Janine Jansens fall 2013 release is once again dedicated to Johann Sebastian Bach. Once again Janine Jansen was allowed to join the master interviewer Matthijs van Nieuwkerk ('Bach! Suddenly he is there again ... The giant in music ... That is a mountain, you have to climb it once ... Many preceded you ... You are still at the bottom of the mountain .. How do you go, how do you climb ..? How do you
… discover ... How, how do you train Bach ..? You still have to master him ... '). Then Janine Jansen played the Siciliano from the Sonata BWV.1017, with father Jan Jansen on the grand piano (also on the CD, but with harpsichord). Bach's concertante music for violin stems largely from the aristocratic early half of his career. As a court organist in Weimar he made keyboard arrangements of the concerts of Vivaldi. Afterwards, as Kapellmeister at the court in Köthen, he had a choice of soloists to whom he dedicated numerous chamber music and concerts. In Leipzig, he must have remembered it with melancholy when he played those old concerts (converted into keyboard concertos) in the coffee house with himself and his sons on the harpsichord. On the basis of such a harpsichord version the lost Double Concerto BWV.1060 (violin & oboe) could be reconstructed. The bonus CD contains a live recording of the beautiful Trio Sonata BWV.1039. (HJ) On the basis of such a harpsichord version the lost Double Concerto BWV.1060 (violin & oboe) could be reconstructed. The bonus CD contains a live recording of the beautiful Trio Sonata BWV.1039. (HJ) On the basis of such a harpsichord version the lost Double Concerto BWV.1060 (violin & oboe) could be reconstructed. The bonus CD contains a live recording of the beautiful Trio Sonata BWV.1039. (HJ)more