Bach's musical universe The composer and his work

Christoph Wolff

Book - 2020

"A comprehensive and fascinating study of the overall creative output of Johann Sebastian Bach, capturing the essence of his art. In this companion volume to his Pulitzer Prize-finalist biography, Johann Sebastian Bach: The Learned Musician, leading Bach scholar Christoph Wolff contextualizes his famous subject by delving deeply into the composer's rich collection of music. Emerging from this complex and massive oeuvre, Bach's Musical Universe is a focused discussion of a meaningful selection of compositions- from the famous Well-Tempered Clavier, violin and cello solos, and Brandenburg Concertos to the St. Matthew Passion, Art of Fugue, and B- Minor Mass. Unlike any study undertaken before, this book details Bach's crea...tive process across the various instrumental and vocal genres, and centers on what the composer himself judiciously presented in carefully designed benchmark collections and individual works- all consequential to Bach's musical art. Tracing Bach's evolution as a composer, Wolff compellingly illuminates the ideals and legacy of this giant of classical music in a new, refreshing light for everyone, from the amateur to the virtuoso"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

780.92/Bach
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 780.92/Bach Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : W. W. Norton & Company, Inc [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Christoph Wolff (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xviii, 410 pages : illustrations, music ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [347]-369) and indexes.
ISBN
9780393050714
  • General Abbreviations
  • List of Illustrations
  • Preface
  • Prologue: On the Primacy and Pervasiveness of Polyphony: The Composer's Business Card
  • Chapter 1. Revealing the Narrative of a Musical Universe: The First List of Works from 1750
  • Size of the Estate
  • Survival of Original Manuscripts
  • Benchmark Works
  • Chapter 2. Transformative Approaches to Composition and Performance: Three Unique Keyboard Workbooks
  • Revealing Afterthoughts: Three Unique Title Pages
  • Orgel-Büchleim A Collection of Short Chorale Preludes
  • Das Wohltemperierte Clavier: Preludes and Fugues in All Keys
  • Aufrichtige Anleitung: Inventions and Sinfonias
  • Chapter 3. In Search of the Autonomous Instrumental Design: Toccata, Suite, Sonata, Concerto
  • At Home on Keyboards and Other Instruments
  • The Inaugural Opus: Six Keyboard Toccatas
  • Opus Collections from Weimar and Cöthen
  • Two sets of six suites for harpsichord, with and without preludes
  • Two books of unaccompanied solos, for violin and for violoncello
  • Six concertos for several instruments
  • Early Leipzig Reverberations
  • Six sonatas for harpsichord and violin
  • Six trio sonatas for organ
  • Chapter 4. The Most Ambitious of All Projects: Chorale Cantatas throughout the Year
  • Background, Concept, and Schedule
  • A Serial Opus
  • Opening movements
  • Arias, recitatives, and final chorales
  • Incomplete and Yet Monumental
  • Chapter 5. Proclaiming the State of the Art in Keyboard Music: The Clavier-Übung Series
  • Clavier-Übung, Part I: Six Partitas
  • Clavier-Übung, Part II: Italian Concerto and French Overture
  • Clavier-Übung, Part III: A German Livre d'orgue
  • Clavier-Übung, Part IV: Goldberg Variations
  • Chapter 6. A Grand Liturgical Messiah Cycle: Three Passions and a Trilogy of Oratorios
  • St. John Passion
  • Christ the King: "Herr, unser Herrscher"
  • Man of Sorrows: "Betrachte, meine Seel"
  • Christus Victor: "Es ist vollbracht"
  • The different versions of the St. John Passion-a Note
  • St. Matthew Passion
  • Composer and librettist: A productive partnership
  • The choir loft as virtual stage
  • Human characters and emotions
  • St. Mark Passion
  • The Oratorio Trilogy
  • Christmas Oratorio
  • Easter Oratorio
  • Ascension Oratorio
  • Chapter 7. In Critical Survey and Review Mode: Revisions, Transcriptions, Reworkings
  • Disposal vs. Preservation
  • No Random Yield
  • The Great Eighteen Chorales for Organ
  • The Six "Schübler" Chorales for Organ
  • Harpsichord Concertos
  • Kyrie-Gloria Masses
  • The Well-Tempered Clavier, Part II
  • Chapter 8. Instrumental and Vocal Polyphony at Its Peak Art of Fugue and B-minor Mass
  • The Art of Fugue Completed: The Manuscript Version
  • Canonic Intermezzi
  • Fourteen Canons on the "Goldberg" Aria
  • Canonic Variations on the Christmas song "Vom Himmel hoch"
  • The canons of the Musical Offering
  • The Art of Fugue Unfinished: The Published Version
  • The Mass in B Minor
  • A wide spectrum of styles for a timeless genre
  • The parts and the whole
  • Legacy
  • Epilogue. "Praxis cum theoria": Maxim of the Learned Musician
  • Chronology
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Illustration Credits
  • Genre Index of Bach's Works
  • Title Index of Bach's Works
  • General Index
Review by Booklist Review

Johann Sebastian Bach's colossal output makes it difficult for anyone to characterize his music. Wolff, Harvard professor and director of Leipzig's Bach Archive, knows the master's work both broadly and deeply, so he sets out to find the larger themes and organizing principles to help modern listeners understand what Bach accomplished during his career. Bach had to produce music almost daily to support the church year's liturgical cycle, but that scarcely stopped him from exploring the vast soundscape of polyphony that still serves as textbook examples of pure musical form for its own sake. And Bach was determined that this music be played in ways to avoid monotony. Thus, in his famous Goldberg Variations, the final section of the Clavier-Übung, Bach specified strict meters and tempos that give this music liveliness and even surprise. He also cast many pieces in ways that allowed them to be performed by both multi-keyboard instruments or less elaborate instrumentation. Wolff's work speaks to the musically adept, and his scholarly perspective requires more than passing familiarity with reading musical notation.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The celebrated 18th-century German composer Johann Sebastian Bach was the great brainiac of classical music, according to this dense scholarly study. Harvard music historian Wolff (Johann Sebastian Bach: The Learned Musician) styles Bach a musical intellectual whose hallmarks were "swift mental processing of complex musical considerations" and "meticulous rationalizations of the creative act," all bent toward perfecting the complex counterpoint of polyphonic voices that snake and twine through his music. This isn't a full biography; instead, Wolff focuses on analyzing a group of landmark compositions, including the keyboard pieces in The Well-Tempered Clavier and the Goldberg Variations, the giant cycle of chorale cantatas for church services; the Brandenburg Concertos and the St. John and St. Matthew Passions. The book is quite technical and often bone dry as it delves into the details of compositional dating; issues of tuning, counterpoint, and instrumentation; the selection of texts for choral writing; and the revisions Bach made in pieces over the years. It's full of music theory, tabularized data on the structures of compositions, and photos of Bach's manuscript scores that convey little impression beyond how bewilderingly complicated they are. Readers with a serious musicological background will appreciate Wolff's deep dive into Bach's craft, but casual Bach-lovers will find it a heavy and not very tuneful slog. (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A close investigation of Bach's works reveals remarkable transformations.Eminent musicologist Wolff (Adams University Professor Emeritus/Harvard Univ.; Mozart at the Gateway to His Fortune: Serving the Emperor, 1788-1791, 2012, etc.) offers an erudite companion to his biography Johann Sebastian Bach (2000), a Pulitzer Prize finalist, with a detailed examination of the development of Bach's creative process, goals, and achievements. Because Bach left no theoretical writings, Wolff selects from the composer's prodigious oeuvreincluding keyboard workbooks, toccatas, suites, sonatas, concertos, choral works, and oratoriosto focus on elements of musical design, engagement with other repertoires and genres, reassessment of existing conventions, and innovations. Facsimile pages are excerpted from an online library of Bach manuscripts. Bach, writes the author, "competed with himself constantly," making "judicious revisions to his own works." His competitive attitude also led him to pay careful attention to the works of other composers, past and contemporary, as he evaluated his own compositions. Also influencing his musical evolution were the demands of his changing professional duties: town organist, court organist and chamber musician, concertmaster, and cantor and music director in Leipzig, where he also directed the Leipzig Collegium Musicum for more than 10 years. As part of his duties in Leipzig, he was required to offer about 60 cantata performances yearly; although these did not have to be his own compositions, Bach added "a considerable repertoire of his own music" to his growing sacred and secular vocal compositions. Throughout his career, Wolff notes, Bach was "a passionate instrumentalist," acclaimed for his performances on the organ and harpsichord, and he was frequently invited to give guest concerts. His prowess on the keyboard fed directly into his "pathbreaking approaches" to harpsichord and fortepiano. The author identifies Bach's intense interest in exploring "all facets of the art of polyphony" as singularly characteristic of the composer's musical language. For a musically sophisticated reader familiar with Bach's works, as well as musical terminology and technique, Wolff's analyses have the potential of enriching the listening experience.An authoritative, lucid chronicle of Bach's multifaceted musical context. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.