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within far more rigorous structures,
which allow for very rich listening
experiences. The basic structure of
a fugue requires a melody known
as the “subject” to be presented by
the first voice in the home key. The
next voice then presents the same
melody but starting on the fifth
note of the scale being used, and
this is known as the “answer.”
When replying to this, the original
voice plays a “counter-subject,”
which may be very contrasting.
The third voice then enters with
the “subject” again, starting on the
same note in a different octave,
while the second voice now
performs the counter-subject and
the first voice will usually play free
material derived from the subject.
This continues in the same way
until all the voices have entered,
creating an exposition that
moves rapidly from simplicity to
complexity, while using limited
musical material.
The fugue will then progress
by adding mood-changing
“episodes,” again often derived
from the opening material. The
middle section, in turn, presents
the subject in different keys and
formats until the work returns to
the opening key. However, further
variants heighten this journey, such
as the “stretto,” where subjects and
answers enter before the previous
ones have been resolved.
Teaching tools
In writing the 48 fugues of The
Well-Tempered Clavier, Bach offered
a compendium of techniques to be
studied by both keyboard players
and composers. These were
designed as teaching tools, and
although they are often performed
in concert halls, they are not as
powerful as his organ fugues or
those found in his sacred music.
However, they had a considerable
influence on later composers, who
dubbed them the “Old Testament”
of music (the Beethoven sonatas
were the New Testament) and paid
tribute to them; Shostakovich, for
instance, composed 24 Preludes
and Fugues. Even now, pianists
study Bach’s The Well-Tempered
Clavier as part of their training.
Bach’s fascination with
counterpoint did not merely focus
on the fugue. His suites of dance
movements rely on an understanding
of counterpoint for their inner
energy; even when the music is for
solo violin or cello, it often hints at
what the other voices would play
if there were more instruments by
injecting notes and phrases in
different registers.
Bach was similarly attracted
to canons, where one voice follows
the exact melodic contour of the
other but slightly later (the round,
“London’s Burning” is an example
of this). His use of this technique is
Ceaseless work, analysis,
reflection, writing much,
endless self-correction,
that is my secret.
Johann Sebastian Bach
BAROQUE COUNTERPOINT
In a fugue, a word derived from the
Latin for “flight,” each of three or more
voices enter one after the other, imitating
and modifying the initial theme. The
structure illustrated here has many
other possible variants.
Structure: The fugue
Soprano
Alto
Bass
EXPOSITION EPISODE MIDDLE SECTION EPISODE FINAL SECTION CODA
S CS FP
A CS CS
FP
S FP FP FP S CS
S FP FP FP
FP FP FP A
FP CS FP FP
FP FP S FP FP
FP FP FP S TP
A
Key
S = Subject—The principal theme of the fugue.
A = Answer—The subject, repeated a fifth (5 notes) higher.
CS = Counter-Subject—A contrasting secondary theme.
FP = Free Part—Material based on the first theme.
TP = Tonic Pedal—Sustained final bass note.
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