He was the youngest
son of Johann Ambrosius Bach, a town musician,
from whom he probably learnt the violin and the
rudiments of musical theory. When he was ten he
was orphaned and went to live with his elder
brother Johann Christoph, organist at St.
Michael's Church, Ohrdruf, who gave him lessons
in keyboard playing. From 1700 to 1702 he
attended St. Michael's School in Lüneburg,
where he sang in the church choir and probably
came into contact with the organist and
composer Georg Böhm. He also visited
Hamburg to hear J.A. Reincken at the organ of
St. Catherine's Church.
After competing
unsuccessfully for an organist's post in
Sangerhausen in 1702, Bach spent the spring and
summer of 1703 as 'lackey' and violinist at the
court of Weimar and then took up the post of
organist at the Neukirche in Arnstadt. In June
1707 he moved to St. Blasius, Mühlhausen,
and four months later married his cousin Maria
Barbara Bach in nearby Dornheim. Bach was
appointed organist and chamber musician to the
Duke of Saxe-Weimar in 1708, and in the next
nine years he became known as a leading
organist and composed many of his finest works
for the instrument. During this time he
fathered seven children, including Wilhelm
Friedemann and Carl Philipp Emanuel. When, in
1717, Bach was appointed Kapellmeister at
Cöthen, he was at first refused permission
to leave Weimar and was allowed to do so only
after being held prisoner by the duke for
almost a month.
Bach's new employer,
Prince Leopold, was a talented musician who
loved and understood the art. Since the court
was Calvinist, Bach had no chapel duties and
instead concentrated on instrumental
composition. From this period date his violin
concertos and the six Brandenburg
Concertos, as well as numerous sonalas,
suites and keyboard works, including several
(e.g. the Inventions and Book I of
the '48') intended for instruction. In
1720 Maria Barbara died while Bach was visiting
Karlsbad with the prince; in December of the
following year Bach married Anna Magdalena
Wilcke, daughter of a court trumpeter at
Weissenfels. A week later Prince Leopold also
married, and his bride's lack of interest in
the arts led to a decline in the support given
to music at the Cöthen court. In 1722 Bach
entered his candidature for the prestigious
post of Director musices at Leipzig
and Kantor of the Thomasschule there. In April
1723, after the preferred candidates, Telemann
and Graupner, had withdrawn, he was offered the
post and accepted it.
Bach remained as
Thomaskantor in Leipzig for the rest of his
life, often in conflict with the authorities,
but a happy family man and a proud and caring
parent. His duties centred on the Sunday and
feastday services at the city's two main
churches, and during his early years in Leipzig
he composed prodigious quantities of church
music, including four or five cantata cycles,
the Magnificat and the St.
John and St. Matthew Passions. He
was by this time renowned as a virtuoso
organist and in constant demand as a teacher
and an expert in organ construction and design.
His fame as a composer gradually spread more
widely when, from 1726 onwards, he began to
bring out published editions of some of his
keyboard and organ music.
From about 1729 Bach's
interest in composing church music sharply
declined, and most of his sacred works after
that date, including the b Minor Mass
and the Christmas Oratorio, consist
mainly of 'parodies' or arrangements of earlier
music. At the same time he took over the
direction of the collegium musicum that
Telemann had founded in Leipzig in 1702 - a
mainly amateur society which gave regular
public concerts. For these Bach arranged
harpsichord concertos and composed several
large-scale cantatas, or serenatas, to impress
the Elector of Saxony, by whom he was granted
the courtesy title of Hofcompositeur
in 1736.
Among the 13 children
born to Anna Magdalena at Leipzig was Bach's
youngest son, Johann Christian, in 1735. In
1744 Bach's second son, Emanuel, was married,
and three years later Bach visited the couple
and their son (his first grandchild) at
Potsdam, where Emanuel was employed as
harpsichordist by Frederick the Great. At
Potsdam Bach improvised on a theme given to him
by the king, and this led to the composition of
the Musical Offering, a compendium of
fugue, canon, and sonata based on the royal
theme. Contrapuntal artifice predominates in
the work of Bach's last decade, during which
his membership (from 1747) of Lorenz Mizler's
learned Society of Musical Sciences profoundly
affected his musical thinking. The Canonic
Variations for organ was one of the works Bach
presented to the society, and the unfinished
Art of Fugue may also have been
intended for distribution among its
members.
Bach's eyesight began to
deteriorate during his last year and in March
and April 1750 he was twice operated on by the
itinerant English oculist John Taylor. The
operations and the treatment that followed them
may have hastened Bach's death. He took final
communion on 22 July and died six days later.
On 31 July he was buried at St. John's
cemetery. His widow survived him for ten years,
dying in poverty in 1760.
Bach's output embraces
practically every musical genre of his time
except for the dramatic ones of opera and
oratorio (his three 'oratorios' being oratorios
only in a special sense). He opened up new
dimensions in virtually every department of
creative work to which he turned, in format,
musical quality and technical demands. As was
normal at the time, his creative production was
mostly bound up with the extemal factors of his
places of work and his employers, but the
density and complexity of his music are such
that analysts and commentators have uncovered
in it layers of religious and numerological
significance rarely to be found in the music of
other composers. Many of his contemporaries,
notably the critic J.A. Scheibe, found his
music too involved and lacking in immediate
melodic appeal, but his chorale harmonizations
and fugal works were soon adopted as models for
new generations of musicians. The course of
Bach's musical development was undeflected
(though not entirely uninfluenced) by the
changes in musical style taking place around
him. Together with his great contemporary
Handel (whom chance prevented his ever
meeting), Bach was the last great
representative of the Baroque era in an age
which was already rejecting the Baroque
aesthetic in favour of a new, 'enlightened'
one.
Biography by: Honey Fox
Submitted On : 08.25.00
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