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Bach: Six Sonatas, BWV 1014-1019

Sirkka-Liisa Kaakinen-Pilch (violin), Tuija Hakkila (fortepiano)

Bach: Six Sonatas, BWV 1014-1019
For the most part, I am very taken by Kaakinen-Pilch’s confident and imaginative playing. There’s lovely ornamentation and shaping in the Largo of the Sonata in C minor, and the opening to the...

Bach: Six Sonatas, BWV 1014-1019

Sirkka-Liisa Kaakinen-Pilch (violin), Tuija Hakkila (fortepiano)

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This release includes a digital booklet

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For the most part, I am very taken by Kaakinen-Pilch’s confident and imaginative playing. There’s lovely ornamentation and shaping in the Largo of the Sonata in C minor, and the opening to the...

About

All but the last of Johann Sebastian Bach’s six sonatas for violin and harpsichord (BWV 1014–19) commence with slow movements of intense feeling. This is music of implication and inference, the emotions no less real for their apparent lack of specificity. There is pleasure in the paradox: even without a text, the music sings. The copying and the performance of these sonatas were crucial to the mission of memorialising Bach’s music, but not merely as a matter of historical interest or archival fastidiousness. C. P. E. Bach described these works as among the best works of his 'dear departed father': they still sound very good and give me much joy, although they date back more than fifty years. They contain some Adagios that could not be written in a more singable manner today.' C. P. E. Bach’s well-worn copy of the Sonatas shows that he played them frequently. In this recording, Tuija Hakkila plays a copy of a Gottfried Silbermann 1747 fortepiano by Andrea Restelli. J. S. Bach played one of his fortepianos in 1747 in Potsdam for Frederick the Great and his court musicians. In his last years Bach even seems to have served as a dealer for Silbermann’s fortepianos in Leipzig.

Contents and tracklist

I. Adagio
Track length3:30
II. Allegro
Track length3:12
III. Andante
Track length3:03
IV. Allegro
Track length3:45
I. Andante
Track length2:51
II. Allegro
Track length3:28
III. Andante
Track length2:49
IV. Presto
Track length5:01
I. Adagio
Track length3:42
II. Allegro
Track length3:12
III. Adagio
Track length4:10
IV. Allegro
Track length4:00
I. Largo
Track length3:54
II. Allegro
Track length4:55
III. Adagio
Track length3:28
IV. Allegro
Track length5:14
I. Largo
Track length6:10
II. Allegro
Track length5:23
III. Adagio
Track length3:32
IV. Allegro
Track length2:56
I. Allegro
Track length3:42
II. Largo
Track length1:48
III. Allegro
Track length4:49
IV. Adagio
Track length2:33
V. Allegro
Track length3:35

Awards and reviews

March 2024

For the most part, I am very taken by Kaakinen-Pilch’s confident and imaginative playing. There’s lovely ornamentation and shaping in the Largo of the Sonata in C minor, and the opening to the Allegro finale of the E major is utterly fabulous, exploding in visceral energy.
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