Today Johann Sebastian Bach is considered the eminent church musician
of his age. Although he was well respected in his lifetime, his fame rested
on his ability as an organist. Music history shows that this provincial
cantor in Leipzig dominated the sacred music of the period with his mastery
of:
Music for the Lutheran liturgy.
Passion settings.
Cantatas for the church year.
Chorale settings for choir and for organ.
Other organ music. His lifetime goal was to prepare well-regulated
church music. Bach based his practice of church music on the Bible,
Lutheran doctrine, Lutheran liturgy, and the traditional chorale
During several generations, before and after Johann Sebastian, members
of the Bach family were leading Lutheran church musicians, principally
in northern and eastern Germany. Johann Sebastian was greatly influenced
by Dietrich Buxtehude, as well as other French and Italian composers such
as Vivaldi. His prolific contemporary, Georg Philipp Telemann, was far
more renowned at the time.
While Johann Sebastian Bach was the most famous, he came from a long
line of musicians with the name Bach. Their vocation had been music for
a number of generations. The reputation of the Bach family was well known
throughout much of Germany.
Dietrich Buxtehude, who was born in Denmark in about 1637 and died in
Luebeck in 1707, was an important composer and organist who greatly influenced
Johann Sebastian Bach. Buxtehude
was an organist at St. Mary's Church in Luebeck for nearly 40 years. He also
served as business manager of the church.
Although much of his music was performed in ordinary Lutheran worship,
he was most famous for performances in the popular late afternoon Abendmusiken
concerts of sacred music given on Sundays in Advent.
Following a tradition begun by his predecessor Franz Tunder, Buxtehude
presented a variety of often-dramatic choral and organ music in concerts
at the conclusion of Vespers worship. Bach traveled more than 250 miles
on foot to experience these concerts and worship first hand.
Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767) was one of the most prolific, energetic,
well-known and celebrated composers of the century. At Leipzig, he was
a church musician, founded a Collegium musicum, and became Director of
the Opera. In Zary, Poland, and later in Eisenach, he was Court Capellmeister.
In Frankfurt he became City Music Director. His most enduring assignment
was in Hamburg, where he spent 46 years, serving as music director of
five churches, Director of the Opera, and of a Collegium musicum. While
in Hamburg, he wrote about 30 operas, many oratorios, and chamber music.
It is interesting to note the vacant St. Thomas position in Leipzig first
was offered to Telemann before it was offered to his friend Bach. Telemann
ultimately refused the offer and stayed in Hamburg when the authorities
there refused to release him. (They increased his salary).
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