The six Brandenburg concertos were dedicated to Christian Ludwig, Margrave of Brandenburg. Each of the six concerti is distinct and can stand alone from one another as individual pieces, not to be seen as a set of works to some respect. Hearing the 5th concerto in comparison from the rest shows us clearly that Bach was a brilliant contrapuntist.…
This baroque concerto is composed by Johann Sebastian Bach, the famous baroque composer of his time. This work is the fifth of six concertos the composer dedicated to Christian Ludwig, Margrave of Brandenburg. This piece showcases Bach's inimitable strength as a contrapuntist. Bach’s music has flexibility in its form and influence, but still retaining the constraints of the form of baroque music. He blended Italian and German music in these concertos, giving them a distinctive touch. This fifth concerto is made distinctive by the flute, solo violin, harpsichord, and strings. It is the only one of the six pieces to have any solo given to the harpsichord, which is part of the continuo throughout…
Although this artifact of study varies from the standard artifact in rhetorical study, there is much to be said about the uses of rhetorical devices in relation to their musical equivalents. I chose to study Bach because of my appreciation for his music, the complexity, and the overall relevance in the musical world. Without having known any connections between music theory and rhetoric, some brief investigation led me to several meaningful sources that showed me those connections. I have come to realize that there is more research and information on musical rhetoric, even in connection to Bach, than I had previously realized. First, I will discuss who J.S. Bach is and his importance in the musical world. Next, I will dissect a work of Bach,…
C. Bach exemplify adequate usage of Classical era techniques on the keyboard. J. C. Bach’s composition, “Concerto for Harpsichord or Piano and Strings in E-flat Major,” serves as an ample example of the use and stylistic techniques of the keyboard in the Classical era. The keyboard concerto was a popular genre throughout the classical era, and J. C. Bach was perhaps one of the most influential composers in this category, as he was among the first to compose this particular genre. Throughout this piece, there are three movements, a fast movement followed by a slow movement, and then another fast movement. This organization was extremely typical for solo concertos in the 1700s. The galant style is heard in this piece through the lush ornamentation and sophistication. For example, in measure 17, one can note the elegance in the recurring 32nd to dotted 8th notes. As this composition calls for either a harpsichord or a piano, one might contend that a piano would be better suited, due to the lack of dynamic contrast achievable on the…
Johann Sebastian Bach was born in Germany in the year of 1685, about 85 years after the Baroque era began. Bach passed away in 1750 at about the closing of the baroque era. Bach was born in a decently large family compared to today's standards. There were nine people in his family, seven other…
Johann Sebastian Bach was born on March 31, 1685 in Eisenach, Saxe-Eisenach to the director of town musicians, Johann Ambrosius Bach, and his wife, Maria Elisabeth Lämmerhirt. He was the eighth child to be born in the family and was around music since he was a child. His uncles were all professional musicians and historians assume that his older brother taught him violin and basic musical theory when he was very young. Little did his family know, he would eventually become one of the most well known composers in history.…
Johonnes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart was Mozart’s full name. Mozart was born on January 27, 1756 with his mother Anna Maria and his father Leopold Mozart by his side. Mozart was born in Salzburg, Austria where both of his parents lived. According to Volker’s Biography Mozart was often called “Wolfgang Amadeus” or “Wolfgang Gottlieb” (Boehm). He was also known as a prodigy or a young one endowed with special qualities.…
Felix Mendelssohn was not only an accepted composer and pianist, but also a sensitive painter, skillful writer, and fluent in three languages aside from his native deutsch tongue. The genesis of Mendelssohn's successful life in the arts, began with piano lessons from his mother. He was later taught by Marie Bigot in Paris, and eventually tutored by Ludwig Berger, a former student of Clementi's. Young Mendelssohn also studied composition with Carl Friedrich Zelter, a keen enthusiast of J.S.Bach. Zelter's appreciation for Bach's music was passed on to his student, and Mendelssohn himself became a devout admirer of Bach. Mendelssohn was not only an accepted composer and pianist, but also a sensitive painter, skillful writer, and fluent in three languages aside from his native deutsch tongue. When Mendelssohn was 20, he conducted Bach's oratio Saint Matthew's Passion. It's performance not sparked afresh a new interest in the music of Bach, but also gained him "respect and recognition" in the realm of music. Six years later, Mendelssohn was made the conductor of the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, and under his direction it developed into one of the finest in all Europe. A few years prior to his…
Martin Luther was a German priest from the 14th century. He was one of the first people to question the Catholic Church and their teachings. He first began questioning the church when he went to Rome for the first time. He bought an indulgence, or a piece of paper that could forgive you or someone you love of your sins, he soon realized that this was a scam put on by the church so they could get more money. He battled against the church about this for a very long time and after he got the word out about indulgences bringing no peace or forgiveness many people stopped buying them. This was the beginning of a revolution.…
Bach was born in Eisenach in 1685. He was taught to play the violin and harpsichord by his father, Johann Ambrosius, a court trumpeter in the service of the Duke of Eisenach. Young Johann was not yet ten when his father died, leaving him orphaned. He was taken in by his recently…
to study with his brother, Johann Christoph. In the early 1700's Bach began working as a…
Who was Johann Sebastian Bach? Did he have any mathematical background? What is special about his music? Johann Sebastian Bach was a famous fugal German composer during the Baroque era. He is now known as the greatest composer of all time. The job of a fugal composer is to make the lines in music develop independently, and still fit everything together while playing the music. On the Organ, Bach proved that he could make a four-part fugue. He explored harmony much more deeply than other composers in that period of time such as Handel or Vivaldi. Bach's music can include unusual “jazzy” chords. The music he made didn’t have to be played on a specific instrument, the same pieces could be played on a piano that was meant for a guitar, in…
Johann Sebastian Bach’s was born on the 21st of March 1685 and died in 1750. He was a German composer, during the Baroque period. His Fugue in C minor was written in the middle years of his life, 1722. A fugue is a contrapuntal composition, where a subject is developed. It has 3 main parts an Exposition, Middle section and the Final Section.…
He was a composer and, a performer who was extremely skilled at his craft. Bach was credited with over 1000 different compositions; including his most important, “The Saint Johns Passion”(Hanford). Originally Bach intended that the St John Passion would be first performed in the St. Thomas Church in Leipzig, but due to a last-minute change by the music council, it was first performed on Good Friday of 1724 in the St. Nicholas Church, shortly after Bach's 39th birthday(Hanford).. The St. Johns Passion was the best piece of western music composed because of its musicality, and its purpose.…
George Frideric Handel was born in Halle, Germany on February 23, 1685. He was born about a month before J.S. Bach. He was the son of a barber-surgeon who wanted him to study law, but he allowed him to study music. His family was not musically inclined, but Handel was attracted to music and opera at a young age. He became a student of Zachow, the principal organist in Halle. When he was seventeen, he was appointed organist of the Calvinist Cathedral, but a year later he left for Hamburg. At age eighteen he moved to Hamburg, the center of German opera at the time. He got a job in the opera orchestra playing the violin and the harpsichord. Eventually he had an opera of his own produced.…