Organ pedal curriculum › Level 1 · Sustained pedal

Heut triumphieret Gottes Sohn, BWV 630

Johann Sebastian Bach · baroque · Level 1 · Sustained pedal ✓ score-verified

pedal sustained · pedal diff 1/5 · manual diff 2/5

Heut triumphieret Gottes Sohn, BWV 630

Johann Sebastian Bach · baroque · Level 1 · Sustained pedal

In the score, the score has a real pedal staff (3-staff system) carrying a gentle, mostly slow-moving pedal line (automated motion proxy 0.872, on the gentle end). That places Heut triumphieret Gottes Sohn, BWV 630 at Level 1 · Sustained pedal. On John Stainer’s pedal syllabus this sits at the Independence of Hands and Feet stage: Stainer’s first feet-and-hands work is to hold the feet steady (a sustained pedal note) while the hands move independently — the gentlest useful pedal.

Why this piece teaches it

Independence of Hands: Exercises. Independence of Hands and Feet: Exercises.

— Stainer, The Organ: A Manual of the True Principles of Organ Playing (Novello Primer, 1877; ed. 1909) (the Independence of Hands and Feet stage of the pedal syllabus).

This kind of cantus-firmus chorale setting is the repertoire the Bach Orgelbüchlein / Lemmens École d’orgue legato school uses to introduce a held pedal point.

Confidence: ✓ score-verified. Pedal presence confirmed from the score by the staff detector, and its pedal-motion proxy ranks among the gentlest of the confirmed pedal pieces — i.e. real but undemanding pedal work.

Score (PDF): open / download the score — the site’s own copy, source on IMSLP.

Score

To import into forScore on iPad/iPhone: open the score, then tap Safari’s Share button → Copy to forScore. The score arrives tagged with its title, composer and genre.

↓ open score

Your browser can't display the PDF inline. Open / download the score.