Just a few notes from many to show how JS Bach was so often falsely portrayed and misunderstood, even by supposedly neutral contemporaries. Some quotes from the great book 'Bach meets Frederick the Great in the Age of Englightenment' by James Gaine -
'In music and virtually every other sphere if life in mid 18th century Germany, Frederick represented all that was new while Bach's music had come to mean everything that was ancient and outmoded......His musical language, teaching and tradition had been rejected and denounced by composers and theorists, even by his two sons, and Bach had every reason to fear that he and his music would soon be forgotten after his death; had indeed been all but forgotten already. For this reason and others his encounter with with the Prussian king threatened to bring in to question some of his most important qualities by which he defined himself, as a musician and as a man.......Frederick, a bisexual misanthorpe in a childless political marriage was a lapsed Calvinist whose reputation for religious tolerance arose from the fact that he held all religions equally in contempt. Bach wrote and spoke German. Frederick boasted he had 'never read a German book'.....Nowhere were the two men more different than in their attitudes to music. Bach represented church music and especially the 'learned counterpoint of canon and fugue, a centuries old craft that some its practitioners thought was a quasi-divine art, even a weaving of the cosmic tapestry itself. Frederick and his generation were having none of that. They denigrated counterpoint as the vestige of an outworn aesthetic, extolling instead the 'natural and delightful' in music, by which they meant the easier pleasure of song, the harmonic ornamentation of a single line of melody. For Bach this new, so-called 'galant' style was full of emptiness......For Frederick the goal of music was simply to be agreeable, an entertainment and a diversion, easy work for performer and audience alike. He despised, as he put it, 'smells of the church' and had called Bach's chorales, 'dumb stuff'....
The facts are these. Frederick gave Bach an impossibly long and complex musical figure and asked the old master to make a 3 part fugue of it...So difficult was this figure the the foremost 20th century composer of counterpoint, Arnold Schoenberg marvelled at the fact that it had been so cleverly contrived, noting that what Frederick gave to Bach 'did not admit one single canonic imitation' - in other words that the royal theme was purposely constructed to be as resistant to counterpoint as possible.....Still, Bach managed there with almost unimaginable ingenuity to do it, even alluding to the king's taste by setting off his intricate counterpoint with a few 'galante' flourishes...(!)
When Bach had finished his three part fugue and while his audience of virtuosi were still 'seized with amazement' Frederick asked Bach if he could go one better, this time making the theme in to a fugue for 6 voices. Knowing instantly that he had no hope of doing such a vastly more complex improvisation (Bach had never even written a six part fugue for keyboard) he demured with the observation that not every musical subject is suitable for improvisation in six voices - he said he would work at it on paper and send it to him later.......Clearly, no-one could have faulted him for turning aside Frederick's challenge - every musician and especially the composers in the room would have realised just how ridiculously demanding it was - but there is no other recorded instance in Bach's life when he had to concede such a defeat. and this was an exceedingly proud man, the acknowledged master of both fugue and imrovisation, before an audience of fellow virtuosi as well as his own two oldest sons.....Bach's embarrasment may have been the reason he had been invited in the first place. Writing 200 years later Schoenberg found in this evidence of a malicious scheme to (publicly) humiliate Bach.....
Bach's 'Musical Offering' to Frederick represents as stark a rebuke of his beliefs and world view as an absolute monarch has ever received....Not incidentally, it is also one of the greatest works of art in the history of music.
R
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