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"Open Well-Tempered Clavier" Project Complete; Score and Recording Online

rDouglass writes Open source music notation software MuseScore, and pianist Kimiko Ishizaka, have completed the Open Well-Tempered Clavier project and released a new studio recording and digital score online, under the Creative Commons Zero (CC0, public domain) license. Their previous project, the Open Goldberg Variations (2012), has shown its cultural significance by greatly enhancing the Wikipedia.org article on J.S. Bach's work, and by making great progress in supplying musical scores that are accessible to the visually impaired and the blind. The recording has also received very positive early reviews by music critics. Over 900 fans of J.S. Bach financed this project on Kickstarter.com, where a total of $44,083 was raised.

5 of 59 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Unfortunately, it's still on piano by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think you might project some intentions here. Bach used a clavichord most of the time but that does not automatically mean that he liked it the most. The clavichord was practical enough to be used at a writing table where one might also transcribe the music. IIRC that use of the instrument is pretty much proven for his work on the cantatas.
    A modern day equivalent would be the use of an E-piano instead of let's say a Boesendorfer Model 290 while composing and arranging: the grand piano might be great for a concert hall but certainly not for your average bedroom. (And also I would not recommend putting a metal case laptop on top of it on a regular basis :-)

  2. Re:Unfortunately, it's still on piano by afidel · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I had the exact same thought when I went to the site. I went to Bach's childhood home and they have a number of his harpsichords including at least two in playable condition and I was lucky enough to be there on a day when they were actually playing one of them! It's a very different sound from a modern piano, though through stylized play the artist on this recording has made a modern piano sound as close as I've heard to the actual instrument that the piece was written for.

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  3. Re:Unfortunately, it's still on piano by rDouglass · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Instruments have developed since Bach's time. It's nice to play on period instruments, but it's also nice to play on modern instruments. The equivalent of the Bösendorfer 280 on which this recording was made never existed in Bach's lifetime. Would he have liked it? Who knows, but I like it!

  4. Great performance!! by Joey+Vegetables · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've listened to only a little so far, but it sounds extremely promising, with the phrasing, tempo, and ornamentation all being superb. Ms. Ishizaka also does an outstanding job of using the dynamic range of the piano in harmony with the music. This is perhaps among the hardest and most subjective elements of interpreting Bach's keyboard work, since, as other commenters here have noted, most of it predates the widespread adoption of the piano, and was written without its greater dynamic range and expressiveness in mind. So far, this is becoming my favorite recording of this work.

  5. Temperament and copyright by orgelspieler · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't see anything on the Kickstarter or description on the website about the temperament of the Bösendorfer on which this was recorded. I hope that they did not use a standard equal-tempered piano. That would be missing out on a great opportunity.

    Also, I noticed the following on the back cover of the CD: "(C) 2015 Navona Records ... Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applicable laws." Yet at the top it says that they hope you share the music. What gives?