Fantasia Contrappuntistica is a solo piano piece composed by Ferruccio Busoni. Busoni created serveral versions of the work including several for solo piano, and one for two pianos. It has been arranged for organ and for orchestra since the composer's death. Ferruccio Busoni Dante Michaelangelo Benvenuto Ferruccio Busoni (April 1, 1866 â July 27, 1924) was an Italian composer, pianist, music teacher and conductor. ... In popular music an arrangement is a setting of a piece of music, which may have been composed by the arranger or by someone else. ...
The work is in large part a homage to Johann Sebastian Bach's Kunst der Fuge. Johann Sebastian Bach, 1748 portrait by Elias Gottlob Haussmann Johann Sebastian Bach (21 March 1685 (O.S.) â 28 July 1750 (N.S.))[1] was a German composer and organist of the baroque period, and is widely acknowledged[2] as one of the greatest composers in the Western tonal tradition. ... The Art of Fugue or The Art of the Fugue (Die Kunst der Fuge), BWV 1080, is an unfinished work by Johann Sebastian Bach composed in 1748-1749 and published after his death in 1750. ...
Fantasia Contrappuntistica is written in twelve parts:
Bach-Vlad: “Wenn wir in höchsten Nöten sein” Chorale; Ferruccio Busoni (1866-1924) FantasiaContrappuntistica: Roman Vlad (1919-) Opus Triplex [comp.
Buzz: In the FantasiaContrappuntistica, his magnum opus, Busoni brought together the many sides of his creative personality—scholarship, craftsmanship, occult visions, irrational abstraction—in an experimental idiom aimed at realizing both his intellectual aspirations and his near-mystical musical visions.
His point of departure was Bach, though he did not advocate the “back to Bach” veneration of, say, Reger, or seek devotedly a magister in absentia.