Question: If a piece of music is perfect both on its head and also its feet, which one is the inversion?
In the previous fugue, fugue twelve, we saw Bach took four voices, a turned everything upside down: 1234 became 4321 and what went up came crashing down. Now, fugue 13 is again a 'mirror' fugue... or is it?
This thirteenth fugue is in three voices and uses a technique almost identical to it's sister fugue, number 12, but is still more complicated.
Topics Covered: Which comes first in number 13, the rectus or the inversus?
--
DUE TO PROBLEMS WITH INSTAGRAM (they think Bach's music is 'Branded Content' - yikes. Public domain y'all) I AM MOVING STREAMS TO TWITCH.TV/WTF_BACH PLEASE FOLLOW ME THERE
Find a selected playlist of the music found and discussed in this podcast here: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1Ha250UDFktGqZjpt1hk7L?si=fIqZwtTUQJmzB9SYwskeYA
... have you seen: http://bachchurch.com ???
Support us!
Why not join Evan's Patreon, where he unique Bach-related insights on a weekly basis:
https://www.patreon.com/wtfbach
Write us: