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Johann Sebastian Bach

(born March 21, 1685 in Eisenach, Sachsen-Eisenach – died July 17, 1750 in Leipzig, Kurfürstentum Sachsen | Julian calendar)
(born March 31, 1685 in Eisenach, Sachsen-Eisenach – died July 28, 1750 in Leipzig, Kurfürstentum Sachsen | Gregorian calendar)


Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg:

“But just as Greece only had one Homer and Rome only one Virgil: Germany will probably only have had one Bach.”

Forkel in his biography of Bach:

“And this man, the greatest musical poet, and the greatest musical declaimer, that ever existed, and probably ever will exist, was a German. Let his country be proud of him; let it be proud, but at the same time, worthy of him!”

Ludwig van Beethoven:

“His name should be not Brook (Bach) but Ocean, because of the infinite and inexhaustible wealth of his tone combinations and harmonies.”

The following is written in Bach’s obituary of 1754

“If ever a composer showed polyphony in its greatest strength, it was certainly our late lamented Bach. If ever a musician employed the most hidden secrets of harmony with the most skilled artistry, it was certainly our Bach.

No one ever showed so many ingenious and unusual ideas as he in elaborate pieces such as ordinarily seem dry exercises in craftsmanship.

As long as anyone cannot show us even the mere possibility of the existence of a better organist or keyboard player, we cannot be blamed if we are audacious enough to  continue to claim that our Bach was the greatest organ and keyboard player who ever lived.

It may be the case that many famous men achieved a great deal on these instruments, but we doubt that any was so accomplished, in the hands as well as the feet, as was Bach. Anyone who had the pleasure of hearing him and comparing his playing, without prejudice, to that of others will agree that this doubt is not without foundation.

And whoever examines his organ and keyboard works – which, as is widely known, he himself performed to the greatest perfection – will have no objection to the position expressed above.”

Key Figures in Johann Sebastian Bach’s Life

Contemporaries and supporters behind the genius of the Baroque master. These relationships were crucial in shaping Bach’s illustrious career and lasting legacy.


Johann Ambrosius Bach

Johann Ambrosius Bach was the father of Johann Sebastian. The highly esteemed Ambrosius Bach received a musical education in Arnstadt at the age of nine.

In 1671, he moved to Eisenach, where he worked as a highly respected court and town musician. Johann Ambrosius Bach died shortly before Johann Sebastian’s tenth birthday.

Georg Philipp Telemann

Georg Philipp Telemann maintained a close friendship with Johann Sebastian Bach and Handel and was godfather of Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach.

Telemann worked in Hamburg as general music director from 1721 and also directed the so-called Gänsemarkt Opera from 1722.

Count Hermann Carl von Keyserling

The name Goldberg Variations which is often used today, is based on an anecdote about Count Hermann Carl von Keyserling and his personal harpsichordist Johann Gottlieb Goldberg.

Bach’s eldest son Wilhelm Friedemann dedicated his harpsichord sonata in E-flat major to the Count in 1763.

Johann Ernst III, Duke of Saxe-Weimar

In March 1703, Duke Johann Ernst III employed the young Bach as a lackey and violinist at the court of the Red Palace.

In July of the same year he left Weimar again to go to Arnstadt and work as an organist.

The duke died in 1707.

Wilhelm Ernst, Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach

After working as an organist in Arnstadt and Mühlhausen, the 23-year-old Bach returned to Weimar in July 1708. He now worked there as court organist and chamber musician.

From November 1717, Bach was imprisoned in the tower of the Weimar City Palace for almost a month, because he had accepted a new position in Köthen.

Wilhelm Friedemann Bach

As Bach’s eldest son, Wilhelm Friedemann grew up with music from an early age. His career as a very capable composer and organist soon became apparent.

Among others, he cultivated contacts with legendary composers of the Dresden court, such as Johann Adolph Hasse and Jan Dismas Zelenka.

He also taught Johann Gottlieb Goldberg, who is associated with the Goldberg Variations.

Ernst August I, Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach

Ernst August I was the son of Johann Ernst III. In 1707, Ernst August I became co-regent of his uncle Wilhelm Ernst on behalf of his late father.

He took his band, including Johann Sebastian Bach, to the wedding in Nienburg (Saale), and it was also here where the composer met the bride’s brother, his future employer Leopold von Anhalt-Köthen.

Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach

Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, also known as the Hamburg Bach or the Berlin Bach, was the fifth of seven children of Johann Sebastian Bach and his first wife Maria Barbara Bach.

He was in the service of King Frederick II from 1740 to 1768 and dedicated the six Prussian Sonatas, published in Nuremberg in 1742, to him.

Leopold, Prince of Anhalt-Köthen

In August 1717, Bach was appointed court music director by Prince Leopold at his court in Anhalt-Köthen.

At the same time, this year was overshadowed by the death of his wife Maria Barbara – in July 1720, the only 35-year-old was buried in Köthen.

Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg

Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg was a music theorist and author of various standard works, such as the Treatise on the Fugue of 1753 and 1754, which deals with The Art of the Fugue, among other things.

Bach and Marpurg knew each other personally.

August II, King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania

In 1717, King August II. (Augustus the Strong) seconded Bach in his request for release to Duke Wilhelm Ernst.

Bach later wrote a cantata, Es lebe der König, der Vater im Lande, which was performed on August’s name day.

Christian Ludwig, Margrave of Brandenburg-Schwedt

In the winter of 1718/19, Johann Sebastian Bach visited the city of Berlin and impressed the music-loving Christian Ludwig with his skills.

Christian Ludwig asked Bach for some of his compositions and in the spring of 1721 received a score entitled Six Concerts Avec plusieurs Instruments, now known as the Brandenburg Concertos.

Friedrich II, King in Prussia

On May 7, 1747, King Frederick II. requested a musical encounter with J. S. Bach.

Bach originally traveled to Sanssouci Palace to visit his son Carl Philipp Emanuel, who was employed there as court harpsichordist, and to see his grandson.

Wilhelm Friedemann accompanied his father on this trip.

John Taylor

John Taylor (* 1703 in Norwich; † November 16, 1770 in Rome) was an English oculist and medical charlatan.

John Taylor performed two unsuccessful eye operations on Bach. Taylor also later operated on Handel’s eyes to no avail.

The Dutch ophthalmologist R. Zegers noted: “After his training, Taylor began practicing in Switzerland, where he blinded hundreds of patients, as he himself once confessed.”

    “I was obliged to be industrious. Whoever is equally industrious will succeed equally well.”

    Johann Sebastian Bach

    St. Thomas Church in Leipzig
    In the historic city of Leipzig, where Bach worked for over 27 years, he composed works including the St. John Passion, the St. Matthew Passion, the so-called Goldberg Variations, the Mass in B minor and finally The Art of Fugue.

    Bach as Artist, Teacher, and Icon:
    Forkel’s Groundbreaking Account

    Johann Nikolaus Forkel’s biography of Bach, entitled Johann Sebastian Bachs Leben Kunst und Kunstwerke. Für patriotische Verehrer echter musikalischer Kunst (a book titled Life of John Sebastian Bach; with a critical view of his compositions.) was published in 1802.

    His account of Bach as interpreter, composer and teacher is a lively record of the life of the musician whom Forkel regarded as the highest representative of his art.

    Much of the information came directly from Bach’s sons Carl Philipp Emanuel and Wilhelm Friedemann. An English translation of the biography appeared in 1820.

    We would like to encourage visitors to this website to engage with this literature. A free version is available at the Project Gutenberg’s Website.

    The Old Bach Memorial near St. Thomas Church in Leipzig

    “I consider music not only as an art to delight the ear but as one of the greatest means of moving the heart and exciting sensations.”

    Christoph Willibald Gluck