Lute Suite in E minor, BWV 996


Suite in E minor, BWV 996, is a musical composition written by Johann Sebastian Bach between 1708 and 1717. It is probable that this suite was intended for Lautenwerck. Because the lautenwerk is an uncommon instrument, it is in modern times often performed on the guitar or the lute.

Musical structure

The work consists of six movements:
  1. Präludium: Presto
  2. Allemande
  3. Courante
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  1. Bourrée
  2. Instrumentation

Bach wrote his lute pieces in a traditional score rather than in lute tablature, and some believe that Bach played his lute pieces on the keyboard. No original script of the Suite in E minor for Lute by Bach is known to exist. However, in the collection of one of Bach's pupils, Johann Ludwig Krebs, there is one piece that has written "aufs Lauten Werck" in unidentified handwriting.
Some argue that despite the annotation about the lute-harpsichord, the piece was meant to be played on the lute as demonstrated by the texture. Others argue that since the piece was written in E minor, it would be incompatible with the baroque lute which was tuned to D minor unless a capo was on the 2'nd fret. Nevertheless, it may be played with other string instruments, such as the guitar, mandola or mandocello, and keyboard instruments, and the fifth movement is especially well-known among guitarists.