 |
Johann
Sebastian Bach
1685 - 1750
German organist and composer of the baroque era, one of
the greatest
and most productive geniuses in the history of Western music.
Bach was born on March 21, 1685, in
Eisenach, Thüringen, into a family that over seven generations
produced at least 53 prominent musicians, from Veit Bach to Wilhelm
Friedrich Ernst Bach. Johann Sebastian received his first musical
instruction from his father, Johann Ambrosius, a town musician. When
his father died, he went to live and study with his elder brother,
Johann Christoph, an organist in Ohrdruf.
|
Early
Years
|
|
In 1700 Bach began to earn his own living as a chorister
at the Church
of Saint Michael in Lüneburg. In 1703 he became a violinist in
the chamber orchestra of Prince Johann Ernst of Weimar, but later that
year he moved to Arnstadt, where he became church organist. In October
1705, Bach secured a one-month leave of absence in order to study with
the renowned Danish-born German organist and composer Dietrich
Buxtehude, who was then in Lübeck and whose organ music
greatly influenced Bach's. The visit was so rewarding to Bach that he
overstayed his leave by two months. He was criticized by the church
authorities not only for this breach of contract but also for the
extravagant flourishes and strange harmonies in his organ
accompaniments to congregational singing. He was already too highly
respected, however, for either objection to result in his dismissal.
In 1707 he married a second cousin, Maria
Barbara Bach, and went to Mülhausen as organist in the Church
of Saint Blasius. He went back to Weimar the next year as organist and
violinist at the court of Duke Wilhelm Ernst and remained there for the
next nine years, becoming concertmaster of the court orchestra in 1714.
In Weimar he composed about 30 cantatas, including the well-known
funeral cantata God's Time Is the Best, and also
wrote organ and harpsichord works. He began to travel throughout
Germany as an organ virtuoso and as a consultant to organ builders.
In 1717 Bach began a 6-year employment as
chapelmaster and director of chamber music at the court of Prince
Leopold of Anhalt-Köthen. During this period he wrote
primarily secular music for ensembles and solo instruments. He also
prepared music books for his wife and children, with the purpose of
teaching them keyboard technique and musicianship. These books include
the Well-Tempered Clavier, the Inventions,
and the Little Organ Book.
Bach's
first wife died in 1720, and the next year he married Anna Magdalena
Wilcken, a fine singer and daughter of a court musician. She bore him
13 children in addition to the 7 he had had by his first wife, and she
helped him in his work by copying the scores of his music for the
performers.
|
| Later
Years |
|
Bach moved to Leipzig in 1723 and spent the rest of his life there. His
position as musical director and choirmaster of Saint Thomas's church
and church school in Leipzig was unsatisfactory in many ways. He
squabbled continually with the town council, and neither the council
nor the populace appreciated his musical genius. They saw in him little
more than a stuffy old man who clung stubbornly to obsolete forms of
music. Nonetheless, the 202 cantatas surviving from the 295 that he
wrote in Leipzig are still played today, whereas much that was new and
in vogue at the time has been forgotten. Most of the cantatas open with
a section for chorus and orchestra, continue with alternating
recitatives and arias for solo voices and accompaniment, and conclude
with a chorale based on a simple Lutheran hymn. The music is at all
times closely bound to the text, ennobling the latter immeasurably with
its expressiveness and spiritual intensity. Among these works are the Ascension
Cantata and the Christmas Oratorio, the latter
consisting of six cantatas. The Passion of St. John
and the Passion of St. Matthew also were written in
Leipzig, as was the epic Mass in B Minor. Among the works written for
the keyboard during this period are the famous Goldberg
Variations; Part II of the Well-Tempered Clavier;
and the Art of the Fugue, a magnificent
demonstration of his contrapuntal skill in the form of 16 fugues and 4
canons, all on a single theme. Bach's sight began to fail in the last
year of his life, and he died on July 28, 1750, after undergoing an
unsuccessful eye operation.
|
| The
Bach Revival |
|
After Bach's death he was remembered less as a composer than as an
organist and harpsichord player. His frequent tours had ensured his
reputation as the greatest organist of the time, but his contrapuntal
style of writing sounded old-fashioned to his contemporaries, most of
whom preferred the new preclassical styles then coming into fashion,
which were more homophonic in texture and less contrapuntal than Bach's
music. Consequently, for the next 80 years his music was neglected by
the public, although a few musicians admired it, among them Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart and Ludwig van Beethoven. A revival of interest in
Bach's music occurred in the mid-19th century. The German composer
Felix Mendelssohn arranged a performance of the Passion of
St. Matthew in 1829, which did much to awaken popular
interest in Bach. The Bach Gesellschaft, formed in 1850, devoted itself
assiduously to finding, editing, and publishing Bach's works.
Because the "Bach revival" coincided with the
flowering of the romantic movement in music, performance styles were
frequently gross distortions of Bach's intentions. Twentieth-century
scholarship, inspired by the early enthusiasm of German-born Protestant
medical missionary, organist, and musicologist Albert Schweitzer,
gradually has unearthed principles of performance that are truer to
Bach's era and his music.
Bach was largely self-taught in musical
composition. His principal study method, following the custom of his
day, was to copy in his workbooks the music of French, German, and
Italian composers of his own time and earlier. He did this throughout
his life and often made arrangements of other composers' works.
|
| Master
of Counterpoint |
|
The significance of Bach's
music is due in large part to the scope of his intellect. He is perhaps
best known as a supreme master of counterpoint. He was able to
understand and use every resource of musical language that was
available in the baroque era. Thus, if he chose, he could combine the
rhythmic patterns of French dances, the gracefulness of Italian melody,
and the intricacy of German counterpoint all in one composition. At the
same time he could write for voice and the various instruments so as to
take advantage of the unique properties of construction and tone
quality in each. In addition, when a text was associated with the
music, Bach could write musical equivalents of verbal ideas, such as an
undulating melody to represent the sea, or a canon to describe the
Christians following the teaching of Jesus.
Bach's ability to assess and exploit the
media, styles, and genre of his day enabled him to achieve many
remarkable transfers of idiom. For instance, he could take an Italian
ensemble composition, such as a violin concerto, and transform it into
a convincing work for a single instrument, the harpsichord. By devising
intricate melodic lines, he could convey the complex texture of a
multivoiced fugue on a single-melody instrument, such as the violin or
cello. The conversational rhythms and sparse textures of operatic
recitatives can be found in some of his works for solo keyboard.
Technical facility alone, of course, was not the source of Bach's
greatness. It is the expressiveness of his music, particularly as
manifested in the vocal works, that conveys his humanity and that
touches listeners everywhere.
Bach
- in brief
Bach -
professional history in short
|
|
|