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This is the second of a two-volume study of the music of Johann
Sebastian Bach. Taking into account the vast increase in our
knowledge of the composer due to the Bach scholarship of the last
sixty years, Richard Jones presents a vivid and in some respects
radically new picture of his creative development during the
Coethen (1717-23) and Leipzig years (1723-50). The approach is, as
far as possible, chronological and analytical, but the author has
also tried to make the book readable so that it may be accessible
to music lovers and amateur performers as well as to students,
scholars, and professional musicians. There are many good
biographies of Bach, but this is the first, fully-comprehensive,
in-depth study of his music making it indispensable for those who
want to study specific pieces or learn how he developed as a
composer.
This book gives an account of the individual works of one of the
greatest composers. The first volume of a two-volume study of the
music of J. S. Bach covers the earlier part of his composing
career, 1695-1717. By studying the music chronologically a coherent
picture of the composer's creative development emerges, drawing
together all the strands of the individual repertoires (e.g. the
cantatas, the organ music, the keyboard music). The volume is
divided into two parts, covering the early works and the mature
Weimar compositions respectively. Each part deals with four
categories of composition in turn: large-scale keyboard works;
preludes, fantasias, and fugues; organ chorales; and cantatas.
Within each category, the discussion is prefaced by a list of the
works to be considered, together with details of their original
titles, catalogue numbers, and earliest sources. The study is thus
usable as a handbook on Bach's works as well as a connected study
of his creative development. As indicated by the subtitle Music to
Delight the Spirit,, borrowed from Bach's own title-pages, Richard
Jones draws attention to another important aspect of the book: not
only is it a study of style and technique but a work of criticism,
an analytical evaluation of Bach's music and an appreciation of its
extraordinary qualities. It also takes account of the remarkable
advances in Bach scholarship that have been made over the last 50
years, including the many studies that have appeared relating to
various aspects of Bach's early music, such as the varied
influences to which he was subjected and the problematic issues of
dating and authenticity that arise. In doing so, it attempts to
build up a coherent picture of his development as a creative
artist, helping us to understand what distinguishes Bach's mature
music from his early works and from the music of his predecessors
and contemporaries. Hence we learn why it is that his later works
are instantly recognizable as 'Bachian'.
This is the second of a two-volume study of the music of Johann
Sebastian Bach. Taking into account the vast increase in our
knowledge of the composer due to the Bach scholarship of the last
sixty years, Richard Jones presents a vivid and in some respects
radically new picture of his creative development during the
Coethen (1717-23) and Leipzig years (1723-50). The approach is, as
far as possible, chronological and analytical, but the author has
also tried to make the book readable so that it may be accessible
to music lovers and amateur performers as well as to students,
scholars, and professional musicians. There are many good
biographies of Bach, but this is the first, fully-comprehensive,
in-depth study of his music making it indispensable for those who
want to study specific pieces or learn how he developed as a
composer.
This book gives an account of the individual works of one of the
greatest composers. The first volume of a two-volume study of the
music of J. S. Bach covers the earlier part of his composing
career, 1695-1717. By studying the music chronologically a coherent
picture of the composer's creative development emerges, drawing
together all the strands of the individual repertoires (e.g. the
cantatas, the organ music, the keyboard music). The volume is
divided into two parts, covering the early works and the mature
Weimar compositions respectively. Each part deals with four
categories of composition in turn: large-scale keyboard works;
preludes, fantasias, and fugues; organ chorales; and cantatas.
Within each category, the discussion is prefaced by a list of the
works to be considered, together with details of their original
titles, catalogue numbers, and earliest sources. The study is thus
usable as a handbook on Bach's works as well as a connected study
of his creative development. As indicated by the subtitle Music to
Delight the Spirit,, borrowed from Bach's own title-pages, Richard
Jones draws attention to another important aspect of the book: not
only is it a study of style and technique but a work of criticism,
an analytical evaluation of Bach's music and an appreciation of its
extraordinary qualities. It also takes account of the remarkable
advances in Bach scholarship that have been made over the last 50
years, including the many studies that have appeared relating to
various aspects of Bach's early music, such as the varied
influences to which he was subjected and the problematic issues of
dating and authenticity that arise. In doing so, it attempts to
build up a coherent picture of his development as a creative
artist, helping us to understand what distinguishes Bach's mature
music from his early works and from the music of his predecessors
and contemporaries. Hence we learn why it is that his later works
are instantly recognizable as 'Bachian'.
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