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Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No.5, third movement - EduqasMusical description

J.S. Bach came from a family of successful musicians and was one of the most prominent composers of the Baroque period, writing six concertos for the noblemen of Brandenburg. Bach took on the work in the hope for employment, but the concertos took a lot longer than expected.

Part of MusicMusical forms and devices

Musical description

The third and final movement of Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No.5 is a fast and lively dance. The tempo is marked as , or quick. It was common for composers to use the same features throughout their work to keep in fashion with the dances. Five of the six Brandenburg Concertos were written with the same order of .

A Baroque court ballroom.
Image caption,
Each movement of a composition would be written for a particular court dance

The overall structure of the third movement consists of three main sections, known as :

  • A - bars 1 to 78 - exposition
  • B - bars 79 to 232
  • A - bars 233 to 310

Concerto grosso

Brandenburg Concerto No.5 in D Major, third movement, is a . This means that the work uses a group of solo instruments - the concertino - rather than a single soloist. Overall there are three main groups of instruments - the , the and the .

In this work the soloists are flauto (flute) and violino (violin) and sometimes the cembalo (harpsichord). The ripieno is a string ensemble, violino (violin), viola, violoncello (cello) and contrabasso (double bass). The continuo part is played on the cembalo (harpsichord).

Form and structure

The third movement has a simple 2/4 time signature. However, J.S. Bach creates a feel by writing continuous triplet quavers. In bar 110 the harpsichord plays triplet quavers, which are three quavers played in the space of two quavers. The triplet quavers are groups of three notes, creating a sense of 123, 456 rhythm against the written 2/4 time signature.

The third movement employs a structure and texture. In a fugue a melody starts the piece (the subject), which is then repeated at different and imitated by different instruments throughout the work. This creates a complex texture of independent moving parts known as .The opening is presented like this.

  • The violin plays the in bars 1 and 2, and then the .
  • The flute begins in bar 3, playing the subject five notes higher, and then the countersubject.
  • The harpsichord plays the subject in bar 9.

Dynamics

Composers in the Baroque period generally did not write into the score, leaving the louds and softs to the performer. The term terraced dynamics means that there are no crescendos or diminuendos, just loud or quiet playing.