Saturday, December 29, 2012

Wilhelm F. Bach: Symphonies & Concerto pour clavecin


This recording presents a selection of works that will at last allow justice to be done to Wilhelm Friedemann Bach, Johann Sebastian's favourite son.

The legacy of his enigmatic life is a body of works whose highly personal style largely awaits rediscovery.






The eldest son of Johann Sebastian Bach, Wilhelm Friedemann was born in 1710 in Weimar and was taught by his father, after 1723, when the family moved to Leipzig, becoming a pupil at the Thomasschule. He spent four years at the University of Leipzig, before finding employment as organist at the Sophienkirche in Dresden and subsequently, with unhappy results, at the Liebfrauenkirche in Halle. 

From 1764 until his death twenty years later he held no official position, although he had been widely recognised as one of the most distinguished organists of his time and had mastered very thoroughly the lessons taught him by his father. His own tendency to the freedom of thought of the Enlightenment had not endeared him to his Pietist superiors in Halle and independence of character rendered him gradually less employable, within the restrictive circumstances of his time.





No comments:

Post a Comment