This article was updated in July 2025.
The harpsichord is a striking instrument that enjoyed great popularity during the Baroque and Classic periods – until it was replaced by a new invention, the fortepiano. In the 1600s, its popularity and use had spread all around Europe, and all major composers wrote pieces for it. From the early single-keyboard Italian works to the more developed ones with different temperaments, here is a list for you to enjoy.
1Giovanni Picchi: Danze et Toccata
Picchi was an influential Italian composer from the early Baroque period, and the only Venetian from his time to write dance music for the harpsichord. Here is organist and harpsichordist Ton Koopman playing on an Italian harpsichord.
2Louis and François Couperin
In Baroque France, the Couperin brothers, Louis and François – part of a talented family of musicians – left a wide legacy of harpsichord music. Their compositions became a benchmark for European harpsichord repertoire.
3Domenico Scarlatti: Sonatas K2, K213, K208
Another milestone in the development of the keyboard repertoire is the 555 sonatas composed by Domenico Scarlatti. Even though they are composed of a single, short movement, they show interesting resources in harmonies and an influence from Spanish traditional music: in some of them, you can hear turns such as those of a Spanish guitar.
4Johann Sebastian Bach: Concerto for harpsichord no. 1 in D minor, BWV 1052
We move to Northern Europe to pay a visit to our beloved J. S. Bach, who, of course, also wrote music for the harpsichord. By this time, the harpsichord had evolved technically and had two sets of chords, for a richer sound. Works for solo harpsichord and orchestra were a novelty, and apparently Bach composed them to showcase his keyboard expertise. We listen here to the young and gifted harpsichordist Jean Rondau.
5Bach: Goldberg Variations, BWV 988
We can’t help but include more than one piece by J. S. Bach, so here it goes: the Goldberg Variations played by another talented young harpsichordist, Mahan Esfahani.
6Joseph-Nicolas-Pancrace Royer: La marche des Scythes