Bach to the rescue!!! How a rich dude who couldn't sleep inspired the greatest music ever

Tom Angleberger

Book - 2019

Creative nonfiction picture book about Johann Sebastian Bach's creation of the Goldberg Variations. Loosely based on Albert Schweitzer's account which even Schweitzer noted may not be all true.

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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Angleberger (the Origami Yoda series) takes more than a few liberties with this playful account of how Johann Sebastian Bach may have come to compose the Goldberg Variations, one of his most well-known works for harpsichord. "Once upon a time, there was a Rich Dude who couldn't sleep," the story begins. When insomnia strikes, the Rich Dude wakes up his personal harpsichord player, Goldberg (and the rest of the village, which becomes tired and tetchy), but none of Goldberg's compositions satisfy him. Then Bach arrives with the gusto of a stage magician-"I showed up! (Don't I look nice? That's my best wig!)." Bach soon composes "the Greatest Music Ever Written Ever" for Goldberg, the Rich Dude sleeps, and Goldberg is lauded by the villagers. Elio (Monster Mayhem) illustrates in exuberant cartoons, with broad, boldly outlined characters carrying exaggerated expressions. In an author's note, Angleberger describes the solace the Goldberg Variations provide him; endpapers feature musical notations from the work. Ages 4-8. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

How the self-styled "greatest composer ever!" created the Greatest Music Ever Written Ever for a Rich Dude who could not sleep.Improvising on a historical anecdote that he admits "may not be true," Angleberger has Bach himself explain how he created what came to be known as the "Goldberg Variations"named for the beleaguered personal harpsichordist of a grumpy, insomniac Rich Dude unmoved by sonatinas ("Too slow!!!"), minuets ("Too fast!!!"), or toccatas ("Too toccatally!"). So how did Bach do it? "I took some leftover notes and a dance hall tune and an old folk song or something and mashed them all up, and it was the Greatest Music Ever Written Ever," he trumpets. "Yes, it's just that easy for me!" The Dude and all his likewise grumpy, sleep-deprived servants and neighbors are delighted, one of the former sighing, "each note falls into just the right spot in my brain." Some brown faces in the crowd scenes add diversity to the mostly white cast, and Elio's broad, simply drawn, loudly colored cartoon scenes otherwise provide worthy accompaniment for the high-volume, exclamation-strewn narrative. An appreciative note from the author citing a free, online recording of the work serves up a proper coda, but readers hoping to learn the Rich Dude's name or more about Bach will have to look elsewhere.Decidedly irreverentbut never disrespectfulriffs on a musical masterwork and its creator. (Picture book. 6-10) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.