this piece is exactly the violin partita no 3 and was transcribed for lute several years after it's composition...possibly upon the advice of sl weiss who was a family friend of bach
Luca Pianca plays a baroque lute by Luc Breton, recorded december 1998 in Lugano,Switzerland by Christian Feldken for Teldec's Bach 2000, complete works by J.S. Bach
i got a old style guitar who come from the research of L.Breton the guitar is made by Serge Rinsoz who was the "disciple" of Luc Breton :so great makers!!
My favorite piece by J. S. Bach. It amazes me: the more I hear it the more complex it becomes for me. Just beautiful. It is very curious because Bach used this same music in three of his pieces: BWV 29 (Organ) , BWV 1006 (Violin) and this one. So he must've liked it
One always comes back to Bach. Segovia knew this and as such was hounded by jealous orchestral musicians for daring to play upon their sacred ground. As was S. L. Weiss who almost lost his thumb to one. If one does not understand the reason why Bach during his life time wrote the same music out for different instruments then a true understanding of his genius will always allude the seeker. Hearing this suite upon the lute truly exposes the divine dance in song of Bach's music.
Would you mind explaining why Segovia was hounded by orchestral musicians, music is for everyone to enjoy and it makes no sense at all to me why on earth other musicians were jealous of him.
+Bronk Tug Because when Segovia first dared to perform Bach's D minor Chaconne he was heckled by some violinists who only came to concert because their sacred "violin" Chaconne was on the program.
This is remarkable in that the lutenist plays this piece in E major (as in the original score.) Nigel North transcribed the entire piece into F major in his Linn recording, saying that E major is a very bad key for lute.
Cette Suite est incroyablement difficile, du Prélude, un long tunnel où l'on ne sait trop quand respirer, à la Gigue, en passant par les difficultés rythmiques de la Loure. La Gavotte en Rondeau est juste magique !
too bad you did not translate this into English (google translate) It is an interesting comment.. I don't speak French.. but I do speak Italian... and that is how I was able to understand you.... Please take the effort in using Google's IA! thanks! Beaucoup de Merci
Salut, j'ai adapté le prélude du mieux que j'ai pu, pour la basse électrique. Très difficile à mon niveau, mais c'est le morceau le plus excitant à jouer, et l'interprétation de Pianca est au top.
+nevertheless123 The performer is Elvis Presley, sometime in late 1969 0r early 1970. He took up the lute because of being "grounded" by minor hip surgery. Very nice job, don't you think?
Jouer JS BACH avec un luth vous transporte au XVIII ème siècle , cette sonorité est remarquable de finesse et de légèreté et respire tout le génie de la renaissance . A l'identique, le clavecin produit le même effet Quel Bonheur
There have to be a mistake on Like/Dislike bar, I hope someone clicked dislike by a mistake. What human on this world can actually dislike such a divine music? created by a "God" in this domain.
Don't get a cheap one, that's what I recommend--you'll be so thankful in the end. But, if you must, go for one of those cheapies on ebay. If you want to play this kind of music, you'll be looking for a Baroque lute; you'll probably want one with 13 courses. (Courses are used to refer to the strings, which are usually doubled or paired in octaves like a 12-string guitar.) Cheers.
This suite is, of course, nearly identical to the 6th Solo Violin Sonata. I wonder for which instrument was it first written - lute or violin? I know Bach played the violin but did he also play the lute? It is beautiful music whatever instrument it is played on! Thank you for posting!
bach was only 20 at the time so it wasnt his music the other kid (geyersbach) was playing, and he was admonished by his schoolmasters, rather than arrested. unless theres some whole other similar circumstance im unaware of.
But lutes do vary in size and as they do, they have different pitches. I was simply unclear about the pitch of the lute was E (making it a bass lute) or the actual Suite was in E.
Whatever but I never heard of this dude before. Been around since 1750 making recordings and still none of my bro's know him. So what does that tell you sir?
DrDLL99 99% of us do not have access to the written score, so How would we know id it was "messed up" as you say. It's still a great performance as far as I'm concerned. I enjoyed it.. P.S. Nobody's perfect.
I cannot get tired of the prelude, to me it's one of the finest piece Bach ever wrote.
Sometimes, this music is the only thing that brings me peace.
+mrlaa1 that is so true .. I'd go totally mad if it were not for music
All is bless ...thank you to J.S Bach to Luca Pianca to Luc Breton and to THE ALL MIGHTY GOD for this Amazing Grace music
Totalmente maravilloso
this piece is exactly the violin partita no 3 and was transcribed for lute several years after it's composition...possibly upon the advice of sl weiss who was a family friend of bach
Luca Pianca plays a baroque lute by Luc Breton, recorded december 1998 in Lugano,Switzerland by Christian Feldken for Teldec's Bach 2000, complete works by J.S. Bach
i got a old style guitar who come from the research of L.Breton the guitar is made by Serge Rinsoz who was the "disciple" of Luc Breton :so great makers!!
The preludio is arguably the finest piece of solo work of the Baroque period. In my small, unimportant opinion, anyway.
I'd be happy to argue that! LOL
@@seanmarshall7529 lol
Peak masterpiece of counterpoint ~ unique mathmatical beauty
hear hear
My favorite piece by J. S. Bach. It amazes me: the more I hear it the more complex it becomes for me. Just beautiful.
It is very curious because Bach used this same music in three of his pieces: BWV 29 (Organ) , BWV 1006 (Violin) and this one. So he must've liked it
_No law against stealing from yourself!_ 🤣
Even the introduction Symphony for Cantate 29,organ, orchestra & choirs.
It was also his job to compose a million pieces a day (a small exaggeration), so I believe he was also a very practical man. :)
One always comes back to Bach. Segovia knew this and as such was hounded by jealous orchestral musicians for daring to play upon their sacred ground. As was S. L. Weiss who almost lost his thumb to one. If one does not understand the reason why Bach during his life time wrote the same music out for different instruments then a true understanding of his genius will always allude the seeker.
Hearing this suite upon the lute truly exposes the divine dance in song of Bach's music.
Would you mind explaining why Segovia was hounded by orchestral musicians, music is for everyone to enjoy and it makes no sense at all to me why on earth other musicians were jealous of him.
+Bronk Tug Because when Segovia first dared to perform Bach's D minor Chaconne he was heckled by some violinists who only came to concert because their sacred "violin" Chaconne was on the program.
It seems that the definition of "allude" has eluded you.
DSStephen1
It seems as if you’ve thrown yourself in a loop, buddy. He had in fact used allude correctly.
Love love Bach -- soothing to the soul music.
The Preludio is miraculous in that it is at once a perpetuum mobile (not uncommon in Bach) and a true melody.
This is remarkable in that the lutenist plays this piece in E major (as in the original score.) Nigel North transcribed the entire piece into F major in his Linn recording, saying that E major is a very bad key for lute.
I think this might be played on an archlute rather than a baroque lute in d minor tuning, as was Nigel's version.
Theodor Rombouts 1597-1637 -- Lute Player
Cette Suite est incroyablement difficile, du Prélude, un long tunnel où l'on ne sait trop quand respirer, à la Gigue, en passant par les difficultés rythmiques de la Loure. La Gavotte en Rondeau est juste magique !
too bad you did not translate this into English (google translate) It is an interesting comment.. I don't speak French.. but I do speak Italian... and that is how I was able to understand you.... Please take the effort in using Google's IA! thanks! Beaucoup de Merci
Salut, j'ai adapté le prélude du mieux que j'ai pu, pour la basse électrique. Très difficile à mon niveau, mais c'est le morceau le plus excitant à jouer, et l'interprétation de Pianca est au top.
Eu nunca vi tamanha beleza em forma de música. Guardarei no meu coração cada momento da primeira vez que ouvi essa performasse .
Who is playing this?
Dont you feel bad to post someone else's music without acknowledging the performer???
It's Luca Pianca. But I agree, he should be credited in the description.
MarcoGorelli But he is still not mentioned. You have to do it, even because he is playing so well
***** Indeed. We might as well thumb up and comment to keep this on top.
+nevertheless123 The performer is Elvis Presley, sometime in late 1969 0r early 1970. He took up the lute because of being "grounded" by minor hip surgery. Very nice job, don't you think?
+Marv Luse Exactly. American "Pop" musicians are so talented. Elvis is no slouch either.
While I have always heard this played on the violin (Partita no.3), this version on the lute is simply wonderful.
I have never heard Bach's lute arrangement for this...
...now I will be making up for lost time
Luca Pianca, sei un fenomeno! Bravissimo! Vado a comprarmi i tuoi CD di Bach, Marais e De Visée!!!
Jouer JS BACH avec un luth vous transporte au XVIII ème siècle , cette sonorité est remarquable de finesse et de légèreté et respire tout le génie de la renaissance .
A l'identique, le clavecin produit le même effet
Quel Bonheur
il n'y a pas de meilleure musique
love bach and classical music
This is baroque. Bach never played classical. Beethoven and Mozart were in the classical era :)
@@TheRealityfades that reply was terrible... a little bit of respect please!
Muy hermoso, gracias por subir esta música maravillosa
peaceful and beatiful song
Thank you, Luca Pianca.
Gracias🥰🥰🥰💞💞💞
Lively and lovely
There have to be a mistake on Like/Dislike bar, I hope someone clicked dislike by a mistake. What human on this world can actually dislike such a divine music? created by a "God" in this domain.
Caro Luca, congratulazioni da un tuo omonimo. Quasi come Szeryng! Bravo!
thanks for posting. i had known this as a violin partita, i never knew he had this as a lute piece as well
This has really aided my study time. Thank you!
Absolutely lovely! Thank you!
Bach is a master of Peace
YES! Well said. Peace, tenderness and all that is high and clean. Also, sometimes, a whirling, romping danceability.
Richard Sørensen well said
Outstanding work. LOVE IT!!!
wonderful music, great playing, thanx
A blistering tempo, but very interesting. I like it!
Excelente me encanta
perfetto, golden touch
thank you so much for this... it made my day!
Beautiful performance! Single-strung (arch)lute?
Beautiful music, great performance!
Excellent
Gorgeous!
good, beautiful interpretation
Большое спасибо! Виртуозное исполнение !
carson a tha thu a ’sgrìobhadh ann an leithid de chànan air a thomhas a-mhàin airson an ìre as lugha den t-sluagh den t-seòrsa ciùil seo?
common don't be too tough on this Fedotov... he only meant that the music was great.. sbasibo spakuoni nochi... Ephkaristo'
Quien es el intérprete? Sin palabras, nos llega a través del tiempo, todo el ímpetu de ese poderoso espíritu musical de Bach
Que preciosa musica de bach yo pienso que se inpiraban en Dios y viene de lo alto
Lovely!
Preciosa obra.
Luca Pianca
素敵です
Who is playing that piece here?
I guess you are very perceptive. I bow deeply to you sir!
Thank you for clearing my confusion friend.
Love Bach
Muito bom.
this is nice piece :^)
I cried on the last part of the intro. Fucking hell.
Прекрасная музыка!!!
und ein schoenes auf wiederschreiben... hertzlichen dank tavarich
Thank you, todd wood - I didn't know that but I know the wonderful music of Weiss! :-)
Oof this music sure makes me soft
Don't get a cheap one, that's what I recommend--you'll be so thankful in the end. But, if you must, go for one of those cheapies on ebay. If you want to play this kind of music, you'll be looking for a Baroque lute; you'll probably want one with 13 courses. (Courses are used to refer to the strings, which are usually doubled or paired in octaves like a 12-string guitar.) Cheers.
I dont know what it is but it seems like all his best work is in the bwv 1000-1050 range
Bach sure got a lot of mileage out of the Prelude of this Suite by using it in so many different ways. Who is the lutenist? BRIAN
Any sheets or where can i buy the book with this music piece?
Anyone know the course of the lute? Or is it a theorbo?
@alexramone1234 ahh... no wonder! Thank you so much for the response. I thought the playing was exceptional. BRIAN
This suite is, of course, nearly identical to the 6th Solo Violin Sonata. I wonder for which instrument was it first written - lute or violin? I know Bach played the violin but did he also play the lute? It is beautiful music whatever instrument it is played on! Thank you for posting!
maybe for organ?
First was for violin, I learned.
I love the Caravaggio painting.
it's not Caravaggio, it's Theodoor Rombouts' - "The Lute Player"
I will remain silent in deference to the genius of the master Herr Bach. This is a Baroque Lute, of course, NRYourng. Please listen and learn.
ha...true that!
bach was only 20 at the time so it wasnt his music the other kid (geyersbach) was playing, and he was admonished by his schoolmasters, rather than arrested. unless theres some whole other similar circumstance im unaware of.
can you share me the mp3 file ? thank a lot !!!
But lutes do vary in size and as they do, they have different pitches. I was simply unclear about the pitch of the lute was E (making it a bass lute) or the actual Suite was in E.
Who's the lutenist?
y la imagen de quien es?
Where are these songs written for lute originally?
Is the Suite in E or the Lute?
Pardon for the late response, the E refers to the score and not to the lute's tuning.
Also Symphonia to Cantata 29
You're welcome, man. Enjoy the beautiful music you're gonna play! :)
All love!
(PS & incidentally, strange picture here...)
whats the picture called on 0.56
i mean 0:56
ANONYMOUS, according to THEODOR ROMBOUTS, Flanders 2nd quarter 17th century, "man grants his lute"
i work at a place named caravaggio in Brazil,
Who's playing ?
I want to know that too!
This is AWESOME!
Luca Piance, that's in the description.
Jazz music a lot of hundred years befote. Ja.
Who is playing that piece?????
tamara dmytriieva I think Marco Gorelli shows it being performed by Luca Pianca
What is the name of that instrument????? Is soo hard core haha, I'm serious what is the name xp
Theorbo.
Uhh, if you look at the title it clearly says it's for the kazoo.
***** Is played on theorbo, not on lute.
Adagio ad lib. Which is a type of lute....
***** The theorbo is very different from the lute.
who's the player?
metallica...
now thats a jar
I think that he doesn't understand sarcasm. It is however ironic that you don't understand the difference :-) Live long and prosper.
This sounds like it has been pitched down a few steps below E. Excellent performance though!
Tuned in A 420bpm, baroque style.
Some of this sounds more like Vivaldi than Bach.
I don't think lutes are transcribing instruments.
i guess you're joking :) but some people can't understand irony
L' è anca braf ma m' al pias no.
Whatever but I never heard of this dude before. Been around since 1750 making recordings and still none of my bro's know him. So what does that tell you sir?
Is it a Lute? It's like a guitar
Whoever played this added some random, weird notes in fifth measure in Gavotte en rondeau and messed up the tempo and rhythm.
The world awaits your superior performance.
He (Luca Pianca) simply repeats the E note. I think it sounds great!
DrDLL99 99% of us do not have access to the written score, so How would we know id it was "messed up" as you say. It's still a great performance as far as I'm concerned. I enjoyed it.. P.S. Nobody's perfect.
You have got to be kidding me. Johann Sebastian Bach, the man who composed this piece, died in 1750. The education system has failed you my friend!
Is it just me or was classical music so much more complex and intelligent than our garbage music now....have we actually become dumber?