Concerto for Two Violins in D minor
by Johann Sebastian Bach
*FREE VIOLA SHEET MUSIC Concerto for 2 Violins - 1st Movement |
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Viola Melody 1 | Viola Melody 2 | Harmony | Full Score |
*FREE VIOLA SHEET MUSIC Concerto for 2 Violins - 2nd Movement |
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Viola Melody 1 | Viola Melody 2 | Harmony | Full Score |
*FREE VIOLA SHEET MUSIC Concerto for 2 Violins - 3rd Movement |
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Viola Melody 1 | Viola Melody 2 | Harmony | Full Score |
Scored in three-part harmony, and available with interchangeable violin, cello and bass parts.
**VIOLA SOUND FILES Concerto for 2 Violins - 1st Movement |
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Melody 1 | Melody 2 | Full Score |
**VIOLA SOUND FILES Concerto for 2 Violins - 2nd Movement |
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Melody 1 | Melody 2 | Full Score |
**VIOLA SOUND FILES Concerto for 2 Violins - 3rd Movement |
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Melody 1 | Melody 2 | Full Score |
Concerto for Two Violins in D minor, BWV 1043, is often called the Bach Double and was composed by Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750). The precise date when this concerto was composed is unknown. Although it was originally thought that Bach composed this piece during the time when he was director of music for Prince Leopold of Anhalt at Cöthen (between 1717 and 1723), recent scholarship seems to indicate that Bach composed this concerto during his Leipzig period. Manuscript parts for Bach’s D minor concerto for two violins date approximately 1730-31, [1] a time when Bach was not only the civic director of music for Leipzig (one of the most prestigious musical positions in Germany at the time), but he had also assumed leadership of Leipzig 's collegium musicum, a voluntary organization founded by Telemann in 1702. Members of Leipzig’s collegium musicum included university students and professional musicians, and they contributed to Leipzig’s musical culture with weekly concerts.[2]
Bach’s D minor concerto is scored for two solo violins, continuo and strings, and follows the typical Baroque concerto pattern of three movements (fast-slow-fast). This particular arrangement has been simplified, and has been arranged for three instruments. Bach’s interplay between the soloists is exquisite as the melodies interweave each other in a continual stream of contrapuntal melodies.
To learn more about Bach, visit our String Class.
[2] Wolf, Christoph and Jones, Richard. "Johann Sebastian Bach," The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Ed. Stanley Sadie. London : Macmillian, 1980. 1:785-840.
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