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The WTF Bach Podcast

Evan Shinnerswtfbach.substack.com
Experience the music of Bach as you never have before. For music lovers, to professional musicians, let WTF Bach guide your mind through a contrapuntal journey.

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Episodes

(4 Min. Rant) Literally Can't Thank You Enough in Advance

PG-13 Warning . This isn’t the norm—just testing the cult of Shinners. Future episodes stay true to our Bach tradition. Enjoyed this? Do you want some more of my originals mixed in with your weekly Bach? Literally Can't Thank You Enough in Advance I try to “bear the burden of bitterness which experience forces on us with as much uncomplaining dignity as strength will allow” as restaurants around me tell me to eat beautiful , as any person who pockets their phone to listen is crowned empathetic ,...

Jul 11, 20254 min

100th Episode! Special Guest: Ton Koopman

A few months back I had the pleasure of interviewing Ton Koopman. If you’re at home in the Baroque, you’re no stranger to his work. Please enjoy this interview, marking the 100th episode of The WTF Bach Podcast! Thanks for your support, thanks to all those who make this work possible. Here’s looking forward to 100 more! Topics Covered (Chronologically) Works of doubtful authenticity (Violin Sonata, BWV 1025)Continuo playing (Figured bass, Improvisation, Ornamentation)Legato in the BaroqueWanda L...

Jun 27, 20251 hr 4 min

Ep. 99: NEW ALBUM - Partitas 1-3

Listen to the new album here : https://modernclassicalx.lnk.to/BachCompleteKeyboardWorksVol4PartitasPtOne Today I’ve released Volume 4 in my “Complete Keyboard Works” of JSB. This album contains three pieces by the master: Partita no. 1 in B-flat Major, BWV 825 Partita no. 2 in c minor, BWV 826 Partita no. 3 in a minor, BWV 827 Bach’s Opus One —the six Partitas of Clavier-Übung I —were first issued individually from 1726, with the complete set published in 1731. Bach pays homage to his Leipzig p...

Jun 13, 202547 min

Borges, Bach, Barthelme.

Would you object to the comparison of Messiaen and Borges? I see both 20th century giants deeply steeped in the masters of the past, throughly conversant in the antique, and yet they bring something uniquely modern— magical. Borges’ stories have the ability to stun, to make one wonder, or in the case of the story I read today, elicit tears. After Shakespeare’s Memory , (1983) which I believe is his last published story, I offer my somewhat chaotic rendition of the Canonic Variations on Vom Himme...

May 30, 202550 min

Bach as A Minor in a minor.

Yep. I based an entire episode on the pun. We study two works not usually heard in the organ repertoire, the Prelude (Fantasy) BWV 569 and the Prelude with Fugue BWV 551, both in a minor. These are not the best known pieces in the repertoire, but they command our attention—especially when you consider that one of them was written when Bach was just 14 years old. BWV 569 , composed around 1708 when Bach was 23, is a single-rhythm experiment in modulation—akin to his Fantasy , BWV 922. On the page...

May 21, 20251 hr 7 min

Alleluia! Bach's Jubilant Ululation.

The oldest surviving (ca. 1100) German church melody is centered around Easter and the resurrection: Christ ist erstanden . Luther adapted this into Christ lag in Todesbanden . Both texts culminate in a triumphant “Hallelujah!” What kind of music could Bach compose for such a joyous word? In every instance, it demands a distinctly exalted treatment. We discuss the origins of the word Alleluia, and analyze the music when the word appears in his motets, cantatas and a four-part chorale. Plus, the ...

May 01, 20251 hr 3 min

Bach’s St. John Passion: Which Version?

Today, Good Friday 2025, marks 300 years since Bach performed the St. John Passion in Leipzig. … but it started like this: But wait, I thought the St. John Passion was: In this episode, beyond outlining the basic revisions between the 1724 and 1725 (and a few other) versions of BWV 245, we’ll study how people heard passion music, the purpose of a passion setting, and how Bach, by changing the opening and closing movements, or swapping an aria here and there, envisioned he might guide the listene...

Apr 18, 20251 hr 4 min

Baroque Keyboardists Weren’t Specialists—They Played Everything

The organ held a central role in the life of a baroque keyboardist. Not only was an accomplished harpsichordist or clavichordist comfortable playing with their feet, but the art suggests that the repertoire often called for ad libitum pedal additions. In J.S. Bach’s second collection of chorale prelude for organ, he introduces obligato pedal parts. Below is an image from his Bach’s earliest chorale settings for organ, as preserved in the Neumeister Collection : Whereas we do not see any explicit...

Mar 27, 20251 hr 4 min

The 'Actus Tragicus' BWV 106

A beloved cantata from Bach’s early 20s, the Actus Tragicus anticipates the future of opera more than it foreshadows Bach’s own later cantatas. Albert Schweitzer’s beautiful writing on Bach features heavily in this episode. Here is the tuning video with chorale in question toward the end of the episode: WTF Bach is a listener-supported publication. To receive new episodes, to support the work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Let’s have a look at BWV 106. I focus on the two recorders...

Mar 13, 20251 hr

Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis. An Audiobook.

The bard— not the brook, but don’t worry, this podcast isn’t going to become an English lesson. Thanks for reading WTF Bach! This post is public so feel free to share it. Here is my reading of Shakespeare’s first publication, Venus and Adonis , a poem that is pure music. If I were to list my favorite lines, I might as well copy out half the poem. Just something that pops into my head would be a line like, “Rain added to a river that is rankPerforce will force it overflow the bank.” It bursts wit...

Mar 04, 20251 hr 9 min

MiniSeries! 10: The Final Episode

UPDATE: One of my astute listeners pointed out that it is in fact Jones’ review of Butler’s work in Music & Letters, and the original work by Butler is this book . Thanks for the correction! Don’t miss the end of this episode where I play three of Bach’s earlier settings of the same tune, BWVs 700, 701, & 738! We finish our study of this late masterpiece by reading some scholarship on the two different versions Bach made of his canonic variations on Luther’s 1539 melody. Whereas Wolff su...

Feb 18, 202519 min

MiniSeries! 9: Revisions Part Two

Today, as we did in episode 5 of this miniseries, we’ll examine the revisions Bach made from engraving copy to handwritten copy. This is an important view into the composer’s workshop, and unlike clear ameliorations between layers in his other works, the two versions of BWV 769 present a unique challenge in seeking the “best” version. Changes like this (first beat, alto) are minute, yet fascinating: (Top: engraving. Bottom: fair copy.) Bach made three revisions dealing with a similar leap of a f...

Feb 11, 202527 min

MiniSeries! 8: A Bachian Fractal

Show me a finale as densely packed with thematic material as this one. Here are the five bars — the only five bars — discussed in today’s episode. You might listen while looking at them: Notice the finale comes in two stages, first diminution, then stretto. The signature in the final bar is noteworthy (though it should be mentioned that the letters are an addition by the editor.) And here is a video of the Mandelbrot set fractal, as promised (with perfect background music:) We Rely On Listener S...

Feb 05, 202521 min

MiniSeries! 7: Canon at MOVING Intervals

Have a look at this. This is Bach beginning a canon in inversion. The follower is a 6th below the leader: (If you can’t see that the shapes are inversions, hold up a mirror — seriously!) Yet here, only a few bars later, the imitation seems to be at a different interval: The follower is no longer a sixth below, but a third. How rare! And going on, something else: (We’re looking at the lower two voices in this picture, the quarter notes.) We see the canonic imitation has shifted yet again, to the ...

Jan 29, 202517 min

MiniSeries! 6: A Sloth Canon

Imagine composing an ornate melody, then stretching it out so it moves twice as slow, and somehow when you layer the stretched version onto the original, they match up beautifully: One shape, two different speeds. This is what Bach has done in this canon (but he also made sure that the consequence of both lines also blends into the harmonic implications of the chorale melody, which must also past through both lines…) Let’s see what our augmented canon looks like on the page. Here is the opening ...

Jan 21, 202524 min

MiniSeries! 5: Canonic Revisions Part One

The subject of the last several episodes has been Bach’s canonic variations on a Christmas tune by Martin Luther himself. A major inquiry into this work is its existence in two versions: engraved and handwritten. The published version (for reasons explained in the episode) doesn’t fully solve the canonic lines, as seen here: Notice how the notes of the bottom line don’t continue after the fifth note! See two other canons, each with the comes omitted: Variatio 2 omits the follower after only thre...

Jan 03, 202522 min

MiniSeries! 4: Feet & LH, a 7th Apart

Let’s delve into a third variation from Bach’s 1747 masterpiece, “Some canonic variations on the Christmas song, ‘From Heaven Above’ for the organ with two keyboards and pedal, by J.S. Bach.” Two versions of this piece exist: the ‘fair copy’ and the ‘publication’ ( Stichfassung ), which present the variations in a different order. In this episode, we follow the publication, where the canon at the 7th appears as the third variation. The previous two variations featured canons between right and le...

Dec 27, 202419 min

Is Pachelbel's Canon Really a Canon?

I never knew the authentic version of the world’s most famous canon, having only known arrangements which conceal the fact that the music is indeed a canon in three voices. Here is what the ‘real’ canon looks like: It continues for over 50 bars as a three voice canon at the unison. In my brief survey of this piece, I found one theory that suggests the 9-year-old J.S. Bach was in attendance at the first performance in history. While the canonic treatment is clever and not worthy of our loathing— ...

Dec 20, 202417 min

MiniSeries! 3: A Canon At The Fifth

Continuing our mini-series exploring Bach’s canonic variations on the Christmas song, ‘Vom Himmel hoch da komm ich her’ BWV 769, we listen to the second canon: a canon at the perfect fifth. Here is what the initial shape looks like in the right hand: So the same shape must be imitated down the perfect fifth. It appears like this in the left hand: I briefly mention the difference between ‘tonal’ and ‘real’ answers. Although the majority of the imitating line appears a perfect fifth below the lead...

Dec 17, 202416 min

MiniSeries! 2: Divine Row Row Row Your Boat

The first variation in these late variations for organ, is a canon at the octave. The two hands, each on a separate keyboard, play the same shape, one octave apart, while the feet provide the chorale melody. It looks like this: Those are the first three measures of 18 measures. That’s right: the shape is imitated note for note for 18 bars! If you’re having trouble seeing that the two upper lines are in fact the same melody, one octave apart, try this image: We Rely On Listener Support! How to Do...

Dec 07, 202419 min

MiniSeries! 1: Bach's Christmas Puzzles

In this first of several related episodes, we will learn about Bach’s late contrapuntal masterpiece, the Canonic Variations on Vom Himmel hoch da komm' ich her , BWV 769. The variations— although certainly not as familiar— should be considered alongside Bach’s other late achievements, the Goldberg Variations , The Art of Fugue , and A Musical Offering. They employ many similar ideas and highlight the composers uncanny ability to ‘squeeze water from a stone,’ making elaborate pieces with minimal ...

Nov 28, 202421 min

Bach Pulls Out His Dagger.

Since I was a child I’ve known the story of Bach pulling out a blade. What really happened? In this short episode, I read the contemporary reports from the Arnstadt Consistory Court, where this famous fisticuffs was first recorded. About halfway through the episode (14 minutes), I’ve given you some “chill” chorales, played over a drone. One of my listeners mentioned they wanted some Bach for doing yoga/meditation, so this is what I came up with. If you like the way it sounds, I’ll put a full hou...

Nov 18, 202430 min

The Urtext Illusion: Textual Variance in Bach's "Aria Variata" BWV 989

Last week I posted this piece on YouTube : The most intriguing part of studying this piece was the overwhelming amount of differences between the three earliest sources of this work. Here is a list of the sources I reference in the episode , the copyists, and when they were made: The ‘Andreas Bach Book’ (D-LE III.8.4) J. Christoph Bach; copyist, between 1705-1714 P 801 J. Tobias Krebs; copyist, between 1710-1717 P 804 J. Peter Kellner; copyist, before 1725 In the episode I simply refer to these ...

Oct 31, 202454 min

Passion Music for His Son: The F Minor Sinfonia, BWV 795

Yes, that recording at the end is none other than Jascha Heifetz with Primrose and Piatigorksy, who apparently recorded three of the sinfonias. The wonderful pianist with that golden sound playing before the string trio arrangement is ( I think! ) Marcelle Meyer recorded sometime around 1948. WTF Bach needs your support! Consider becoming a subscriber. Today’s episode focuses on the ‘black pearl’ of the inventions and sinfonias. The f minor sinfonia is highly complex piece of passion music embed...

Oct 09, 202434 min

Fantasy & Fugue in C minor BWV 537

Becoming familiar with Bach’s music is a never-ending process. First, there is the initial reading, which alone can occupy many happy years. What’s remarkable is that with each further reading, you’re astonished by the details you missed before—quite honestly amazed. You ask yourself: Where—or even who —was I during those earlier readings? You begin to measure your growth as a musician against the depth with which you can now understand the pieces. One fugue, which I initially read with little i...

Sep 25, 202447 min

Anyone Else Getting Married?

In this episode, we’ll explore Bach’s constant involvement with weddings. Weddings and funerals occupied a weekly place in Bach’s life in Leipzig and we’ll shed light on the various ways in which he was involved musically. [I forgot to credit the last recording in this episode to Rudolph Lutz and the J.S. Bach foundation.] Here are (some of) the beautiful parts which make up the chorales, BWVs 250-252. They are beautiful examples of Bach’s handwriting ca. 1730. Note that all three chorales are o...

Sep 08, 202441 min

The 3rd Keyboard Partita (A Crucial Revision)

A brief(er) episode for you today: Bach’s first published opus was his six partitas for keyboard. In some of the sources within Bach’s circle, copies retained as a ‘Handexemplar’ include revisions by a scribe we can almost say with certainty is Bach himself. The most consequential of these revisions appears at the end of the third partita, where the second half of the Gigue is re-written with what one might call ‘updated’ or ‘refined’ counterpoint. Here we see the main source (G 25) in question:...

Aug 12, 202422 min

Performer's Commentary, Vol. 3

The final performer’s commentary episode for you. This is live commentating (the program notes of the future) on the last of my three simultaneous releases. This album is a bunch of preludes and fugues— some maybe you know, some maybe you don’t. You can stream and individually purchase any track including the performer’s commentary from the third volume below. [More streaming links (including youtube playlists) at the bottom:] How To Support This Podcast: https://www.paypal.me/wtfbach https://ve...

Aug 04, 202453 min

No One Ever Erected a Statue to a Critic (Bach vs. Scheibe)

Johann Adolph Scheibe went down in history for attacking Bach’s “turgid and confused” style. “…from the natural to the artificial, and from the lofty to the obscure ... one wonders at the painful labor of it all, that nevertheless comes to nothing, since it is at variance with reason.” Let’s examine the controversy from the beginning. How To Support This Podcast: https://www.paypal.me/wtfbach https://venmo.com/wtfbach https://cash.app/$wtfbach or become a paid subscriber at wtfbach.substack.com ...

Jul 26, 202436 min

Mi Fa, et Fa Mi est tota musica (BWV 1078)

On March 1, 1749, Bach penned the following into a Stammbuch : Today’s episode covers this canon in depth. What does it mean? How does it sound? Here is a link to the article by scholar, Anatoly Milka. The book, Bach and the meaning of Counterpoint, by David Yearsley is available here . How To Support This Podcast: https://www.paypal.me/wtfbach https://venmo.com/wtfbach https://cash.app/$wtfbach or become a paid subscriber at wtfbach.substack.com The first three albums of the 'Complete Works for...

Jul 07, 202433 min
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