distinguishable Fictional character, and arias....
s, for example, survive; but none of the scores does, which is particularly unfortunate, because his German oratorios seem to be the model for later works by Johann Sebastian Bach
Johann Sebastian Bach

Johann Sebastian Bach was a German composer and organ whose sacred and secular works for choir, orchestra, and solo instruments drew together the strands of the Baroque music period and brought it to its ultimate maturity....
 and Georg Philipp Telemann
Georg Philipp Telemann

Georg Philipp Telemann was a German Baroque music composer, born in Magdeburg. Self-taught in music, he studied law at the University of Leipzig....
.

Gustaf Düben
Gustaf Düben

Gustaf D?ben was a Sweden organist and composer. In 1663, he succeeded his father, the German-born Andreas D?ben as both hovkapellm?stare, director of the Swedish Royal Orchestra, and organist of the German St Gertrud Church in Stockholm....
's collection and the so-called Lübeck tablature A373 are the two most important sources for Buxtehude's vocal music. The former includes several autographs, both in German organ tablature
Organ tablature

Organ tablature is a form of musical notation used by the north Germany Baroque organ school, although there are also forms of organ tablature from other countries such as Italy, Spain, Poland, and England....
 and in score. Both collections were probably created during Buxtehude's lifetime and with his permission. Copies made by miscellaneous composers are the only extant sources for the organ works: chorale settings are mostly transmitted in copies by Johann Gottfried Walther
Johann Gottfried Walther

Johann Gottfried Walther was a Germany music theory, organ , composer, and lexicography of the Baroque music era. Not only was his life almost exactly contemporaneous to that of Johann Sebastian Bach, he was the famous composer's cousin....
, while Gottfried Lindemann's and others' copies concentrate on free works. Johann Christoph Bach
Johann Christoph Bach

Johann Christoph Bach was a German composer of the Baroque period. He was born at Arnstadt, the son of Heinrich Bach, Johann Sebastian Bach's great uncle, hence he was Johann Sebastian's first cousin once removed....
's manuscript is particularly important, as it includes the three known ostinato works and the famous Prelude and Chaconne in C major, BuxWV
List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude

The Buxtehude-Werke-Verzeichnis is the catalogue and the numbering system used to identify musical works by Dieterich Buxtehude. It was created by Georg Karst?dt and published in mid-1970s as Thematisch-Systematisches Verzeichnis der Musikalischen Werke von Dietrich Buxtehude....
 137. Although Buxtehude himself most probably wrote in organ tablature, the majority of the copies are in standard staff notation.

Keyboard works


Preludes and toccatas
The nineteen organ
praeludia (or preludes) form the core of Buxtehude's work and are ultimately considered his most important contributions to music literature of the seventeenth century. They are sectional compositions that alternate between free improvisatory sections and strict contrapuntal parts, usually either fugues or pieces written in fugal manner; all make heavy use of pedal and are idiomatic to the organ. These preludes, together with pieces by Nikolaus Bruhns, represent the highest point in the evolution of the north German organ prelude
German organ schools

The 17th century organ composers of Germany can be divided into two primary schools: the north German school and the south German school ....
, and the so-called
stylus phantasticus. They were undoubtedly among the strongest influences of JS Bach, whose organ preludes, toccatas and fugues frequently employ similar techniques.

The preludes are quite varied in style and structure, and therefore hard to categorize. Structure-wise, there usually is an introductory section, a fugue and a postlude, but this basic scheme is very frequently expanded: both BuxWV 137 and BuxWV 148 include a full-fledged chaconne along with fugal and toccata-like writing in other sections, BuxWV 141 includes two fugues, sections of imitative counterpoint and parts with chordal writing. A few pieces are smaller in scope; for example, BuxWV 144, which consists only of a brief improvisatory prelude followed by a longer fugue. The sections may be explicitly separated in the score or flow one into another, one ending and another beginning in the same bar. The texture is almost always at least three-voice, with many instances of four-voice polyphony and occasional sections in five voices (BuxWV 150 being one of the notable example, with five-voice structure in which two of the voices are taken by the pedal).

The introductory section is always improvisatory. The preludes begin almost invariably with a single motif in one of the voices which is then treated imitatively for a bar or two. After this the introduction will most commonly elaborate on this motif or a part of it, or on a short melodic germ which is passed from voice to voice in three- or four-voice polyphonic writing, as seen in Example 1:

Occasionally the introduction will engage in parallel 3rds, 6ths, etc. For example, BuxWV 149 begins with a single voice, proceeds to parallel counterpoint for nine bars and then segues into the kind of texture described above. The improvisatory interludes, free sections and postludes may all employ a vast array of techniques, from miscellaneous kinds of imitative writing (the technique discussed above, or "fugues" that dissolve into homophonic writing, etc.) to various forms of non-motivic interaction between voices (arpeggios, chordal style, figuration over pedal point
Pedal point

In tonality, a pedal point is a sustained tone, typically in the bass , during which at least one foreign, i.e., consonance and dissonance harmony is sounded in the other register ....
, etc.). Tempo
Tempo

In musical terminology, 'tempo' is the speed or pace of a given musical piece. It is an extremely crucial element of composition, as it can affect the mood and difficulty of a piece....
 marks are frequently present:
Adagio sections written out in chords of whole- and half-notes, Vivace and Allegro imitative sections, and others.

The number of fugues in a prelude varies from one to three, not counting the pseudo-fugal free sections. The fugues normally employ four voices with extensive use of pedal. Most subjects are of medium length (see Example 2), frequently with some degree of repercussion (note repeating, particularly in BuxWV 148 and BuxWV 153), wide leaps or simplistic runs of 16th notes. One of the notable exceptions is a fugue in BuxWV 145, which features a six-bar subject. The answers are usually tonal, on scale degrees 1 and 5, and there is little real modulation. Stretto and parallel entries may be employed, with particular emphasis on the latter. Short and simple countersubjects appear, and may change their form slightly during the course of the fugue. Structure-wise, Buxtehude's fugues are series of expositions, with non-thematic material appearing quite rarely, if ever. There is some variation, however, in the way they are constructed: in the first and last fugues of BuxWV 136 the second voice does not state the subject as in enters during the initial exposition; in BuxWV 153 the second exposition uses the subject in its inverted form, etc. Fugue subjects of a particular prelude may be related as in Froberger's and Frescobaldi
Frescobaldi

The Frescobaldi Family is a prominent Florentine family that has been involved in the political, sociological and economic history of the Tuscany region since the Middle Ages....
's ricercar
Ricercar

A ricercar is a type of late Renaissance music and mostly early Baroque music instrumental composition. The term means to search out, and many ricercars serve a Prelude function to "search out" the key or mode of a following piece....
s and canzona
Canzona

In music, a canzona was a 16th-century multipart vocal setting of a literary canzone and a 1500s- and 1600s instrumental composition. At first based on Franco-Flemish polyphonic songs , later independently composed, the instrumental canzonas, such as the brass canzonas of Giovanni Gabrieli, influenced the fugue and were the direct ancest...
s (BuxWV 150, 152, etc.):

The fugal procedure dissolves at the end of the fugue when it is followed by a free section, as seen in Example 4:

Buxtehude's other pieces that employ free writing or sectional structure include works titled
toccata, praeambulum, etc. All are similar to the praeludia in terms of construction and techniques used, except that some of these works do not employ pedal passages or do so in a very basic way (pedal point which lasts during much of the piece, etc.). A well-known piece is BuxWV 146, in the rare key of F-sharp minor; it is believed that this prelude was written by Buxtehude especially for himself and his organ, and that he had an own way of tuning the instrument to allow for the tonality rarely used because of meantone temperament.

Chorale settings
Almost all Buxtehude's chorale settings fall into three distinct types: chorale preludes, chorale fantasias and chorale variations. The chorale preludes are usually four-part cantus firmus
Cantus firmus

In music, a cantus firmus is a pre-existing melody forming the basis of a polyphony composition .The plural of this Latin term is , though one occasionally sees the corrupt form canti firmi....
 settings of one stanza of the chorale; the melody is presented in an elaborately ornamented version in the upper voice, the three lower parts engage in some form of counterpoint (not necessarily imitative). Most of Buxtehude's chorale settings are in this form. Here is an example from chorale
Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott
A Mighty Fortress is Our God

"A Mighty Fortress Is Our God" is the best known of Martin Luther's hymns. Luther wrote the words and composed the hymn tune sometime between 1527-1529....
BuxWV 184:

Buxtehude Chorale Ein Feste
The ornamented cantus firmus in these pieces represents a significant difference between the north German and the south German schools
German organ schools

The 17th century organ composers of Germany can be divided into two primary schools: the north German school and the south German school ....
; Pachelbel and his pupils would almost always leave the chorale melody unornamented.

The chorale fantasias (a modern term) are large-scale virtuosic sectional compositions that cover a whole strophe of the text and are somewhat similar to chorale concertos in their treatment of the text: each verse is developed separately, allowing for technically and emotionally contrasting sections within one composition. The presence of contrasting textures makes these pieces reminiscent of Buxtehude's
praeludia. Each section is closely related to the text of the corresponding lines (chromatic sections to express sadness, gigue fugues to express joy, etc.). Examples include Gelobet seist du, Jesu Christ BuxWV 188, Nun freut euch, lieben Christen g'mein BuxWV 210, Nun lob, mein Seel, den Herren BuxWV 213 and Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern, BuxWV 223. Buxtehude's chorale variations are usually in two or three voices. They consist of around 3-4 variations of which only one may use the pedal. These pieces are not as important for the development of the form and not as advanced as Pachelbel
Johann Pachelbel

Johann Pachelbel was a German Baroque music composer, organist and teacher, who brought the German organ schools to its peak. He composed a large body of sacred and secular music, and his contributions to the development of the chorale prelude and fugue have earned him a place among the most important composers of the middle Baroque era....
's or Böhm
Georg Böhm

Georg B?hm was a German Baroque organist and composer. He is notable for his development of the chorale partita and for his influence on the young Johann Sebastian Bach....
's contributions to the genre.

The pieces that do not fall into any of the three types are
Auf meinen lieben Gott BuxWV 179, which is, quite unusually for the time, a dance suite based on the chorale, and the ones based on the chant (Magnificat
Magnificat

The Magnificat is a canticle frequently sung liturgy in Christian church services. The text of the canticle is taken directly from the Gospel of Luke where it is spoken by the Virgin Mary upon the occasion of her Visitation to her cousin Elizabeth....
s BuxWV 203-5 and
Te Deum laudamus, BuxWV 218), which are structurally similar to chorale fantasias.

Ostinato works
The three ostinato
Ostinato

In music, an Ostinato is a motif or phrase which is persistently repetition in the same musical voice. The repeating idea may be a rhythmic pattern, part of a tune, or a complete melody....
 bass works Buxtehude composed—two chaconne
Chaconne

In music, a chaconne is a musical form whose primary formal feature involves Variation on a repeated short harmonic progression.Originally a quick dance-song which emerged during the late 16th century in Spain culture, possibly from the New World, the chaconne was characterized by suggestive movements and mocking texts.....
s (BuxWV 159–160) and a passacaglia
Passacaglia

A passacaglia is a musical form that originated in early seventeenth-century Spain and is still used by contemporary composers. Its character is usually grave and it is often, but not always, based on a bass-ostinato and written in triple-meter....
 (BuxWV 161
Passacaglia in D minor, BuxWV 161

Passacaglia in D minor is an organ work by Dieterich Buxtehude. It is generally acknowledged as one of his most important works, and was possibly an influence on Johann Sebastian Bach's Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor, BWV 582 , as well as Johannes Brahms' music....
)— not only represent, along with Pachelbel's six organ chaconnes, a shift from the traditional chaconne style, but are also the first truly developed north German contributions to the development of the genre. They are among Buxtehude's best-known works and have influenced numerous composers after him, most notably Bach (whose organ passacaglia is modeled after Buxtehude's) and Brahms. The pieces feature numerous connected sections, with many suspensions, changing meters, and even real modulation (in which the ostinato pattern is transposed into another key).

Some of the praeludia also make use of ostinato models. The praeludium in C major, BuxWV 137, begins with a lengthy and expressive pedal solo and concludes not with a postlude of arpeggios and scale runs, but with a fully legitimate (if somewhat short) chaconne built over a fairly complex three-bar ostinato pattern in the pedal:

The praeludium in G minor, BuxWV 148, in which the ostinato pattern is derived from the subject of one of the fugal sections, also ends in a chaconne. In addition, another praeludium in G minor, BuxWV 149, employs a repeating bass pattern in the beginning.

Other keyboard works
The rest of Buxtehude's keyboard music does not employ pedals. Of the organ works, a few keyboard canzonas are the only strictly contrapuntal pieces in Buxtehude's oeuvre and were probably composed with teaching purposes in mind. There are also three pieces labelled
fugues: only the first, BuxWV 174, is a real fugue. BuxWV 175 is more of a canzona (two sections, both fugal and on the same subject), while BuxWV 176 is more like a typical Buxtehude prelude, only beginning with a fugue rather than an improvisatory section, and for manuals only.

There are also 19 harpsichord suites and several variation sets. The suites follow the standard (Allemande - Sarabande - Courante - Gigue) model, sometimes excluding a movement and sometimes adding a second sarabande or a couple of doubles. Like Froberger's, all dances except the gigues employ the French lute
Lute

Lute can refer generally to any plucked string instrument with a neck and a deep round back, or more specifically to an instrument from the family of European lutes....
 style brisé, sarabandes and courantes frequently being variations on the allemande. The gigues employ basic imitative counterpoint but never go as far as the gigue fugues in the chorale fantasias or the fugal writing seen in organ preludes. It may be that the more developed harpsichord writing by Buxtehude simply did not survive: in his writings, Mattheson mentioned a cycle of seven suites by Buxtehude, depicting the nature of planets, but these pieces are lost.

The several sets of arias with variations are, surprisingly, much more developed than the organ chorale variations. BuxWV 250
La Capricciosa may have inspired Bach's Goldberg Variations
Goldberg Variations

The Goldberg Variations, BWV 988, are a set of an aria and 30 Variation for harpsichord by Johann Sebastian Bach. First published in 1741 as the fourth in a series Bach called Bach compositions printed during the composer's lifetime, "keyboard practice", the work is considered to be one of the most important examples of Variation for...
 BWV 988: both have 32 variations (including the two arias of the Goldberg Variations); there are a number of similarities in the structure of individual movements; both include variations in forms of various dances; both are in G major; Bach was familiar with Buxtehude's work and admired him, as has been related above.

Recordings


Available media


Commercial

  • Organ works
    • Ulrik Spang-Hanssen (complete - recorded 1990/93)
    • Rene Saorgin
      René Saorgin

      Born in Cannes in 1928, Ren? Saorgin began his musical studies at the Nice Conservatoire and then went to Paris to study composition with Maurice Durufl? and No?l Gallon at the Paris Conservatoire....
       (complete)
    • Michel Chapuis
      Michel Chapuis

      Michel Chapuis is a France canoe racing who competed in the early 1960s. He won the silver medal in the C-2 1000 m event at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo....
       (complete)
    • Peter Hurford
      Peter Hurford

      Peter Hurford OBE is a British organist, born Saint Cecilia's day 1930 in Minehead, Somerset.Educated and Blundell's School he later studied both music and law at Jesus College, Cambridge, University of Cambridge, graduating with dual degrees, subsequently obtaining an enviable reputation for both musical scholarship and organ playing....
    • David Kinsela
      David Kinsela

      David Kinsela is an Australian organist and musicologist who also specialises in ancient instruments like the clavicytherium and chekker.Kinsela was born in Sans Souci, New South Wales, a suburb in Sydney, Australia, on 3 June 1941 and raised and schooled at Young, NSW in mid-west New South Wales....
    • Harald Vogel
      Harald Vogel

      Harald Vogel is a German organist and one of the leading experts on Renaissance music and Baroque music Keyboard instrument music. He has been professor of organ at the University of the Arts Bremen since 1994....
    • Ernst-Erich Stender
    • Bine Katrine Bryndorf (in progress)
    • Hans Davidsson
      Hans Davidsson

      Hans Davidsson is a Swedish organist and teacher well known all over the world. He was one of the driving forces behind establishing the organ research center GOArt in G?teborg, Sweden....
       (to be released)
    • Christopher Herrick
      Christopher Herrick

      Christopher Herrick is an England pipe organ....
       (to be recorded from 2007)
    • Ton Koopman
      Ton Koopman

      Ton Koopman is a Conducting, organist and harpsichordist.Koopman had a "classical education" and then studied the pipe organ , harpsichord and musicology in Amsterdam....
       (Buxtehude Opera Omnia series; Vol III, Organ works 1 (BuxWV 139, 141, 146, 156, 160, 162, 169, 178, 197, 210, 213, 220) Antoine Marchand Records, CC72242
    • Ton Koopman
      Ton Koopman

      Ton Koopman is a Conducting, organist and harpsichordist.Koopman had a "classical education" and then studied the pipe organ , harpsichord and musicology in Amsterdam....
       (Buxtehude Opera Omnia series; Vol IV, Organ works 2 (BuxWV 157, 161, 163, 164, 170, 173-175, 177, 180-182, 184, 188, 211, 217, 223) Antoine Marchand Records, CC72243


  • Harpsichord music
    • Rinaldo Alessandrini
      Rinaldo Alessandrini

      Rinaldo Alessandrini is a virtuoso on Baroque music keyboards, including harpsichord, fortepiano, and organ . He is founder and conductor of the Italian early music ensemble Concerto Italiano, performing music of Monteverdi, Vivaldi, Fran?ois Couperin, J....
       (BuxWV 163, 234, 164, 166, 226, 174, 248, 250)
    • Lars Ulrik Mortensen
      Lars Ulrik Mortensen

      Lars Ulrik Mortensen is a Denmark harpsichordist and Conductor .He studied with Karen Englund and Jesper B?je Christensen at The Royal Danish Academy of Music in Copenhagen and with Trevor Pinnock in London....
       (BuxWV 243, 168, 238, 162, 250, 165, 223, 233, 176, 226, 249, 166, 179, 225, 247, 242, 174, 245, 171, 235, 170, 215)
    • Ton Koopman
      Ton Koopman

      Ton Koopman is a Conducting, organist and harpsichordist.Koopman had a "classical education" and then studied the pipe organ , harpsichord and musicology in Amsterdam....
       (in progress as part of the Buxtehude Opera Omnia series intended as a "Complete Edition"; Vol 1 has been brought out, containing BuxWV 250, 230, 238, 233, 245, 235, 247, 228, 242, 226, 243, 234, 232)


  • Cantatas
    • 6 Cantatas (BuxWV 78, 62, 76, 31, 41, 15), Orchestra Anima Eterna & The Royal Consort, Collegium Vocale
      Collegium Vocale

      Collegium Vocale was founded in 1970, one of the top choirs, mainly in the interpretation of the vocal work of J.S. Bach. Collegium Vocale is based in Ghent and was founded, and still directed by Philippe Herreweghe....
      , Jos van Immerseel
      Jos van Immerseel

      Jos van Immerseel is a Flanders harpsichordist.Van Immerseel studied organ , piano and harpsichord at the Antwerp Conservatory under Flor Peeters, Eug?ne Tracy and harpsichordist and musicologist Kenneth Gilbert....
       — 1994 — Channel Classics, CCS 7895
    • Sacred Cantatas (BuxWV 47, 94, 56, 73, 174, 12, 48, 38, 60), Emma Kirkby
      Emma Kirkby

      Dame Carolyn Emma Kirkby is a soprano singer and one of the world's most renowned early music specialists. She was a classics student at Somerville College, Oxford, and an English language teacher before developing a career as a soloist....
       et al, The Purcell Quartet — 2003 — Chandos Records Ltd, Chan 0691
    • Sacred Cantatas Vol. 2 (BuxWV 13, 92, 77, 17, 6, 71, 58, 37, 57), Emma Kirkby
      Emma Kirkby

      Dame Carolyn Emma Kirkby is a soprano singer and one of the world's most renowned early music specialists. She was a classics student at Somerville College, Oxford, and an English language teacher before developing a career as a soloist....
      , Michael Chance
      Michael Chance

      Michael Chance Order of the British Empire is an England countertenor.Chance was born in Penn, Buckinghamshire, into a musical family. After growing up as a chorister he attended Eton College, Berkshire, and later King's College, Cambridge, where he read English....
      , Charles Daniels
      Charles Daniels (tenor)

      Charles Daniels is an English tenor, particularly noted for his performances of baroque music. He is a frequent soloist with The King's Consort, and has made over 25 recordings with the ensemble on the Hyperion Records label....
      , Peter Harvey
      Peter Harvey

      Peter Harvey is an Australian television journalist, currently employed with the Australian Nine Network?s 60 Minutes program. Harvey is also a regular contributor on Today Hot Topics segment....
      , The Purcell Quartett — 2005 — Chandos Records Ltd, Chan 0723
    • Sacred Cantatas (BuxWV 104, 59, 97, 161, 107, 53, 64, 108), Matthew White
      Matthew White (countertenor)

      Matthew White is a Canada countertenor....
      , Katherine Hill, Paul Grindlay, Aradia Ensemble, Kevin Mallon — 2004 — Naxos 8.557041
    • Geistliche Kantaten (Sacred cantatas), Cantus Cölln, Konrad Junghänel
      Konrad Junghänel

      Konrad Jungh?nel is a German Conducting and lutenist. He has given numerous solo concerts all around the world and has also worked with ensembles such as Les Arts Florissants and others....
      , Harmonia Mundi France HMC 901629
    • O Gottes Stadt (BuxWV 87), Wo ist doch mein Freund geblieben? (BuxWV 111) and Herr, wenn ich nur dich habe (BuxWV 38), sung by Johannette Zomer and Peter Harvey
      Peter Harvey

      Peter Harvey is an Australian television journalist, currently employed with the Australian Nine Network?s 60 Minutes program. Harvey is also a regular contributor on Today Hot Topics segment....
       on "Death and Devotion", Netherlands Bach Society, Jos van Veldhoven
      Jos van Veldhoven

      Jos van Veldhoven is a Dutch choral conductor. Although he is a regular guest artist with international orchestras, he is most known as the artistic director of ....
      , Channel Classics, CCS SA 20804
    • Wacht! Euch zum Streit gefasset macht (Das jüngste Gericht) (BuxWV Anh.3) (Dieterich Buxtehude - Opera Omnia, Volume 2, Vocal Works 1), Ton Koopman
      Ton Koopman

      Ton Koopman is a Conducting, organist and harpsichordist.Koopman had a "classical education" and then studied the pipe organ , harpsichord and musicology in Amsterdam....
      , The Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir
      Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir

      Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir is an early-music group based in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. It was created in two stages by the Conducting, organist and harpsichordist Ton Koopman....
      , Antoine Marchand Records, CC72241
    • Dieterich Buxtehude - Opera Omnia, Volume V, Vocal Works 2 (BuxWV 2, 10, 12, 19, 20, 40, 43, 50-52, 64, 70, 81, 110, 113, 114, 120, 123, 124, Anh 1) Ton Koopman
      Ton Koopman

      Ton Koopman is a Conducting, organist and harpsichordist.Koopman had a "classical education" and then studied the pipe organ , harpsichord and musicology in Amsterdam....
      , The Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir
      Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir

      Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir is an early-music group based in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. It was created in two stages by the Conducting, organist and harpsichordist Ton Koopman....
      , Antoine Marchand Records, CC72244
    • Membra Jesu Nostri
      Membra Jesu Nostri

      Membra Jesu Nostri , List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude 75, is a cycle of seven cantatas composed by Dieterich Buxtehude in 1680, and dedicated to Gustaf D?ben....
      , Monteverdi Choir
      Monteverdi Choir

      The Monteverdi Choir was founded in 1964 by John Eliot Gardiner for a performance of the Vespro della Beata Vergine 1610 in King's College Chapel, Cambridge....
      , English Baroque Soloists
      English Baroque Soloists

      The English Baroque Soloists is a chamber orchestra playing on authentic performance, formed in 1978 by English people Conducting John Eliot Gardiner....
      , Fretwork
      Fretwork (music group)

      Fretwork is a Consort of instruments of viols based in England, United Kingdom. Formed in 1986, the group consists of six players. Its repertoire consists primarily of music of the Renaissance music period, in particular that of Elizabethan and Jacobean England, arrangements of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach, and contemporary music writ...
      , John Eliot Gardiner
      John Eliot Gardiner

      Sir John Eliot Gardiner CBE Fellowship of King's College London is an England conducting. He founded the Monteverdi Choir , the English Baroque Soloists and the Orchestre R?volutionnaire et Romantique ....
      , Archiv Produktion 447 298-2
    • Membra Jesu Nostri
      Membra Jesu Nostri

      Membra Jesu Nostri , List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude 75, is a cycle of seven cantatas composed by Dieterich Buxtehude in 1680, and dedicated to Gustaf D?ben....
      , Netherlands Bach Society, Jos van Veldhoven
      Jos van Veldhoven

      Jos van Veldhoven is a Dutch choral conductor. Although he is a regular guest artist with international orchestras, he is most known as the artistic director of ....
       (cond), vocalists Anne Grimm, Johannette Zomer sopranos, Peter de Groot counter-tenor, Andrew Tortise tenor, Bas Ramselaar bass (the soloists act as the chorus), Channel Classics CCS SA 24006; this SACD also features the
      Fried- und Freudenreiche Hinfahrth (BuxWV 76), a series of 2 aria's, sung by Johannette Zomer
    • Membra Jesu Nostri
      Membra Jesu Nostri

      Membra Jesu Nostri , List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude 75, is a cycle of seven cantatas composed by Dieterich Buxtehude in 1680, and dedicated to Gustaf D?ben....
      , Ton Koopman
      Ton Koopman

      Ton Koopman is a Conducting, organist and harpsichordist.Koopman had a "classical education" and then studied the pipe organ , harpsichord and musicology in Amsterdam....
      , Erato 2292-45295-2
    • Membra Jesu Nostri
      Membra Jesu Nostri

      Membra Jesu Nostri , List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude 75, is a cycle of seven cantatas composed by Dieterich Buxtehude in 1680, and dedicated to Gustaf D?ben....
      , Masaaki Suzuki
      Masaaki Suzuki

      is a Japanese people pipe organ, harpsichordist and Conducting, and the founder and musical director of the Bach Collegium Japan.He was born in Kobe to parents who were both Christianity and amateur musicians....
      , Bach Collegium Japan
      Bach Collegium Japan

      The Bach Collegium Japan is an orchestra and chorus specialising in Baroque music. It was founded in 1990 by Masaaki Suzuki. Since 1995 they have produced forty recordings in a series of Johann Sebastian Bach's cantatas on the BIS Records label....
      , Bis Records CD-871
    • Membra Jesu Nostri
      Membra Jesu Nostri

      Membra Jesu Nostri , List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude 75, is a cycle of seven cantatas composed by Dieterich Buxtehude in 1680, and dedicated to Gustaf D?ben....
      , Konrad Junghänel
      Konrad Junghänel

      Konrad Jungh?nel is a German Conducting and lutenist. He has given numerous solo concerts all around the world and has also worked with ensembles such as Les Arts Florissants and others....
      , Cantus Cölln, Harmonia Mundi, HMC 901912


Editions

Organ music
  • Broude Brothers
  • Breitkopf (Klaus Beckmann)
  • Bärenreiter (Christoph Albrecht)
  • Hansen (Josef Hedar)
  • Dover (reprint of public-domain material)


External links

  • , hypermedia by Jeff Hall and Tim Smith at the ; Shockwave Player required.
  • , a recently formed Buxtehude-related group
  • , organized by The Netherlands Bach Society
  • on Goldbergweb


Scores

    • Score from Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection
  • Score from Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection


Recordings and MIDI

  • Kunst der Fuge: