Scanning across a variety of sounds increases color, personality, and emotion. It can not be said that two different instruments playing the same note can produce only one kind of sound. This is why music is very unique and dynamic. Even if you are playing the same instrument, each instrument has its own sound type. This interesting phenomenon can be explained by music elements, that is, tones. Certainly, the melody, rhythm and harmony of music are important, but to distinguish the tone from all these elements is to explore the different sound quality of various kinds of instruments.
Some instruments of the Brandenburg Concerto are unfamiliar to today's audience. In Concerto No. 1, the only brass instrument is two Corno da Caccia. Currently this is not a horn we know today, but unlike hunting horn, it was originally a small and natural valveless horn. This instrument allows Bach to write the same craftsmanship as a trumpet, but the edge of the sound decreases slightly. Flauti D ''s echo of the fourth concerto caused a lot of discussion on what Bach means. Malcom Boyd discussed the possibility of the second concerto Flauti in his book "Bach, The Brandenburg Concertos". This recorder is exactly the same as Flauti D ''s echo, it is not actually a completely different version. This is a problem that many scholars have not yet reached an agreement on this.
Johann Sebastian Bach, Brandenburg Concerto (around the year 1721) The six Brandenburg Concerto in Johann Sebastian Bach occupied an outstanding position in the standard track and became the main instruments of the Baroque era. Among these works, Bach distinguishes himself from other contemporaries (such as Vivaldi and Telemann) by expanding the possibilities and norms of the concerto type, especially with respect to instruments. Biographer Martin Geck is Brandenburg Concerto and Bach is "interested in systematically exploring the possibilities of all composing, thinking of himself as a composer who is aware of history by noticing history, I have it. " The famous Bach scholar has announced the social level interpretation of the Brandenburg Concerto, which shows that Bach used his music as a tool for spreading the idea of social division.
Brandenburg Concerto is not like that. Four sets of solo violin and two solo tape recorders face a series of strings. Bach later transformed the music and instrument of this concerto into a concerto for the solo car for harpsichord, Harpsichord BWV 1057. He also changed the key from G Major to F Major. The unique feature of this concerto in Brandenburgs is that each movement uses perfect instruments. In this sport, the selection of individual instruments can be interpreted at an interesting social level. Normally, a solo violinist will be a senior musician of the Baroque Orchestra (comparable to the organizer of the concert or the leader of today's orchestra)