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Goldberg Variations

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The Goldberg Variations, BWV[?] 988, is a piece of music by Johann Sebastian Bach, originally written for the harpsichord but nowadays frequently performed on the piano. It was probably written around 1741 for Johann Gottlieb Goldberg[?], the harpsichordist to Count Keyserlingk[?]. A popular story regarding the piece is that Count Keyserlingk suffered from insomnia, and Goldberg would often play one or two of Bach's variations to lull him to sleep.

The aria on which the variations are based may or may not be by Bach himself. After a statement of it at the beginning of the piece, there are thirty variations. Because each one follows the same harmonic structure as the aria itself, and because of the 3/4 time signature, the work is often said to be a chaconne. Every third variation is a canon, the first is a canon at the unison, the second is a canon at the second (that is, the second entry begins the interval of a second above the first), the next is a canon at the third and so on until variation 27 which is a canon at the ninth. The intervening variations are of various structures and character.

A complete performance of the work will usually take between thirty five and fifty minutes, depending on tempos and how many repeats are observed.

The Goldberg Variations have been the subject of many articles, books and analytical studies. Once seen as a dry and rather boring technical exercise, the emotional content and range of the work is now increasingly realised. Below is a list of the variations with brief descriptions and some comments by writers and performers. It should be noted that the piece has been played in a wide variety of ways, and there are a range of views on the work, not all of them represented here. This list also contains Bach's indications of whether the performer should use one manual (keyboard) of the harpsichord, two, or either.

Recordings


The Goldberg Variations is also the name of a novel by the Canadian author Nancy Huston.

wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump