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Johann Christian Bach |
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Johann
Christian Bach, painted in London by Thomas Gainsborough, 1776 (Museo Civico,
Bologna) |
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Background information |
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Birth name |
Johann Christian Bach |
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Johann
Christian Bach (September 5,
1735 – January 1, 1782) was a composer of the
Classical era, the eleventh and youngest son of
Johann Sebastian Bach. He is sometimes
referred to 'the London Bach' or 'the English Bach', due to his time spent
living there.
JC Bach was born in Leipzig, Germany. His
father, and possibly also Johann Christian's second cousin Johann Elias Bach,
trained young Johann Christian in music. It is believed that Book II of Johann
Sebastian’s The Well-Tempered Clavier was written
and used for Johann Christian's instruction.[citation needed] Johann
Christian served as copyist to his father, and, on the death of his father in 1750, Johann Christian
became the pupil of his half-brother Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach in Berlin.
In 1754 JC Bach went to Italy where he
studied counterpoint
under Giovanni Battista Martini, and from 1760
to 1762 held the post of organist at Milan Cathedral,
for which he wrote two Masses, a Requiem, a Te Deum, and
other works. Around this time he converted from Lutheranism to Catholicism.
He was the only one of Johann Sebastian's sons to
write opera in Italian,
starting with arias
inserted into the operas of others, then pasticcios.
The Teatro Regio in Turin
commissioned him to write Artaserse, an opera seria that was premiered in 1760.
This led to more opera commissions and offers from Venice and London to compose
operas for them. He accepted the London opportunity and travelled there in
1762, and it was to be London where he would spend the rest of his life, much
like George Frideric Handel, another composer who
decided to make his permanent residence in London 50 years prior. Thus, JC is
often referred to as the "London Bach". The Milan Cathedral
kept his position open, hoping he would return.
For twenty years he was the most popular musician
in England:
dramatic works, produced at the King’s theatre, were received with great
cordiality.
The first of these, Orione, was one
of the first few musical works to use clarinets. His
final opera seria, La Clemenza di
Scipione (1778), remained popular with London audiences for many
years and shows interesting parallels with Mozart's last opera in this genre, La Clemenza di Tito (1791), suggesting the
younger composer may have been influenced by the elder's score.[citation needed]
Johann Christian was appointed music master to the
Queen, and his duties included
giving music lessons to her and her children, and accompaniment on piano, with the King playing flute. JC's
concerts, given in partnership with Abel at the Hanover Square rooms, soon became the most
fashionable of public entertainments. The most famous musicians in that period
participated in those concerts, such as the Italian cellist Giovanni Battista Cirri, and many of
Haydn's works received their English premiere in the same building.
During his first years in London, Bach made
friends with the eight-year old Mozart, who was there as part of the endless tours arranged by
his father Leopold for the purpose of displaying the child
prodigy. Many scholars judge that J. C. Bach was one of the most important
influences on Mozart, who learned from him how to produce a brilliant and
attractive surface texture in his music. This influence can be seen directly in
the opening of Mozart’s piano sonata in B‐flat (KV 315c, the Linz sonata
from 1783 – 1784) which very closely resembles that of two sonatas of Bach’s
which Mozart would have known; and indirectly in Bach’s attempt in an early
sonata (the C minor piano sonata, Op. 5 no. 6) to more effectively combine the galant style of
his day with fugal
music.
Johann Christian Bach died in poverty in London on
the first day of 1782 and was buried in an unmarked pauper's grave at St Pancras Old Church, with his surname being
misspelt in the burial register as Back.
Mozart said in a letter to his father that it was
"a loss to the musical world." When Mozart had first met J. C. Bach
as a young boy, the two were described as "inseparable" by Mozart's
father. They would sit at the organ, Mozart on Johann Christian's lap, both
playing music for hour upon hour. It is often said by scholars that the music
of Mozart was greatly influenced by Johann Christian. This is precisely why, in
later years, Mozart would embrace the elder (Johann Sebastian) Bach's music as
well. Johann Christian likely influenced the young Mozart in the forms of
symphony and piano concerto. The spirit and sound of the young Mozart and J.
C's music is remarkably similar. At the time of Bach's death, Mozart was
composing his Piano Concerto No. 12 in A Major, K. 414; the
Andante second movement of this concerto has a theme close to one found in
Bach's La calamità del cuore overture. It
has been suggested that Mozart's slow movement was intended as a tribute to JC
Bach, his music, and his importance to Mozart's own work.
Although Bach's fame declined in the decades
following his death, his music still showed up on concert programmes in London
with some regularity, often coupled with works by Haydn.
In the 19th century, scholarly work on the life and music of Johann Christian's
father began, but often this led to exaltation of J. S. Bach's music at the
expense of that of his sons; Phillip Spitta claimed towards the end of his J.
S. Bach biography that "it is especially in Bach's sons that we may mark
the decay of that power which had culminated [in Sebastian] after several
centuries of growth" (Spitta, Vol. 3, p. 278), and Sebastian's first
biographer, Johann Nikolaus Forkel, said specifically of
Christian that "The original spirit of Bach is . . . not to be found in
any of his works" (New Bach Reader, p. 458). It was not until the
20th century that scholars and the musical world began to realize that Bach's
sons could legitimately compose in a different style than their father without
their musical idioms being inferior or debased, and composers like Johann
Christian began to receive renewed appreciation.
He is of some historical interest as the first
composer who preferred the piano to older keyboard instruments such as the
harpsichord. Johann Christian’s early music shows the influence of his older
brother Carl Philipp Emanuel, while his middle period in Italy shows the
influence of Sammartini.
Johann Christian Bach's father died when he was
fifteen; this may be one reason why it is difficult to find points of obvious
comparison between Johann Sebastian Bach and Johann Christian. The piano
sonatas of Carl Phillip Emanuel Bach, Johann Christian's brother, tend to
invoke certain elements of the father at times, considering that his father
died when he had reached the age of 36. The use of counterpoint is especially
comparable to that of Johann Sebastian.
Johann Christian's music, however, departs
completely from the styles of the elder Bachs - his music is highly melodic and
brilliantly structured. He composed in the galant aesthetic, a style
encorporating balanced phrases, emphasis on melody and accompaniment, without
too much contrapuntal complexity. The galant movement was against
the intricate lines of Baroque music, and instead places importance on fluid
melodies in periodic phrases. It preceded the classical style, which fused the
galant aesthetics with a renewed interest in counterpoint.
The symphonies listed in the Work List for J. C. Bach in the New
Grove Bach Family number ninety-one works. A little more than half of
these, 48 works, are considered authentic, while the remaining 43 are doubtful
or spurious.
By comparison, the composer sometimes called
"the Father of the Symphony," Joseph
Haydn, wrote slightly over 100. Most of these are not fully comparable to
Johann Christian Bach's symphonies, because many of Bach's works in this
category are closer to the Italian sinfonia than
to the late classical symphony in its most fully developed state as found in
the later works in this category by Haydn and Mozart. Using comparative duration as a
rough means of comparison, consider that a standard recording of one of Bach's
finest symphonies, Op. 6 no. 6 in g minor, has a total time of 13 minutes and 7
seconds (as performed by Hanover Band directed by Anthony
Halstead), while Haydn's "Surprise" Symphony in a typical
recording (by Ádám Fischer conducting the Austro-Hungarian
Haydn Orchestra) lasts 23 minutes and 43 seconds.
It is clear that the listener of J. C. Bach's
symphonies should come to these works with different expectations from the ones
he or she brings to those of Haydn or Mozart. Concert halls across America are
frequently filled with the music of Haydn, and comparatively rarely with that
of J. C. Bach, which probably has less to do with their relative quality (since
the music of the latter is clearly accomplished and worthy of being heard) than
with their relative historical positions regarding the classical symphony. But
J. C. Bach's music is more and more being recognized for its high quality and
significance. The Halstead recording mentioned above is part of a complete
survey of this composer's orchestral works on 22 CDs for the record label
CPO, and the complete works of J. C. Bach have now been published in The Collected Works of
Johann Christian Bach.