Created using MuseScore.
Tuned with A = 415 Hz.
Created using MuseScore.
Tuned with A = 415 Hz.
Created using MuseScore.
Tuned with A = 415 Hz.
Created with MuseScore.
Tuned with A = 440 Hz.
Inspired by Erik Ryde, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ix7PVdBnlEo
Created using MuseScore.
Tuned with A = 415 Hz.
Created using MuseScore.
Tuned with A = 415 Hz.
Probably the most famous keyboard concerto of J. S. Bach. Some people argue that this is a transcription, by the composer himself, of a lost violin concerto. Audacious people have made up several “re-construction”s.
Created using MuseScore.
Tuned with A = 415 Hz.
Created using MuseScore.
Tuned with A = 415 Hz.
Created using MuseScore.
Tuned with A = 415 Hz.
Created using MuseScore.
Tuned with A = 415 Hz.
Probably the best-known organ work of J. S. Bach. It is conjectured (but, of course nobody alive can prove or disprove) that this is a transcription by the composer himself of a lost violin piece.
Created using MuseScore.
This piece is tuned with the Baroque tuning, i.e., A = 415 Hz.
The continuo is played on the violone, not on the harpsichord.
As for the second movement, the site owner followed Ton Koopman and used the second movement of BWV 916: Toccata in G major. However, the site owner has chosen strings instead of harpsichord.