: the incipit of BWV 1060 is Fig. 11 on this page. In his early 19th-century
Bach biography,
Johann Nikolaus Forkel described the concerto as "very old", by which he probably meant he found its style antiquated. The concerto was published in 1848, edited by
Friedrich Konrad Griepenkerl. In the 1874 preface to the
Bach Gesellschaft edition of the concerto for two harpsichords,
Wilhelm Rust had suggested that the original version of the concerto would have been for two violins. In 1886
Woldemar Voigt wrote that the original instrument for the part of the second harpsichord was more likely an oboe, and that the original of the concerto could almost certainly be identified with a lost concerto for oboe and violin mentioned in a 1764
Breitkopf catalogue.
Reconstructed versions Max Schneider's reconstruction as a concerto for two violins in
D minor was performed in 1920 at the
Leipzig Bach Festival. According to
Max Seiffert it makes more sense to keep the same
key as the keyboard version, that is
C minor, when reconstructing the concerto for violin and oboe soloists. In his preface to the 1990 second edition of the
Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis (BWV),
Wolfgang Schmieder proposed to add a capital "R" to a BWV number to indicate a reconstructed version of a composition that is only extant in a later version, hence a reconstruction of a conjectured earlier version of the BWV 1060 concerto can be indicated as BWV 1060R. Schmieder used the 1060R catalogue number for a reconstruction in C minor, for oboe and violin soloists, in the 1990 version of the BWV. Published reconstructions: • • •
Recordings On CD recordings, BWV 1060R is often combined with Bach's violin concertos BWV 1041–1043. The slow movement of Karl Richter's recording, with Hedwig Bilgram and the Münchener Bach-Orchester, also features in the soundtrack of
Stanley Kubrick's
Barry Lyndon (1975). == References ==