Dieterich Buxtehude
1637–1707. German composer. in the North German Baroque tradition.
Influential North German Baroque organist and composer, a key predecessor to Bach. Known for organ praeludia and sacred vocal music.
Signature works: Passacaglia in D minor, Ciacona in E minor, Prelude, Fugue and Chaconne in C major, Membra Jesu Nostri, Te Deum.
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Buxtehude: Trio Sonatas, Op. 1 & 2
$14.99CDBrilliant Classics
Nov 21, 2025BRI96288 -
Buxtehude: Organ Works I
$20.99CDRamee
Apr 10, 2026RAM2505 -
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Buxtehude: Trio Sonatas, Op. 2 / Arcangelo
| The sonata concertata form is perfectly illustrated in these trios by Dietrich Buxtehude which, according to Peter Wollny constitute ‘a landmark in the history of the sonata’. They provide a better understanding of a composer who has owed his fame chiefly associated to his cantatas and organ works, and to the admiration of the young Johann Sebastian Bach, who walked 400 kilometres to hear him play. After recording Buxtehude’s first set of chamber sonatas (ALPHA367), the musicians of Arcangelo (Sophie Gent, Jonathan Manson, Thomas Dunford and Jonathan Cohen) now revive the pieces from the second collection, published in 1696. It shows the multiple European influences (Baltic, Italian, German, French) that flourished in Lübeck, the north German city where Buxtehude worked as organist of the Marienkirche, but also in Hamburg, where the music was type set. |
The Legendary Danish Organist Finn Videro, Vol. 4
Buxtehude: Sacred Cantatas
Membra Jesu Nostri By Dietrich Buxtehude
Buxtehude: Kantaten / Ricercar Consort
Buxtehude: Works for Harpsichord / Kappel
Buxtehude by Arrangement: The Stradal Transcriptions
Buxtehude: Complete Organ Works, Vol. 2/ Flamme
Buxtehude: Complete Organ Works, Vol. 1
Buxtehude: Membra Jesu nostri, BuxWV 75
Buxtehude: Suites In C Major And D Minor, Etc / Lars Ulrik Mortensen
The set of three variations named simply Aria, BuxWV 249, are based on the sarabande. Its second and third variations contain written-out varied repetitions of each of the sections of the binary form, demonstrating how Buxtehude might actually have performed those repetitions that he normally indicated only with repeat marks.
Buxtehude’s chorale settings for keyboard are preserved mainly in manuscripts compiled by Johann Gottfried Walther, organist in Weimar and cousin of J. S. Bach. Although most of them require two manuals and pedal, a few do not, and there is no reason why they should be confined to the church organ. One in particular seems appropriate for performance on the harpsichord: the Partita: Auf meinen lieben Gott, BuxWV 179. Here Buxtehude combines three genres, the dance suite, the variation set, and the chorale setting, to produce an unusual hybrid form, consisting of Allemande (unnamed), Double, Courante, Sarabande, and Gigue. Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern, BuxWV 223, belongs to the genre of the chorale fantasy, in which each phrase of a chorale melody is developed rather extensively in a different manner. Here too the gigue makes a prominent appearance, concluding the work in a fugal treatment of the entire melody.
Buxtehude’s free keyboard works - those independent of a preexisting melody or dance pattern - are mainly transmitted in manuscripts that include both pedaliter and manualiter works. Among these, his most original and justly famous works are praeludia and toccatas in the stylus phantasticus, which intermingles highly unpredictable free sections in virtuosic and idiomatic keyboard styles with more structured fugal sections. Since organists naturally prefer the pedaliter works, those for manuals alone are much less frequently performed, thus offering rich opportunities to adventurous harpsichordists. Even in these free works one can find elements of dance and variation. In place of a second fugue, the Toccata in G major, BuxWV 165, contains a brief passage of ostinato variations that are faintly reminiscent of Pachelbel’s famous canon. Buxtehude may have conceived his canzonas as teaching pieces; they are all manualiter works, and students most often practised on the clavichord or harpsichord. They are variously titled canzon, canzonet, or fuga and consist either of a single fugue (BuxWV 225) or of three related fugues (BuxWV 166 and 176) in the manner of the variation canzona inherited from Frescobaldi and Froberger. The gigue makes an appearance yet again as the second fugue of BuxWV 166.
Kerala Snyder
Buxtehude: Six Sonatas / Holloway, Weiss, Mortensen, Et Al
Includes sonata(s) by Dietrich Buxtehude. Soloists: John Holloway (Violin), Ursula Weiss, Jaap ter Linden, Mogens Rasmussen, Lars Ulrik Mortensen.
Complete Organ Works III
Buxtehude: Trio Sonatas, Op. 1 / Filament
Buxtehude’s Opus 1 sits at a stylistic and formal crossroads, interweaving some of the most refined counterpoint of the 17th century with a sense of boundlessness in time and texture, creating a music in which order and fantasy coexist in perfectly imperfect balance. Composing at the dawn of the 18th century, Buxtehude demonstrates a fidelity to the caprices of earlier 17th-century works while also taking up the challenges of the more extended and developed ensemble writing then emerging in the works of Corelli and his 18th-century successors. Filament comprises a core trio of violin, viola da gamba, and keyboards. Filament's mission is to be the bright connective thread — that eponymous filament — linking the world of its audience with that of its repertoire.
Buxtehude: Membra Jesu Nostri / Bronda, Luthers Bach Ensemble
Buxtehude: Trio Sonatas, Op. 1 & 2
Buxtehude: Organ Works I
Membra Jesu Nostri
Buxtehude Collection
Buxtehude: Complete Chamber Music
Buxtehude: The Complete Organ Music, Vol. 1
Buxtehude: The Complete Organ Music, Vol. 6
Buxtehude: The Complete Organ Music, Vol. 3
Buxtehude: The Complete Organ Music, Vol. 2
CANTATAS
Buxtehude: Membra Jesu Nostri
Buxtehude, D.: Organ Music
Buxtehude: Membra Jesu Nostri / Fasolis, Radio Svizzera
American Record Guide (11-12/97, p.111) - "...The recording was made in the church of Santa Maria Maggiore in Treviso, where the reverberation makes both instrumental and vocal tone rich and sumptuous....On the whole, it is a performance that is technically assured, well-paced, and coherent, with more a chamber than church music feel..."
