🏷️ INSTRUMENT PROFILE Organological family Chordophone with struck strings and a keyboard-operated action Sound production The keys set felt-covered hammers in motion; the hammers strike taut metal strings, whose vibrations pass through bridges to a wooden soundboard Main forms Grand piano and upright piano Keyboard Usually 88 keys: 52 white and 36 black Standard compass A0–C8, spanning seven and a quarter octaves Strings Approximately 220–230 steel strings; the bass strings are commonly wound with copper Main components Keyboard, action, hammers, dampers, strings, bridges, soundboard, and cast-iron plate Pedals Usually three on a modern grand: damper, sostenuto, and una corda Characteristic tone A clearly defined attack, exceptional dynamic breadth, rich resonance, and strongly differentiated registers Musical roles Solo instrument, concerto solois...
Johann Sebastian Bach seems to exist beyond the flow of time. He is one of those rare figures who transcend the era in which they lived, becoming a permanent point of reference for every generation that followed. Musicians, scholars, and listeners alike continue to return to his work, discovering new perspectives within music that appears inexhaustible. His compositions reveal an extraordinary sense of architectural balance and organic unity. Each individual line unfolds with complete independence, yet every voice contributes to a larger musical design of remarkable coherence. In his fugues, preludes, cantatas, and Passions, structural precision is transformed into living musical discourse, where intellectual clarity and profound human expression coexist in perfect equilibrium. Bach earned legendary status as an organist during his own lifetime, but the full magnitude of his achievement as a composer was recognized only decades after his death. Felix Mendelssohn 's revival of ...