Many folks would call Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D minor the ultimate piece of scary music, thanks to any number of horror movies and pop culture moments that have used its thundering organ sounds as a kind of ghoulish shorthand. (But not always. Remember how it was used in Fantasia? The visuals were marvelous, though it wasn't quite as scary as, say, the Night on Bald Mountain segment — unless you count the conductor-as-deity narrative as inherently frightening.)
So with All Hallows' Eve later this week, we thought it would be a perfect time to look up some tricks and treats among the endless Bach arrangements on YouTube. We'll leave it to you to figure out which are the aural equivalent of Reese's Peanut Butter Cups and which are the Mary Janes.
Copyright 2024 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.
Bach Tricks — And Treats
Toy-Minor Toccata
Looking for a way to really freak out the tots coming to your porch for Halloween goodies? Treat them to a toy piano toccata.
Musical Glasses
Ever heard the Toccata and Fugue played on over three dozen glasses? You'll be shattered by the technique — not to mention all those eerie overtones.
A Trombone Quartet
Ever imagine the lines of the Toccata and Fugue growling through a foursome of fearsome trombones? These very talented guys from Costa Rica have.
Purely Rhythmic
This obscure mono LP of Bach played by the New York Percussion Ensemble is so awesome, I have no words — and this has almost no pitches. As one YouTube commenter noted, it's as if Bach were transplanted into a film noir.
Visualizing Bach
Think you know this piece through and through? Try watching this visualization of the score in a bar-graph video that lets even non-music readers appreciate the hellish difficulty of this score.