The eight publications listed in Bach's obituary included
The Art of Fugue which was in fact published shortly after the composer's death. Further, two publications with vocal music and two canons are extant.
Mühlhausen council election cantatas Gott ist mein König, BWV 71,
Bach's council election (Ratswahl) cantata composed for
Mühlhausen in 1708, was printed that same year at the expense of the town council. Also in 1709 and 1710 Bach wrote the council election cantatas for Mühlhausen, which likewise would have been printed. These cantatas, BWV 1138.1 and 1138.2, are however lost: neither a print nor a manuscript survives. In 1731 these partitas were collectively published as
Clavier-Übung ("Keyboard Exercise"). ;Publication : According to an announcement published in May 1730, it was originally planned to publish seven suites. ; : In 1774
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, son of Johann Sebastian, sold a print of from his father's personal library to
Johann Nikolaus Forkel. In 2008 Andrew Talle identified of the
Austrian National Library as the that changed hands in 1774. Previously, Bach scholars had (tentatively) identified Bach's of as either of the Music Division of the
Library of Congress (e.g.
Peter Wollny in 1996) or of the
British Library (e.g.
Walter Emery in 1952, and
Richard D. P. Jones in 1978, 1988 and 1997).
Canon a 4 Bach's "Canon mit 4" (
canon for four
voices),
BWV 1074, was published in
Georg Philipp Telemann's in 1728. This canon was also published with two solutions in
Johann Mattheson's
Der vollkommene Capellmeister in 1739, and with three solutions in Volume 3 of
Lorenz Christoph Mizler's in 1747.
Clavier-Übung II The
second volume of the Clavier-Übung was first published in 1735, soon followed by a reprint with several corrections. It contained two compositions, specified for performance on a two-manual harpsichord: •
Concerto nach Italienischen Gusto (
Italian Concerto), BWV 971 •
Ouvertüre nach Französischer Art (
French Overture), BWV 831 ", BWV 478, No. 868 in Schemelli's
Musicalisches Gesang-Buch ; Publication :
Clavier-Übung II was printed in
Nürnberg by Christoph Weigel. In the second printing pages 20 to 22 were replaced by new engravings. ; :
K.8.g.7 from the British Library was Bach's : it is a copy from the first print run with more than hundred corrections in Bach's hand.
Spiritual songs and arias from Schemelli's Musicalisches Gesang-Buch Georg Christian Schemelli's
Musicalisches Gesang-Buch (musical songbook), commonly known as
Schemellis Gesangbuch, contains 954 song texts, 69 of which,
BWV 439–507, are printed with a setting for
singing voice and
thoroughbass. Not all 69 melodies were composed by Bach, but he provided (or "improved") an accompaniment for all of them.
Schemellis Gesangbuch was published in 1736, and contains some of Bach's probably least known compositions.
Clavier-Übung III For
organ, containing: • Prelude in
E-flat major, BWV 552/i • German Kyrie and Gloria settings, BWV 669–677 • Catechism chorales, BWV 678–689 • Four duets, BWV 802–805 • Fugue E-flat major, BWV 552/ii The Prelude and Fugue were published separately as a pair by
C. F. Peters in 1845 in Volume III of the Organ Works of J. S. Bach, with the fugue listed in the contents as the "St Annen-Fuge".
Clavier-Übung IV In 1741 or 1742 another
Clavier-Übung volume was published, the
Aria with diverse variations for double manual harpsichord, later known as the
Goldberg Variations, BWV 988. Not thus numbered in the print it was the fourth
Clavier-Übung publication. This publication does not carry a reference to
Johann Gottlieb Goldberg: the music was published over half a century before the perhaps exaggerated anecdote involving Goldberg was printed in
Forkel's biography of Bach. ;Publication : The work was published by Balthasar Schmid in Nürnberg. ; :
Ms. 17669 is at the
Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF). It contains corrections by Bach as well as the autograph manuscript of the canons
BWV 1087.
Canon triplex a 6 The
Canon triplex a 6,
BWV 1076, which had appeared on
Elias Gottlob Haussmann's
portrait of Bach in 1746, was printed in 1747.
Canonic Variations on "Vom Himmel hoch da komm' ich her" The
Canonic Variations on "Vom Himmel hoch da komm' ich her", BWV 769, for organ, were published on the occasion of Bach's admission to Mizler's "Society of the Musical Sciences" in 1747.
Musikalisches Opfer The Musical Offering, BWV 1079, was published in 1747, after Bach's visit to
Frederick the Great in Potsdam. The work contains a
trio sonata for
flute, violin and
continuo.
Schübler Chorales The
Schübler Chorales, BWV 645–650, is a set of
chorale preludes for
organ, published around 1748 as
Sechs Chorale von verschiedener Art (Six Chorales of Various Kinds) by Johann Georg Schübler. ;Publication : There is some doubt whether Bach commissioned the publication, which mainly, perhaps even exclusively, consists of arrangements of cantata movements which he had composed a few decades earlier. The work was published in
Zella Melsi, and the engraver apparently prepared the print unsupervised by the composer. It is likely that Bach at least chose the six pieces, determined their sequence in the publication, and gave some instruction on the organ registration to be employed. ; : Bach's is part of the
Scheide Library at
Princeton University Library. It contains several corrections by Bach, but misses the title page and the first page of music.
Kunst der Fuge In preparation for print when the composer died (1750):
The Art of Fugue, BWV 1080. The printed versions (1751 and 1752) contain BWV 668a, a variant of the chorale prelude
"Wenn wir in höchsten Nöten sein", BWV 668. ==Further reading==