The sixth division of the BWV numbers, ranging from 439-524, groups J.S. Bach's songs, arias, and pieces in this genre, such as a Wedding one that exists only as a fragment. For 10 points each:
[10h] Give this genre of the final movement of a Bach piece that breaks the cycle of a canon for every third movement. Some scholars believe that movement in this genre pulls from Volkslied (“VOLKS-leed”) melodies.
ANSWER: quodlibet
[10e] The quodlibet is the 30th and final movement of this set of G major variations by Bach, named for a German harpsichordist. Glenn Gould twice recorded this keyboard work.
ANSWER: Goldberg Variations
[10m] The quodlibet from the Goldberg Variations likely pulled from the Bergamask dance, used around the same time by this Danish-born composer of the North German organ school, whose performance in Lubeck led Bach to walk 250 miles.
ANSWER: Dieterich Buxtehude (“BOOKS-teh-HOO-duh”)
<Noah Sheidlower, Auditory Fine Arts>