, by
Johann Sebastian Bach Some examples are the organ passacaglias of
Johann Sebastian Bach,
Dieterich Buxtehude,
Johann Pachelbel,
Sigfrid Karg-Elert,
Johann Caspar Kerll,
Daniel Gregory Mason,
Georg Muffat,
Gottlieb Muffat,
Johann Kuhnau,
Juan Bautista Cabanilles,
Bernardo Pasquini,
Max Reger,
Ralph Vaughan Williams (
Passacaglia on B–G–C, 1933),
George Frideric Handel and
Leo Sowerby. Passacaglias for
lute have been composed by figures such as
Alessandro Piccinini,
Giovanni Girolamo Kapsperger,
Sylvius Leopold Weiss,
Esaias Reusner,
Count Logy,
Robert de Visée,
Jacques Bittner, ,
François Dufault,
Jacques Gallot,
Denis Gaultier,
Ennemond Gaultier, and
Roman Turovsky-Savchuk, a passacaglia for
bandura by
Julian Kytasty, and for
baroque guitar by
Paulo Galvão,
Santiago de Murcia,
Francisco Guerau,
Gaspar Sanz, and
Marcello Vitale.
Baroque One of the best known examples of the passacaglia in
Western classical music is the
Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor, BWV 582, for
organ by
Johann Sebastian Bach. The French
clavecinists, especially
Louis Couperin and his nephew
François Couperin, used a variant of the form—the
passacaille en rondeau—with a recurring episode between the variations.
Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber's "Passacaglia", the last piece of the monumental
Rosary Sonatas, is one of the earliest known compositions for solo violin. The central episode of
Claudio Monteverdi's madrigal
Lamento della Ninfa is a passacaglia on a descending
tetrachord. The first two movements of the fourth sonata from
Johann Heinrich Schmelzer's
Sonatæ unarum fidium are passacaglias on a
descending tetrachord, but in uncharacteristic major. In 1650 or earlier,
Andrea Falconieri published a passacalle movement
à tre,
basso continuo, in Naples. The fourth movement of
Luigi Boccherini's Quintettino No. 6, Op. 30, (also known as
Musica notturna delle strade di Madrid) is titled "Passacalle". The last movement of
George Frideric Handel's Harpsichord Suite in G minor (HWV 432) is a passacaglia which has become well known as a duo for violin and viola, arranged by the Norwegian violinist
Johan Halvorsen. Other examples of
passacaille include
Les plaisirs ont choisi from
Jean-Baptiste Lully's opera
Armide (1686) and
Dido's Lament,
When I am Laid in Earth from
Henry Purcell's
Dido and Aeneas, the
aria Piango, gemo, sospiro by
Antonio Vivaldi, or "Usurpator tiranno" and
Stabat Mater by
Giovanni Felice Sances, et al.
Romantic Nineteenth-century examples include the C-minor passacaglia for organ by
Felix Mendelssohn, and the finale of
Josef Rheinberger's Eighth Organ Sonata. Notable passacaglias by
Johannes Brahms can be found in the last movement of his
Fourth Symphony, which many musicians place among Brahms' finest compositions. Composed by Brahms to conform to the strict
metrics of
classical dance, British conductor
Constant Lambert called the piece "grimly intellectual". In Brahms's
Variations on a Theme by Haydn, the bass repeats the same harmonic pattern throughout the piece. The first movement of
Hans Huber's Piano Concerto No. 3, Op. 113 (1899) is a passacaglia.
Modern The passacaglia proved an enduring form throughout the twentieth century and beyond. In mid-century, one writer stated that "despite the inevitable lag in the performance of new music, there are more twentieth-century passacaglias in the active repertory of performers than baroque works in this form". Three composers especially identified with the passacaglia are
Benjamin Britten,
Dmitri Shostakovich, and
Paul Hindemith. In his operas, Britten often uses a passacaglia to create the climactic moment of the drama. Examples are found in
Peter Grimes,
Billy Budd,
The Turn of the Screw,
Death in Venice, and even in the comic opera
Albert Herring. Britten also employed the form in smaller vocal forms, such as the
Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings (1943) and
The Holy Sonnets of John Donne (1945) for voice and piano, as well as in purely instrumental compositions, notably in the
Violin Concerto, the second and third
Cello suites, the
second and
third string quartets, the
Cello Symphony, and the
Nocturnal after John Dowland for guitar. Shostakovich restricted his use of the passacaglia to instrumental forms, the most notable examples being found in his Interlude in Act II of the opera
Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk,
Tenth String Quartet,
Second Piano Trio,
Eighth and
Fifteenth Symphonies, and
First Violin Concerto. Hindemith employed the form to conclude his 1938 ballet,
Nobilissima Visione, and it is also found in his early Sonata for viola solo, Op. 11, No. 5 (1919) and the second movement of the song cycle
Das Marienleben (1948), as well as in later works such as the Fifth String Quartet and the Octet for winds and strings.
Igor Stravinsky used the form for the central movement of his
Septet (1953), a transitional work between his
neoclassical and
serial periods. A passacaglia is also found in the finale of
Witold Lutosławski's
Concerto for Orchestra, and in the final movement of
Caroline Shaw's
Partita for 8 Voices. Especially important examples of the form are found in the output of the
Second Viennese School.
Anton Webern's Opus 1 is a
Passacaglia for Orchestra,
Arnold Schoenberg included a passacaglia movement, "Nacht", in
Pierrot lunaire, and
Alban Berg, like Britten, used a passacaglia operatically, in act 1, scene 4 of
Wozzeck. ==References==