The history of one of the world's greatest composers, illustrated by cute dogs.
It's all about the classical music composers and their works from the last 400 years and much more about music. Hier erfahren Sie alles über die klassischen Komponisten und ihre Meisterwerke der letzten vierhundert Jahre und vieles mehr über Klassische Musik.
Popular Posts
-
10 Beautiful versions for Christmas By Hermione Lai Traditionally sung at Christmas or the surrounding Christmas holiday season, Christmas c...
-
413,733 views Premiered Oct 3, 2024 ГОЛЛИВУД "As Time Goes By" is a song written by Herman Hupfeld in 1931. It became very fam...
-
by Hermione Lai, Interlude There is no better way to celebrate the holiday season than to listen to joyful and uplifting Baroque music. For...
-
70,954,611 views Premiered Dec 4, 2020 #JenniferHudson #OhSanta #ArianaGrande Watch the official music video for “Oh Santa!” by Mariah...
-
by Hermione Lai César Franck was born in the city of Liège on 10 December 1822, then part of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands. His fa...
-
161,052,120 views Dec 2, 2017 #ArtemisTour #Artemis Come see me on the #ArtemisTour ! Tickets are on sale now! Head here for tour dates...
-
by Georg Predota Arguably, the first composer to write true piano music was Ludwig van Beethoven . To be sure, he had tremendous technical...
-
107,287 views Nov 23, 2018 No description has been added to this video. Music 1 songs O Holy Night Mario Lanza, Constantine Callinicos C...
-
85,522,217 views Oct 1, 2021 Scorpions performing a 'Still Loving You' at Taratata in April 1996. Footage licensed from Institut N...
Showing posts with label Church Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Church Music. Show all posts
Friday, January 15, 2016
Johann Sebastian Bach - His Music and His Life
Johann Sebastian Bach was born on March 21, 1685, in Eisenach, Thuringia, Germany, into a large and distinguished family of professional musicians. His father, named Johann Ambrosius Bach, was a violinist and trumpeter, employed by the city of Eisenach. His uncles were church organists, court musicians and composers. His mother and father died before Bach was 10. As an orphan, he moved in with his eldest brother, J. C. Bach, an organist and composer, under whose tutelage Bach studied organ music as well as the construction and maintenance of the organ.
Education: At the age of 14, Bach received a scholarship and walked on foot 300 kilometers to the famous St. Michael's school in Lueneburg, near Hamburg. There he lived and studied for 2 years from 1699-1701. It was there that he sang a Capella at the boys chorale. Bach's studies included organ, harpsichord, and singing. In addition he took the academic studies in theology, history and geography, and lessons of Latin, Italian, and French. Besides his studies of music by the local Northern German composers, Bach had important exposure to the music of composers from other European nations; such as the French composers Jean-Baptiste Lully, Marais, and Marchand, the South German composers Johann Pachelbel and Froberger, and the Italians Arcangelo Corelli and Antonio Vivaldi.
Personality and character: Bach was 17 when he made a 4-month pilgrimage, walking on foot about 400 kilometers from Arnstadt to the Northern city of Lubeck. There he studied with 'Dietrich Buxtehude' and became so involved that he overstayed his leave by three months. Buxtehude being probably the best organist of his time became the living link between the founder of Baroque music Heinrich Schütz and the biggest Baroque genius, Bach. Back in Arnstadt, Bach wrote 'Toccata and Fugue in D Minor' (1702), his first masterpiece; which stemmed from his bold organ improvisations. At that time he was in love with his second cousin Maria Barbara; whom he was taking upstairs to the church organ, where her presence was inspirational for his creativity. Bach was punished for the violation of the restrictions on women's presence in the church and he was fired. However, he eventually married Maria Barbara.
Cross-cultural studies: Bach studied the orchestral music of Antonio Vivaldi and gained insight into his compositional language by arranging Vivaldi's concertos for organ. Six French suites were written for keyboard; each suite opens with 'Allemande' and consists of several pieces, including 'Courante', 'Sarabande', 'Menuet', 'Gavotte', 'Air', 'Anglaise', 'Polonaise', 'Bourree', and 'Gigue'. As suggested by their titles, the pieces were representing songs and dances from various cultures. From the music of the Italians Antonio Vivaldi, Arcangelo Corelli, and 'Giuseppe Torelli'; Bach adopted dramatic introductions and endings as well as vivacious rhythmical dynamism and elaborate harmonization. Bach also performed the music of English, French, and Italian composers; motets of the Venetian school, and incorporated their rhythmical patterns and textural structures in the development of his own style.
Teaching: Bach selected and instructed musicians for orchestras and choirs in Weimar and Leipzig. His work as a Cantor included teaching instrumental and vocal lessons to the church musicians and later to the musicians of the court orchestra. Bach was also a teacher of his own children and of his second wife. In 1730, Bach presented his second wife with a musical notebook for studies, known as the 'Notebook of Anna Magdalena Bach'. Compositions in the notebook were written in a form of minuete, polonaise, gavotte, march, rondeau, chorale, sonata, prelude, song, and aria; written mainly by Bach, as well as by his sons 'Carl Philip Emanuel Bach', Johann Christoph Bach, and composers 'Francois Couperin', Georg Bohm, and others.
Family: Bach married his second cousin, named Maria Barbara, who was the inspirational force for his early compositions. They had seven children, 4 of whom survived to adulthood. W. F. Bach, J. C. Bach, and C. P. E. Bach became composers. Maria Barbara died in 1720. On December 3, 1721, Bach married Anna Magdalena (bee Wilcke), a talented soprano, who was 17 years his junior. They had thirteen children. Bach fathered a total of 20 children with his two wives. His sons 'Friedemann Bach', Johann Christoph Bach, and 'Carl Philip Emanuel Bach' became important composers in the Rococo style. The descendants of Bach are living in many countries across the world.
Social activity: Bach replaced his friend Georg Philipp Telemann as the director of the popular orchestra known as Collegium Musicum, which he led from 1729-1750. It was a private secular music society that gave concert performances twice a week at the Zimmerman's Coffeehouse near the Leipzig market square. Bach's exposure to such a secular public environment inspired him to compose numerous purely entertainment pieces for solo keyboard and several violin and harpsichord concertos.
Politics: Being the undisputed musical genius, Bach still suffered from ugly political machinations. Although the Leipzig Council had enough money, they never honored the promised salary of 1000 talers a year; promised to Bach by the Mayor of Leipzig, Gottlieb Lange, at the hiring interview. Bach worked diligently, in spite of being underpaid for 27 years until his death. On top of that local political factions in the Leipzig Council manipulated Bach's educational work as well as his compositions and public performances. They were pressuring him as the Cantor and Composer and interfering his creative efforts by imposing restrictions on his performances because of their ugly political games. Bach prevailed as he composed and played his "Mass in B Minor" to the monarch of Saxony and was appointed the Royal Court Composer of Saxony.
King Frederick the Great invited Bach to Potsdam in 1747. There the king played his own theme for Bach and challenged the composer to improvise on it. Bach used the 'royal theme' and improvised a three-part fugue on the king's piano. Later Bach upgraded the king's theme to a more sophisticated melody, and composed an array of pieces based on the improved 'royal theme', which he titled "Musical Offering" and later presented this composition to the king.
Legacy: Bach wrote over eleven hundred music compositions in all genres. In Leipzig alone he wrote a cantata for every Sunday and feast day of the year, of which 224 cantatas survive. Some of his compositions were written on the same theme at different times in his life, like choral cantatas and organ works on similar themes with significantly reworked arrangements. The complete list of Bach's works, BWV, has 1127 compositions for voice, organ, harpsichord, violin, cello, flute, chamber music for small ensembles, orchestral music, concertos for violin and orchestra, and for keyboard and orchestra. His music became the essential part of the education for every musician. Bach influenced such great composers as Ludwig van Beethoven, Franz Liszt, Frédéric Chopin, Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Sergei Prokofiev and many other prominent musicians.
Bach is by far the most performed and recorded composer in history. His 'Das Wohltemperierte Clavier' (The well-tempered keyboard, or The well-tuned piano, in modern terminology) is the definitive work for all students as well as concert musicians. Bach's 'Orgelbuchlein' (The little organ book) is a staple in the repertoire of organists and pianists, and some pieces from it were arranged for ensembles. Bach's many chorales, especially the "Mass in B Minor" are considered the best works in the genre. His last work 'The Art of Fugue' is best known for it's acclaimed performance by Glenn Gould. Bach's music was used in hundreds of films, thousands of stage productions, and continues being played all over the world.
The definitive biography of J. S. Bach was written by the Nobel Prize Laureate Albert Schweitzer.
Thursday, August 28, 2014
Things you didn't know about Johann Sebastian Bach
Bach-ing mad: the great composer summed up in dog gifs
Born 1685 in Eisenach
Johann Sebastian was born into a musical dynasty. Uncles, cousins, fathers, cats, dogs; you name it, the Bachs were legendary in musical circles.
The child prodigy
By age 10, Bach's
mother and father had both died, he moved to the nearby town of Ohrdruf
with his elder brother, Johann Christoph Bach. His brother taught him
music, but wasn't too keen on Johann Sebastian copying out his scores.
The younger Bach had to sneak peaks at Johann Christoph's music library
under cover of darkness. This 10-year-old was getting good, and nobody
could hold him back.
The amazing organist
Bach took a choral scholarship at St. Michael's School in
Lüneburg. The surname on the CV probably helped. He met all sorts of
people, and heard a whole heap of new musical styles. He sang and played
the organ; he was very good at the organ - leaps and bounds ahead of
anyone else.
Off to see his hero
Bach had an idol, and it was Dieterich Buxtehude. He
decided that Buxtehude's famously extravagant Abendmusiken concerts in
Lübeck had to be experienced, so the young composer famously made the
250-mile journey on foot. Let's hope he enjoyed the gig.
Getting into fights
The maestro apparently called one of his students a "nanny-goat bassoonist" - and it sparked a marketplace brawl. Boys will be boys.
Doing what he did best: church music
Bach took another church job in Weimar, and soon became known as one of Germany's greatest composers and virtuosos, taking on organ pupils from far and wide. He also
married Maria Barbara – so happy times all round (for the time being at
least).
A bit of aristocratic chamber music
Either he'd had enough of the church, or he just fancied a
bit of extra shut-eye on a Sunday morning, but Bach soon moved on to
pastures new: Prince Leopold's court in Cöthen . Here, he pumped out huge amounts of chamber music. And a good thing too.
And heading to Leipzig
Bach's first wife died suddenly, and the composer got
married for a second time - to singer Anna Magdalena Wilcke. Prince
Leopold had married too, but his wife wasn't too fond of music. It was
time for the Bach family to move on again, and Leipzig it was.
A big family
He wasn't just prolific in music - his family was
flourishing (he had 20 children in all). His wife Anna Magdalena helped
in the music copying, and several of his sons were making big names for
themselves as composers and musicians.
His inner geek released
Bach grew increasingly frustrated and disillusioned with
the authorities at St. Thomas's Church - so he amused himself in
creating large scale, and quite geeky, compositional projects.
So enigmatic...
Bach loved numbers, and musical riddles. Many of his
great works contain encoded numerological messages and complex things
like mirrored sections.
All sorts of puzzles and fugues
The Musical Offering was a collection of musical puzzles
on a single melodic theme - and included something termed the 'Crab
Fugue'.
Bach, and the future
When Bach died in 1750 his style of composition was considered old-fashioned and rather out-of-date. His sons. composing in new styles, were now considered the hottest things in town. But over the following decades and centuries Bach's music was rediscovered and he became regarded as one of the finest composers in musical history. Many have since tried to imitate, but there's only one.
Friday, May 17, 2013
Orlando di Lasso - His Music and Life
Lassus, also known
by the Italian form of his name Orlando di Lasso, belonged to the
Franco-Flemish school of composers whose work was of supreme
international importance in the 16th century. He was born at Mons, in
Hainaut, in 1532, and as a boy entered the service of a member of the
Gonzaga family (hereditary dukes of Mantua). Employment elsewhere in
Italy and a stay in Antwerp was followed by a position in the musical
establishment of Duke Albrecht V of Bavaria in Munich, where Lassus
remained from 1556 until his death. With Palestrina and Victoria, he is
one of the most important composers of the period.
Church Music
Lassus wrote a considerable quantity of church music, including over
70 settings of the Mass, settings of the Passions from the four
evangelists, and a very large number of motets. From this considerable
body of high-quality work, selection is invidious; but mention may be
made of the Requiem for four voices, the Missa Qual donna, motets such as Tristis est anima mea, and the setting of the seven penitential Psalms of David and of the Holy Week Lamentations.
Secular Vocal Music
The secular vocal compositions of Lassus include madrigals, in the
Italian style, some 150 French chansons, and a much smaller number of
German Lieder, all of great interest and forming a large body of work,
including settings of Petrarch, Ariosto, Ronsard and Marot, from which
selection is again invidious.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)