Prelude and Fugue in D minor, BWV 875

The Prelude and Fugue in D minor, BWV 875 is a keyboard composition written by Johann Sebastian Bach. It is the sixth prelude and fugue in the second book of The Well-Tempered Clavier, a series of 48 preludes and fugues by the composer.[1]

Prelude

The prelude has 61 measures and is in 3
4
. It is made up of running sixteenth notes and eighth notes.[2]

Beginning of Prelude

Fugue

The fugue has 27 measures and is in common time. It is in three voices and has triplets, sixteenth notes, eighth notes, and many accidentals.[3]

Beginning of Fugue
gollark: Not really.
gollark: i.e. the physical processes involved in the brain do not actually work the same if you swap all the atoms for... identical atoms.
gollark: Anyway, if you actually *did* end up breaking consciousness if you swapped out half the atoms in your brain at once, and this was externally verifiable because the conscious thing complained, that would probably have some weird implications. Specifically, that the physical processes involved somehow notice this.
gollark: I mean, apart from the fact that it wasn't livable in the intervening distance, which might be bad in specifically the house case.
gollark: If I build an *identical* house in the same place, with all the same contents, somehow, I don't care that much.

References

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