The real miracle to me is how someone can take such simple melodies and combine them into something out of this world. While at the same time speaking to your inner soul at a fundamental level. The 3-voice Sinfonia 9 following this piece is one of the best that Bach wrote, it's beyond description.
Great video, quite a beautiful piece. A relative bought me the sheet music of Bach's 2 part inventions for Christmas. An excellent gift because, while I love Bach, I had not heard any of the 2 part inventions before so they were a perfect way of improving my sight reading. Before I let myself watch this video I had a go at playing the hands seperately. No chance in hell I'm sight reading them together yet!
What a great analysis! Bach’s music, even the 2-part Inventions, is incredibly beautiful, and yet so complex! Thank you, Samuel, for sharing your knowledge with us!
I don't care if the piano is tuned correctly or if the invention is played on harpsichord or not. The essence here is the depth of the analysis. He doesn't mention only what Bach did (that's something that an AI can also do pretty well) but he investigates the reasons behind each compositional choice. Well done!
Thanks for the detailed analysis; more detail to dig into and understand than other videos on the piece. Took a minute to find it in the TH-cam search after watching the first time. Subscribed. Thanks again. 👍
@@bela6604 Try some Jean-Philippe Rameau (Dover has a complete edition). I find that most of it fits under the hands well and is easily approachable. In addition, there are a few more technical pieces and a lot of interesting ideas.
@@simballine Rameau is far from an average or lesser-known composer. His Traité de de l’harmonie had a decisive and lasting influence, and his Pièces de clavecin are widely-performed.
@@bela6604 You mean some more "normal" music in 18th century style? Try Fischer's "Musikalischer Parnassus". Handel is of course very skilled as a composer, but his keyboard works tend to be more harmonically transparent than Bach's.
Speaking about baroque, 2 voices compositions, have you heard W.F. Bach’s 6 duets for 2 flutes? A very unusual collection, I recommend especially the lamentabile from the n4 in F major and the vivace from the n1 in e minor. They really sound from another planet!
What is it called when baroque composers take a musical idea/motif and crawl up or down the scale with it? It repeats, but it climbs up or down the key. It's so beautiful, and I wonder what that is called.
Terrific video, Samuel‼ Your channel is a great contribution to music education! Thank you for your explanation of this remarkable piece! Your analysis of the grouping structures of the measures was very enlightening! I was hoping to hear also your take on the remarkable consecutive fifths of bar 25... maybe for your next video! 😄
I'm new to your channel and will be visiting frequently! Thank you for the inspiration. I wish you had been my professor in university. Music theory/composition comes to life when it is explained with clarity and enthusiasm. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and talents. I will be sure to tell my other musician friends about your channel. 🎵🎶🎵🎶p.s. I learned of you while watching a Jordan Peterson video.
Sorry if you mentioned this though I couldn’t watch the full presentation. The most interesting feature of this piece to me is the obbligato interpretation of the trill on the raised 7th (written as 16th notes). I’m not sure if I’ve ever seen the same thing elsewhere in the Bach ouevre. In addition another trill is written as an actual trill in the same piece.
Interesting. Would love to get your analysis of Bachs solo violin partitas. Incredible feat to keep things interesting with a steady flurry of constant sixteenth notes.
When I was a composition student I always shocked my professors by admitting that I understood that Bach was a musicologist's wet dream, that his stuff was incredibly complicated, but I just felt nothing from it.
@@samuel_andreyev You may very well be right, and I'm certainly not saying that his work isn't genius. It is. I'm just saying that it doesn't speak to me. For example, when I was in college studying viola my professor would hand me Telemann when I wanted to play Carter and Hindemith. Just some music spoke to me and others didn't.
Hi Samuel, is there any reason you like/chose this invention in particular as opposed to any other one? (8, 13, 14 are my favorites). Does this one do something special, or better, or is it just a personal favorite?
A-flat major is the relative-major of F-minor. If you listen to the A-flat note by itself, it is a very lonely, distant sound. It actually seems like it’s further away than other notes. Really, to MY ear it’s sounds like the most distant any other note; Like a Twinkling star. // La Campanella (The Bell), by Paganini takes advantage of this note in its repetitions during that piece, as made famous in Liszt’s transcription of it for piano. But, what I’m getting at is that openness of F-major (Green;The Pastoral), and, therefore F in the minor is also an active, flowing and open key to play in; The F-MINOR performance still embodies some of that lonely or estranged quality to it. (Because of the embedded Blue of the relative Ab key). I feel like the Bach invention if F-minor here is sort of like the lost sheep in the meadow, trying to find its way home. The "bell" of the minor-third (A-flat/blue) is sort of like the sound that's calling the lost sheep home. I'm convinced that F-minor a key that express a lost kind of loneliness. Thank you, Mr. Addreyev for covering this quite moody piece.
When played for the purpose of illustrating the bones of the piece to an amateur/layman audience, I think he took the right approach. This is not a performance.
Whenever I write counterpoint I run into a problem of analyzing it after I write it I’ll listen to it, and it’ll be fire 🔥 But I’ll analyze the chords made, and it’s as if everything just keeps going from tonic notes to subdominant notes in the same bar whenever a melody note changes Basically, my own diatonic voice leading pisses me off, I want to use chromaticism in a romantic way but keep the voices more independent How do I transcend diatonic counterpoint
You demonstrate Bach’s genius in composition but what makes this music so moving for you, do artistically great? What if you had to explain that without doing an analysis?
Sam, you need to tune the unisons on your piano. Yikes ! It shouldn't take you more than 15-20 minutes and it's dead easy if one of the three strings is properly tuned.
@@samuel_andreyev really? 😳That surprises me. Well, then I'm better off in Flanders, 70 euro. But quite a time ago.But maybe better to buy a harpsichord then and tune it yourself. 😊
@kamikami Reading nonsense like yours is endless suffering. Bach encouraged playing music on many different instruments and experimenting with instrumentation. He would have loved the modern piano. Bach's music is abstract and works on all instruments.
I think this piece would sound best on clavichord and played a little more seamlessly. It's true Bach's music can be easily adapted and he did so himself many times. But it's also true that the character of the instrument influences the composer.
Kamikaki,I’m sorry you feel like that! I’m lucky that I love playing and hearing Bach works on the piano! I’ve played some of the Inventions and the Italian Concerto on harpsichord, which was fun, but the piano gives more depth of colour and nuance!
I don't like being negative, but you banged/slammed every key in your performance.... ?!? No rythmic impetus.... Sorry... Uneven (16th) notes in the examples 6 mins. And you spoke for five minutes before playing a note... ? Good luck with your project.
Yves, I have analysed many of of Bach’s clavier inventions and fugues, and I find Samuel’s analysis to be clear and well-presented, helping listeners understand and better appreciate the complexity of Bach’s music. We should be grateful that scholars like Samuel take time to share their wisdom! Thank you, Samuel!
Whenever I listen to Bach, even without know any of the analysis, I feel like I'm getting smarter. Just following the patterns seems to sharpen my brain...
Babe wake up, Samuel Andreyev posted an analysis
Lol... Facts though.
The real miracle to me is how someone can take such simple melodies and combine them into something out of this world. While at the same time speaking to your inner soul at a fundamental level. The 3-voice Sinfonia 9 following this piece is one of the best that Bach wrote, it's beyond description.
You illustrate why I can enjoy Bach without any ability whatsoever to understand his genius. I'm just not wired for it. Thanks for the exposition.
Great video, quite a beautiful piece.
A relative bought me the sheet music of Bach's 2 part inventions for Christmas. An excellent gift because, while I love Bach, I had not heard any of the 2 part inventions before so they were a perfect way of improving my sight reading.
Before I let myself watch this video I had a go at playing the hands seperately. No chance in hell I'm sight reading them together yet!
What a great analysis! Bach’s music, even the 2-part Inventions, is incredibly beautiful, and yet so complex!
Thank you, Samuel, for sharing your knowledge with us!
my pleasure, thanks for watching!
I don't care if the piano is tuned correctly or if the invention is played on harpsichord or not. The essence here is the depth of the analysis. He doesn't mention only what Bach did (that's something that an AI can also do pretty well) but he investigates the reasons behind each compositional choice. Well done!
Thanks for the detailed analysis; more detail to dig into and understand than other videos on the piece. Took a minute to find it in the TH-cam search after watching the first time. Subscribed. Thanks again. 👍
Thanks for watching!
Greatly appreciate how thorough your analysis was. I'd been meaning to get into Bach and study his works more, and this was a great introduction.
Glad to hear it!
Sight reading “average” lesser-known baroque composers really puts in perspective how great Bach is. His mastery in counterpoint is second to none.
do you have suggestions for the latter? im trying to improve my sight reading and it wouldn't hurt getting to know some baroque🙏
@@bela6604 Try some Jean-Philippe Rameau (Dover has a complete edition). I find that most of it fits under the hands well and is easily approachable. In addition, there are a few more technical pieces and a lot of interesting ideas.
@@simballine Rameau is far from an average or lesser-known composer. His Traité de de l’harmonie had a decisive and lasting influence, and his Pièces de clavecin are widely-performed.
@@bela6604 You mean some more "normal" music in 18th century style? Try Fischer's "Musikalischer Parnassus". Handel is of course very skilled as a composer, but his keyboard works tend to be more harmonically transparent than Bach's.
@@bela6604 Joseph-Hector Fiocco also comes to mind.
Thanks for the upload, I admire what you do very much, so keep up the great work
Great analysis, thank You very much, looking forward to more of this. Way to go, only 6 more Invention, maybe next year.
Speaking about baroque, 2 voices compositions, have you heard W.F. Bach’s 6 duets for 2 flutes? A very unusual collection, I recommend especially the lamentabile from the n4 in F major and the vivace from the n1 in e minor. They really sound from another planet!
Oh those are brilliant, you can feel JS would be proud of him
What is it called when baroque composers take a musical idea/motif and crawl up or down the scale with it? It repeats, but it climbs up or down the key. It's so beautiful, and I wonder what that is called.
a harmonic sequence!
@@samuel_andreyev Thank you. I notice baroque does that a lot!
Fortspinnung
Terrific video, Samuel‼ Your channel is a great contribution to music education! Thank you for your explanation of this remarkable piece! Your analysis of the grouping structures of the measures was very enlightening! I was hoping to hear also your take on the remarkable consecutive fifths of bar 25... maybe for your next video! 😄
Thank you!!! So glad you enjoyed it. I must admit I didn't notice the consecutive fifths.. good ear ;)
@@samuel_andreyev Good eyesight, rather, hehe... They are quite well hidden!
Analyze the Three Part Invention in Fm. It is Bach's genius distilled.
Big fan of these analyses great work :)
Great analysis! Thank you so much for the great videos you post, have you ever considered making a video on Helmut Eder? Maybe his Drei Satze
Thanks Samuel!
Very enjoyable and well explained.
Thank you! I have been practicing the inventions recently and this video matched my needs exactly 😊
So grateful for your Bach videos. He held the most delicate things in the firmest grasp.
A really great presenttation! Thank you for this video on the mastership of Bach!
Amazing, thank you very much Samuel!
All the best!
I'm new to your channel and will be visiting frequently! Thank you for the inspiration. I wish you had been my professor in university. Music theory/composition comes to life when it is explained with clarity and enthusiasm. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and talents. I will be sure to tell my other musician friends about your channel. 🎵🎶🎵🎶p.s. I learned of you while watching a Jordan Peterson video.
In case no one's said it yet, amazing thumbnail
Wonderful analysis as always. Looking forward to the Beethoven quartets, if you decide to do them!
Sorry if you mentioned this though I couldn’t watch the full presentation. The most interesting feature of this piece to me is the obbligato interpretation of the trill on the raised 7th (written as 16th notes). I’m not sure if I’ve ever seen the same thing elsewhere in the Bach ouevre. In addition another trill is written as an actual trill in the same piece.
Interesting. Would love to get your analysis of Bachs solo violin partitas. Incredible feat to keep things interesting with a steady flurry of constant sixteenth notes.
Thank you!
Wonderful, thank you
Have you done the A minor 13 invention ? It will be helpful if not.
When I was a composition student I always shocked my professors by admitting that I understood that Bach was a musicologist's wet dream, that his stuff was incredibly complicated, but I just felt nothing from it.
Maybe you never heard a truly first rate performance..?
@@samuel_andreyev You may very well be right, and I'm certainly not saying that his work isn't genius. It is. I'm just saying that it doesn't speak to me.
For example, when I was in college studying viola my professor would hand me Telemann when I wanted to play Carter and Hindemith. Just some music spoke to me and others didn't.
I'm certainly not going to assume anything about your psychology based purely on that anecdote...
@@samuel_andreyev I find a lot of Bach even sounds good on midi, so I guess its just affinity
🤮 now you're going too far
Hi Samuel, is there any reason you like/chose this invention in particular as opposed to any other one? (8, 13, 14 are my favorites). Does this one do something special, or better, or is it just a personal favorite?
Also, congratulations on 50k.
A-flat major is the relative-major of F-minor. If you listen to the A-flat note by itself, it is a very lonely, distant sound. It actually seems like it’s further away than other notes. Really, to MY ear it’s sounds like the most distant any other note; Like a Twinkling star. // La Campanella (The Bell), by Paganini takes advantage of this note in its repetitions during that piece, as made famous in Liszt’s transcription of it for piano.
But, what I’m getting at is that openness of F-major (Green;The Pastoral), and, therefore F in the minor is also an active, flowing and open key to play in; The F-MINOR performance still embodies some of that lonely or estranged quality to it. (Because of the embedded Blue of the relative Ab key). I feel like the Bach invention if F-minor here is sort of like the lost sheep in the meadow, trying to find its way home. The "bell" of the minor-third (A-flat/blue) is sort of like the sound that's calling the lost sheep home. I'm convinced that F-minor a key that express a lost kind of loneliness.
Thank you, Mr. Addreyev for covering this quite moody piece.
Everything in counterpoint revolves around the third, that nifty 'passe partout'.
Excellent!!
Thanks
Merci.
The performance could really use some more dynamics if I'm being honest. You really hammered the hell out of it.
When played for the purpose of illustrating the bones of the piece to an amateur/layman audience, I think he took the right approach. This is not a performance.
"Blink if Bach is holding you hostage"
did you watch Tár?
Not yet, wife wants to go see it though
Did you ever consider how we year a series of tones as a 'voice'?
It's not just a series of tones, it's also a phrase, a rhythm, an articulation, a register.
Whenever I write counterpoint I run into a problem of analyzing it after I write it
I’ll listen to it, and it’ll be fire 🔥
But I’ll analyze the chords made, and it’s as if everything just keeps going from tonic notes to subdominant notes in the same bar whenever a melody note changes
Basically, my own diatonic voice leading pisses me off, I want to use chromaticism in a romantic way but keep the voices more independent
How do I transcend diatonic counterpoint
Maybe have a look at Hindemith's book, The Craft of Musical Composition. Good luck.
excelent ¡¡
You demonstrate Bach’s genius in composition but what makes this music so moving for you, do artistically great? What if you had to explain that without doing an analysis?
try explaining the sensation of looking up at the night sky -- same problem
@@samuel_andreyev Could try to bring in aesthetic concepts in your vids. You don’t hear about them much , with Bach.
So, everyone obviously likes this. Where are compositions like this from greatest stars like Madonna, Bieber, Rappers? I'd buy the music tomorrow.
"...one does not dissect gossamer..." 🙀
Soli Deo Gloria
I love your accurate pronunciation of "Bach"! But, it's a pity "Johann Sebastian" didn't make the German cut!
people who mark words are annoying 🤣
Nice video overall but the word "invention" is misspelled.
The listener who is moved needs no explanation.
The composer needs
Why don't you write us an invention yourself. Looking forward to it.
Ok ✅
Please blink less, it's incredibly distracting, otherwise, great video
He plays like he's drunk.
Played very correctly. That's it! Now make it poignant.
Sam, you need to tune the unisons on your piano. Yikes ! It shouldn't take you more than 15-20 minutes and it's dead easy if one of the three strings is properly tuned.
I know. Help me afford a piano tuner! www.patreon.com/samuelandreyev
@@samuel_andreyev they've gotten expensive, haven't they? ☹️
quite, in Strasbourg anyway.. like 200€ or more!
@@samuel_andreyev really? 😳That surprises me. Well, then I'm better off in Flanders, 70 euro. But quite a time ago.But maybe better to buy a harpsichord then and tune it yourself. 😊
yes, or a clavichord!
Bach on piano… My ears are bleeding, suffering is endless and whole day ruined
Contribute to my harpsichord fund! www.patreon.com/samuelandreyev
@@samuel_andreyev Smooth
@kamikami Reading nonsense like yours is endless suffering. Bach encouraged playing music on many different instruments and experimenting with instrumentation. He would have loved the modern piano. Bach's music is abstract and works on all instruments.
I think this piece would sound best on clavichord and played a little more seamlessly.
It's true Bach's music can be easily adapted and he did so himself many times. But it's also true that the character of the instrument influences the composer.
Kamikaki,I’m sorry you feel like that!
I’m lucky that I love playing and hearing Bach works on the piano! I’ve played some of the Inventions and the Italian Concerto on harpsichord, which was fun, but the piano gives more depth of colour and nuance!
I don't like being negative, but you banged/slammed every key in your performance.... ?!? No rythmic impetus.... Sorry... Uneven (16th) notes in the examples 6 mins. And you spoke for five minutes before playing a note... ? Good luck with your project.
If you feel like you can do it better, I encourage you to make your own video!
Yves, I have analysed many of of Bach’s clavier inventions and fugues, and I find Samuel’s analysis to be clear and well-presented, helping listeners understand and better appreciate the complexity of Bach’s music. We should be grateful that scholars like Samuel take time to share their wisdom!
Thank you, Samuel!
Ok. Not the point of video
Whenever I listen to Bach, even without know any of the analysis, I feel like I'm getting smarter. Just following the patterns seems to sharpen my brain...
Same. It's ennobling.
Music is dead.