Nobody knows when... But he did it in Lüneburg for shure.
His most famous composition is canon in D. His other famous works include Chaconne in f minor and Toccata in e minor. He is a prominent composer in middle Baroque era because he developed the chorale prelude and fugue.
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If you are referring to the Prelude and Fugue no 1 in C major that opens The Well Tempered Clavier I it is in C Major.
Bach played the organ, violin, and harpsichord. Two of his pieces are St. Matthew Passion and Toccata and Fugue in D Minor.
A fugue is a musical form. An opus is a musical composition. Therefore a fugue is not an opus, nor is an opus a fugue. A composer may compose a fugue and give it an opus number. In that case, a specific fugue is identified by a specific opus number in its composer's catalogue: 'Fugue in G minor for organ, opus 99, by Franz Schnitzelgruber.'
Johann Sebastian Bach composed the piece Prelude and Fugue, for keyboard No. 6 in D minor (BWV 875), which was published as part of the Well-Tempered Clavier (Book 2) in 1740.
prelude and Fugue in C Minor from The Well-Tempered Clavier Book II
It generally includes a toccata, kind of like a prelude, and a fugue, where four voices in this case literally compete against each other since counterpoint means "notes against notes".
No, it's a fugue.
It's called "They" by Jem
The chorus part of the song (where the lyrics go: I'm sorry...etc) is based on J.S bach's 'Prelude and Fugue in F minor '(Book 2, No 12 BWV881). It is actually the main subject of the Prelude.
Is the oorgan polyphonic in toccata and fugue d minor