BACH, JOHANN SEBASTIAN

sābäsˈtyän, 1685–1750, German composer and organist, b. Eisenach; one of the greatest and most influential composers of the Western world. He brought polyphonic baroque music to its culmination, creating masterful and vigorous works in almost every musical form known in his period.

Life

Born into a gifted family (see Bach, family), J. S. Bach was devoted to music from childhood. He was taught by his father and later by his brother Johann Christoph, and was a boy soprano in Lüneberg. His education was acquired largely through independent studies. He had an insatiable curiosity about music and sometimes walked great distances to hear the organists Johann Adam Reinken (at Hamburg) and Buxtehude (at Lübeck). In 1703 he became violinist in the private orchestra of the prince at Weimar but left within a year to become organist at Arnstadt.

Bach went to Mühlhausen as organist in 1707. There he married his cousin Maria Barbara Bach, who was to bear him seven children. In 1708 he was made court organist and chamber musician at Weimar, and in 1714 he became concert master. Prince Leopold of Anhalt engaged him as musical director at Köthen in 1717. Three years later his wife died, and in 1721 he married Anna Magdalena Wülken, a woman of considerable musical cultivation who eventually bore him 13 children. In 1723 he took the important post of music director of the church of St. Thomas, Leipzig, and of its choir school; he remained in Leipzig until his death.

Compositions

Since few of Bach's many works were published in his lifetime, exact dates cannot be fixed for all of them, but most can be placed with some certainty in the periods of his life. At Arnstadt and Mühlhausen he began a series of organ compositions that culminated in the great works of the Weimar period: the Passacaglia and Fugue in C Minor, most of the great preludes and fugues, and the 45 chorale-preludes gathered in Das Orgelbüchlein [the little organ book].

At Köthen he concentrated on instrumental compositions, especially keyboard works: the Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue; the English Suites; the French Suites; the Two-Part and Three-Part Inventions, written for the education of his son Wilhelm Friedemann; and Book I of the celebrated Well-Tempered Clavier. He also wrote several unaccompanied violin sonatas and cello suites, and the Brandenburg Concertos, recognized as the best concerti grossi ever composed.

The St. John Passion was performed (1723) at Leipzig when Bach was a candidate for the position of musical director at St. Thomas. His Magnificat was presented shortly after he assumed that post. Many more of his superb religious compositions followed: the St. Matthew Passion (1729), the Christmas Oratorio, the sonorous Mass in B Minor, and the six motets. The principal keyboard works of this period were Book II of The Well-Tempered Clavier and the four books of clavier pieces in the Clavierübung, which includes: six partitas (1726–31); the Italian Concerto and the Partita in B Minor (1735); the Catechism Preludes, the Prelude and Fugue (St. Anne) in E Flat (1739), and four duets; and the Goldberg Variations (more formally Aria with Thirty Variations, 1742). His last notable compositions were the Musical Offering composed (1747) for Frederick the Great and The Art of the Fugue (1749).

Accomplishments and Influence

In all his positions as choir director, Bach composed sacred cantatas—a total of some 300, of which nearly 200 are extant. There are also over 30 secular cantatas, composed at Leipzig, among them Phoebus and Pan (1731). The bulk of his work is religious—he made four-part settings of 371 Lutheran chorales, also using many of them as the bases of organ preludes and choral works. In addition, he composed an astonishing number of instrumental works, many of them designed for the instruction of his numerous pupils. In his instrumental and choral works he perfected the art of polyphony, displaying an unmatched combination of inventiveness and control in his great, striding fugues.

During his lifetime, Bach was better known as an organist than as a composer. For decades after his death his works were neglected, but in the 19th cent. his genius came to be recognized, particularly by romantic composers such as Mendelssohn and Schumann. Since that time his reputation has grown steadily.

Bibliography

The classic study of his life and music is by P. Spitta (tr. 1884–85, repr. 1972), and A. Schweitzer's study (tr. 1911, repr. 1962) has attracted much attention. See also biographies by K. and I. Geiringer (1966), C. S. Terry (1928, repr. 1988), and C. Wolff (2000); studies by J. N. Forkel (tr. 1920, repr. 1970), R. L. Marshall (2 vol., 1972), and B. Schwendowius and W. Domling, ed. (1984); H. T. David and A. Mendel, The Bach Reader (1945, rev. ed. 1966); O. L. Bettmann, Johann Sebastian Bach as His World Knew Him (1995).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Bach Johann Sebastian  - 1503 results

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...Creative Development of Johann Sebastian Bach VOLUME 1: 1695-1717 Music...Creative Development of Johann Sebastian Bach Volume I: i695-i7i7 This...Creative Development of Johann Sebastian Bach VOLUME I: 1695-1717 Music...
Johann Sebastian Bach THE MASTER AND HIS WORK...translation of Dr. Wilibald Gurlitt JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH -- Der Meister und sein Werk...family from which the genius of Johann Sebastian Bach sprang. In the history of that family...
JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH THE STORY OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF A GREAT PERSONALITY...INDEX 573 ILLUSTRATIONS JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH Frontispiece From a recently discovered portrait in...
...scripture in the cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach / Howard C. Adams...Daverio -- The message of Johann Sebastian Bach in Ingmar Bergmans cinematic...lib. bdg.: alk. paper 1. Bach, Johann Sebastian, 1685-1750 -- Criticism and...
...ISBN 0-8223-1006-6 1. Bach, Johann Sebastian, 1685-1750 -- Criticism and...der musikalischen Werke von Johann Sebastian Bach Leipzig: Breitkopf Hartel...NBA Neue Bach-Ausgabe. Johann Sebastian Bach: Neue Ausgabe samt licher...
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journal articles on: Bach Johann Sebastian  - 44 results

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...490-501. Besch, Hans. 1938. Johann Sebastian Bach, Frommigkeit und Glaube. Beitrage...Johann Theodor. 1845 2001. Johann Sebastian Bach in seinen Kirchen-Cantaten...Spitta, Philipp. 1873-80. Johann Sebastian Bach. Leipzig: Breitkopf Hartel...
...Paolo. 1998. Liner notes. Johann Sebastian Bach: Violoncello Solo Suites I-VI...recorded by Heinrich Schiff and Johann Sebastian Bach: 6 Cello Suiten recorded by...Discography Beschi, Paolo. 1998. Johann Sebastian Bach: Violoncello Solo Suites...
...conceived as mathematical games executed as optical illusions. This artists greatest affinity is, once again, Johann Sebastian Bach. Escher describes in almost mystical terms his experience of attending a performance of Bachs Goldberg Variations...
...Marshall For admirers of Johann Sebastian Bach, the year 2000 did not just...interpretation -- of the phenomenon of Johann Sebastian Bach proved irresistible. Apart...ultimately fails to humanize Johann Sebastian Bach. We are surely ready by now...
...old Mozart was introduced to a number of works of Johann Sebastian Bach and Georg Friedrich Handel by the Viennese collector...of these pieces, in particular the first (Ex. 1). Bach fugues engage in a controlled transformational process...
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magazine articles on: Bach Johann Sebastian  - 68 results

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Johann Sebastian Bach: Life and Work. by Calvin R. Stapert Johann Sebastian Bach: Life and Work. By Martin Geck...COMPOSER has more universal appeal than Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750). The plethora of concerts...
...anniversary of the death of Johann Sebastian Bach, a man who was little known...stream) but Meer (ocean)." Johann Sebastian Bach is surely one of the greatest...genius. A Life in Music Johann Sebastian Bach was born on March 21, 1685...
...Thomanerchor, the choir once led by Johann Sebastian Bach. Many of those children came...Christianity through the music of Johann Sebastian Bach." "I fit into this category...remained strong enough to help Johann Sebastian Bachs music sweep across the...
...the fame of these two masters, the name Johann Sebastian Bach produces no popular image at all. Yet Bach (1685-1750) is the "father of Western music...and platelets in our material plasma." Bach fails to cut much of a human figure simply...
...the just-concluded 1992 season. JOHANN Sebastian Bach is not just a composer. He is not...the great school of our music. Bach uniquely sums up the polyphony...1970s. It can be simply summed up: Bach told us both what was, and what...
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...when she was the executive director of the Washington Bach Consort. At the time, Ms. Hanlon asked some of the consort musicians to perform some of Johann Sebastian Bachs music for her son, Nicholas, and his classmates...
...discovered a previously unknown work by Johann Sebastian Bach hidden in a shoe box. Michael Maul from the Bach archive in Leipzig found the aria while...Peter Wollny, head of research at the Bach Archive, said: "We hardly know anything...
...time. He takes on the mantle of Johann Sebastian Bach - complete with powdered wig and...providing the commentary for an all-Bach concert by the Royal Liverpool...thought she was ugly. Says Alan: Bach was steeped in church music, so...
...conducting a two-part program: sacred music by Johann Michael Bach, John Tavener, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Sven-David...from Philadelphia will throw light on "Invisible Bach" in a program of J.S. Bach compositions reworked by other Bachs or reconstructed...
Cellist brings Bach to club, cafe crowd Byline: Derek...attuned to honky-tonk than music by J.S. Bach. "It was like a rock concert," he says...and Cafe this afternoon as part of his "Bach Listening-Room" tour. "I have a long...
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encyclopedia articles on: Bach Johann Sebastian  - 7 results

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BACH, JOHANN SEBASTIAN sabas tyan bakh, 1685...Bach , family), J. S. Bach was devoted to music from...and later by his brother Johann Christoph, and was a boy...1966); O. L. Bettmann, Johann Sebastian Bach as His World Knew Him...
...its most renowned member being Johann Sebastian Bach (see separate article). Johannes...musician at Eisenach, and father of Johann Sebastian Bach. Johann Sebastians eldest brother, Johann Christoph Bach, 1671 1721, was organist at Ohrdruf...
...and much-recorded Canon in D Major. Pachelbel is credited with significant influence on the keyboard works of Johann Sebastian Bach . Two of Pachelbels sons, Wilhelm Hieronymus Pachelbel, c.1685 1764, b. Erfurt, and Carl Theodorus Pachelbel...
...college. Known in 1115, Kothen was from 1603 to 1847 the residence of the dukes of Anhalt-Kothen, at whose court Johann Sebastian Bach was musical director from 1717 to 1723. A former spelling was Cothen. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia...
...John Frederick I , the painter Lucas Cranach , the elder, worked there (16th cent.), and from 1708 to 1717 Johann Sebastian Bach was court organist and concertmaster at Weimar. Under Dowager Duchess Amalia (1739 1807) and her son, Charles...
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