Greeting from Amazon.com Delivers Classical 101

Editors, Robert Levine and Ted Libbey

With Classical 101, Amazon.com's expert editors introduce
music fans to key composers and performers, important
stylistic movements, and milestone recordings in the history
of classical music. In this mailing, contributor Ted Libbey
offers an introduction to the life and career of Johann
Sebastian Bach (1685-1750), whose music richly synthesizes
a vast array of idioms and traditions.

You can find key works by Bach at
Classical

and you'll find an audio tour and essay on Bach's Magnificat at
Classical

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The art of music has produced many great composers but only
one Johann Sebastian Bach. Asked on a final exam to sum up
the composer's accomplishments, a student in a music history
class scribbled: "Bach was a master of the passion, and the
father of 20 children." True, though not in the way it
sounds. Born in 1685 in the Thuringian town of Eisenach (the
same town in which Martin Luther had been raised two
centuries earlier), Bach belonged to the most musical family
in German history--he was the descendant of four generations
of professional musicians. He received an unusually thorough
education, covering such subjects as Latin, history,
mathematics, and theology. As a child, Bach was a good
singer, but it was only in his teens that he developed into
a capable instrumentalist. In composition he was largely
self-taught.

Pulling out the Stops

After completing his studies in Lueneburg, not far from
Hamburg, Bach held positions as a church organist in several
small German towns. In 1705, he made a pilgrimage to
Luebeck, in the north of Germany, to hear Dietrich
Buxtehude, the greatest organist of the day and a composer
whose music was to have a profound effect itself. Bach's own
fame as a virtuoso was beginning to spread, and by the end
of his decade of service as court organist and concertmaster
in Weimar (1708 to 1717), he had secured a reputation as the
greatest organist and improviser in Germany. Many of Bach's
most celebrated pieces for organ were written during his
Weimar sojourn.

Some of Bach's happiest years were spent at the court of
Coethen (1717 to 1723), where Bach's young patron, Prince
Leopold of Anhalt-Coethen, a fine musician himself, treated
him with respect and remarkable generosity. The bulk of his
output consisted of chamber and instrumental scores for the
prince's music-hungry court. It included such stellar
achievements as the Sonatas and Partitas for Violin, the
Suites for Cello, and the Brandenburg Concertos.

"Organ Toccatas & Passacaglia"
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000002ZO1/entertainmentsit

"Complete Sonatas & Partitas for Solo Violin"
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00000417N/entertainmentsit

"The 6 Cello Suites" (performed by Pablo Casals)
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000002S8E/entertainmentsit

"Brandenburg Concertos no 1-6"
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000021FZ/entertainmentsit

The Miracle Years

In 1722 the death of Johann Kuhnau left vacant the position
of cantor at the Thomaskirche in Leipzig, that city's most
important church and musical center. Of the six applicants
for the job, Bach was neither the most famous nor the town
council's first choice. But by default, he was eventually
offered the job, making him responsible for all music
related to the church, and in 1723, he took up residence in
Leipzig.

Bach remained the cantor at the Thomaskirche until his death
in 1750, composing five complete annual cycles of sacred
cantatas, other sacred works--including such masterpieces as
his Magnificat, the St. Matthew Passion, and the B-Minor
Mass--numerous secular cantatas, and a vast amount of
keyboard and instrumental music as well. In April of 1729,
shortly after the first performance of the St. Matthew
Passion, Bach was offered the directorship of the Leipzig
Collegium Musicum, an association of professional and
student musicians that gave regular public concerts. Founded
by Telemann in 1704, it enjoyed an excellent reputation for
the quality of its performances. After six years of
occupying himself almost exclusively with sacred composition
and working with limited forces to get his music performed,
Bach was eager for the chance to return to the sphere of
orchestral composition and to work, as he had in Coethen,
with topflight instrumentalists. Among the works he wrote
for this group were the second and third of his four
orchestral suites. He withdrew from the Collegium in 1741;
during the next few years, he completed the score of the
B-Minor Mass, wrote the Goldberg Variations, and undertook
two remarkable series of contrapuntal studies that
summarized his knowledge of the art and theory of music: "A
Musical Offering" and "The Art of the Fugue."

"Magnificat"
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00000I75V/entertainmentsit

"St Matthew Passion"
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000057DG/entertainmentsit

"Messe en si"
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000005Z2W/entertainmentsit

"4 Orchestral Suites"
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000004CYR/entertainmentsit

"Goldberg Variations" (performed by Glenn Gould)
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000025TP/entertainmentsit

"The Art of Fugue, Musical Offering"
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000041A6/entertainmentsit

"Die Kunst der Fuge"
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00000DFKK/entertainmentsit

The Grand Synthesis

Bach had a uniquely inspired way of suiting the action to
the word in his vocal settings. And he was equally brilliant
when it came to composing for instruments alone: he
understood their capabilities and never failed to make what
he wrote for them substantive and virtuosic at the same
time. He was a master of every musical idiom known in his
day, from intricate 16th-century polyphony, already
considered archaic, right up to the "gallant" style that
began to sweep Europe in the 1730s. In spite of this
eclectic reach, he seemed to many of his contemporaries to
be old-fashioned, if not completely out of touch. Today, we
can see that he was simply marching to the beat of a
different drummer. His music reveals him as both the most
profound summarizer and the most brilliant innovator of his
era--a composer whose ability to synthesize elements of
different styles into a magnificently rich personal idiom
set him apart from all his peers. And his influence as a
master of counterpoint and large-scale musical structure
extended to nearly all the great composers of the 18th,
19th, and 20th centuries, including Mozart, Beethoven,
Brahms, Mahler, Schoenberg, Stravinsky, and Shostakovich.

You can find key works by Bach at
Classical

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You'll find more great music, articles, and interviews in
Amazon.com's Classical Music section at
Classical


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