Analyzing Prelude in C# Major BWV 848
Hi all,
Started to tackle this piece recently, and I am having trouble with analyzing this passage, what chord progression and key it's moving through.
There is so much dissonance between the left and right hand. Any help is really appreciated.
Thanks!
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In the passage right before your clip you are coming from A# minor. It then moves to tonicizing E# minor (the dominant of A#) which is why you see the C and D double sharp (melodic minor) at the start of your clip. It then sequences through A# to D# to G# to C# on its way to F# major (all circle of fifths motion) shortly after your clip.
It seems so complex because of the many sharps. If it were in C instead of C#, it would likely be more obvious at a glance that the common circle of fifths pattern is being employed. Two consecutive raised notes, like the two double sharps often hints at your new key area because those are your raised scale degree 6 and 7 for melodic minor.
I should add that it should not sound particularly dissonant between the hands since it is pretty standard harmonic writing, just in a key that results in many accidentals. If you feel it sounds harsh, my suggestion would be to double check that you are applying all accidentals accurately (I have had students comment similarly when learning this one and it often turns out that there is a misread note in there somewhere).
Hope that helps! =)
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Some of the challenge is that Bach is using polyphony and the principles of counterpoint to guide this composition. Tonality as we know it started here but is not as clear cut in counterpoint. I highly recommend looking at some of the basic rules of counterpoint which are likely to clarify things much more than a more traditional chord based analysis. Much of the dissonance in Bach are passing or neighbor tones and will resolve quickly.
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Thank you to everybody who chimed in. One of the challenge is as, I started learning by playing slowly, the Aug 4th due to passing note. My brain tells me I played it wrong and that's part of the struggle. It is more than 30 years ago that I did my counterpoint during high school, which I admit took it because I was forced to. So I don't even remember having such tool.
I think seeing the chord progression, and seeing the dominant fifth allows me to figure out the key I am moving through, which helps me figure out why a note is at a certain place. And playing in Db certainly helps as well.