In this post, I’m digging deeper into Bach’s The Art of Fugue with Contrapunctus VIII. It’s way more complex and intense than Contrapunctus I. I used Ableton Live to line up a MIDI file of the piece with Angela Hewitt’s recording, and then color-coded and annotated it to show the structure, the harmony, the subjects and so on.
Angela Hewitt says that she had to overcome some reluctance before learning The Art of Fugue.
I had heard extracts over the years, performed by various soloists and ensembles, but the work itself never seemed to grab me in the same way as the rest of Bach’s music does, on first hearing. Could it be that, at the end of his life, Bach had finally written something boring? It was hard to believe. I was determined to apply everything I had learned about Bach to see how I could make the work come alive.
It’s true that this music doesn’t grab you on first listen the way Bach’s catchier material does. Like, for example, the E major violin partita jumps right out at you. My kids were walking around singing it for months after I started practicing it. The Art of Fugue is not like that. But it pays back your effort and then some.