Johann Christian Bach

Johann Christian Bach

Johann Christian Bach was the 18th child of Johann Sebastien Bach, the youngest of his 11 sons, born on the 5th September 1735 in Leipzig. He was first taught by his father however after his father’s death when he was aged 15, his half-brother Carl Phillipp Emmanuel Bach, 21 years his senior instructed him in Berlin. During his time in Berlin, he performed some of his own works in public for the first time. He was his father’s copyist in the last years of his father’s life.

He lived in Italy for a period from 1754 and he became organist at the Milan Cathedral in 1760. It was during his time in Italy that Johann Christian Bach converted from Lutheranism to Catholicism. He devoted much of his time to the composition of church music whilst in Italy.

By Pompeo Girolamo Batoni - https://www.sellingantiques.co.uk/606548/a-portrait-of-the-composer-johann-christian-bach-17351782/, CC0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=114982501

Milan Cathedral by Bernt Rostad - Taken from Flickr https://www.flickr.com/photos/brostad/3455659602/, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=7441793

By Bach, Johann Christian, 1735-1782 [performer]Abel, Karl Friedrich, 1723-1787 [performer]Bach, Johann Christian, 1735-1782 [funder/Sponsor]Abel, Karl Friedrich, 1723-1787 [funder/Sponsor]Incledon, Charles Benjamin, 1763-1826 [performer] - Digital Bodleian This file comes from the John Johnson Collection of Printed Ephemera.This file comes from the Bodleian Libraries, a group of research libraries in Oxford University. Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=47914806

In 1762 Johann Christian Bach moved to London becoming known as the “London” Bach. He travelled to London to premiere three operas, one of which was Orione. (This was one of the first few musical works to use the clarinet.) In London he was known as John. He became music master to Queen Charlotte, his duties included teaching music to the Queen and her children, accompanying the King’s flute playing and directing the Queen’s band. In 1766 he married the soprano Cecilia Grassi. They did not have any children. Also, in 1762 he became composer to the King’s Theatre in London, writing several Italian operas for it. He was the only of J. S. Bach’s sons to write operas in the Italian language. In 1764 he commenced his fashionable series of subscription concerts with the viola da gamba (a forerunner of the cello) player Karl Abel. Abel and Bach conducted the concerts on an alternate basis and many of their own compositions were played. These concerts at the Great room in Spring Gardens, Carlisle House in Soho, formerly St James, Almack’s Assembly Rooms and then at the bespoke concert room they had built in Hanover Square became a very fashionable public entertainment in London. (The Hanover Square Rooms were demolished in 1900.) Johann Christian Bach also composed many songs for the open-air concerts at Vauxhall Gardens.

He is noted for being an influence on Haydn and Mozart regarding the concerto and he contributed significantly to the development of the new sonata framework. In 1764 Mozart met Johann Christian Bach in London, spending nearly 18 months being taught by him. Mozart valued the time he spent with Bach and when he heard of his death he stated, “What a loss to the musical world!’”. In Maurice Hinson’s book “At the Piano with the Sons of Bach” he states that “Mozart was deeply impressed by the lovely lyrical melodies in Christian’s music, its sensitive elegance and its effective use of melodic contrast”.

Johann Christian Bach’s compositions include cantatas, chamber music, keyboard and orchestral works, operas and symphonies. Some of his compositions were written for the needs of his pupils.  In Maurice Hinson’s book “At the Piano with the Sons of Bach” he describes Johann Christian Bach’s music as being influenced by “the brilliance and sensuousness of Italian opera and the melodic grandeur of Italian church music”. The Britannica states that his music “reflects the pleasant melodiousness of the galant, or Rococo style. Its Italian grace influenced composers of the Classical period”. The word rococo from the French word rocaille, means “rockwork”. The rococo style is explained in Maurice Hinson’s book “At the Piano with the Sons of Bach” as being “characterised by ornamental delicacy, graceful elegance, and (often) sophisticated wit.” Galaxy music notes states “his deliberate attempt to signify instrumental music as a manifestation of musical passion, bereft of the contrapuntal complexity and intellectual severity of the earlier eras, deserves plaudits”. His compositions belong to the new homophonic style of writing and contain a strong Italian essence.

From Alamy.com

In 1765 Johann Christian’s opera Adriano in Siria was performed. The Guardian states “despite the high quality – both musically and dramatically – of Adriano in Siria, it received only seven performances, and it was never revived. The Italian members of the original cast and audiences saw to that. To them it seemed inconceivable that a non-Italian could compose a good opera (Mozart was to come up against the same prejudices in Vienna just three years later), and an amusing letter from May 1765 to The Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser, written by an anonymous footman at the King’s theatre, records that “the extraordinary merit of Mr Bach’s Adriano in Siria could not rescue it from the vengeance of these destroyers; it was doomed to oblivion as soon as it was presented: and why? Because forsooth Mr Bach did not breathe Italian air as soon as he was born. All but the Italians acknowledged the beauties of Mr Bach’s operas; and none but the Italians could have been capable of smothering so elegant a production.”

 By the late 1770s however, his popularity and finances were in decline. His steward embezzled most of his money. Queen Charlotte covered the expenses of his estate, and his widow was provided with a pension for life.

Johann Christian Bach was friends with the painter Thomas Gainsborough.

Johann Christian Bach’s opus numbers are listed using a ‘W’ as they are taken from Ernest Warburton’s “The Collected Works of Johann Christian Bach”. The opus numbers have sub-categories such as ‘A’ for keyboard works and ‘E’ for liturgical works.

He was buried in the Old St Pancras Cemetery in a pauper’s grave on the 6th January 1782, his name is misspelt in the burial register as Back.

www.wikipedia.com

www.britiannica.com/biography/Johann-Christian-Bach

www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Johann_Christian_Bach

www.galaxymusicnotes.com

www.guardian.com/music/2015/apr/10/jc-bach-london-mozart-classical-opera-adriano-in-siria

www.rslade.co.uk/18th-centruy-music/composers/johann/christian-bach

At the Piano with the Sons of Bach, edited by Maurice Hinson, Alfred Publishing 1995

Anna Magdalena Bach Notebook and Johann Sebastien Bach's children

Anna Magdalena Bach née Wilcke or Wilcken was a singer and the second wife of Johann Sebastien Bach. She was born on the 22nd September 1701 and died on the 27th February 1760. Anna Magdalena Bach’s came form a musical family. Her father was a trumpet player and her mother was the daughter of an organist. In 1721 Anna Magdelena was working as a singer (she was a soprano) at the court of Anhalt-Cöthen. This is where Johann Sebastien Bach had been working as Capellmeister (director of music) since 1717. They were married on the 3rd December 1721, 17 months after his first wife, Maria Barbara Bach, had died.

The Bachs moved to Leipzig in 1723. Anna Magdelena Bach continued to sing professionally after her marriage and it is thought that the Bachs’ shared interest in music contributed to their happy marriage. She often worked as a copyist, transcribing her husband’s music which she sold as a means to contribute to the family’s income. She also would complete the performing parts for cantatas to be sung in Leipzig churches. A few of Bach’s works survive only in her hand. Anna Magdalena organised regular musical evenings featuring the whole family playing and singing together.

Title-page of the notebook for Anna Magdalena Bach

Taken from the Bach son Gesamtausgabe (BGA), vol. 44 [B.W. XLIV]: "Joh. Seb. Bach's handschrift" (Joh.Seb.Bach's manuscripts), Originally published by the Bach-Gesellschaft in Leipzig, 1895. This image is in the public domain.Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=443051

On her marriage, Anna Magdalena became a step-mother to Bach’s children from his first marriage and she gave birth to 13 children, of whom six survived to adulthood.

Christiana Sophia Henrietta (1723 - 1726)

Gottfried Heinrich (1724 - 1763)

Christian Gottlieb (1725 - 1728)

Elisabeth Julian Friederica (1726 - 1781)

Ernestus Andreas (1727 - 1727)

Regina Johanna (1728 - 1733)

Christiana Benedicta (1730 - 1730)

Christiana Dorothea (1731 - 1732)

Johann Christoph Friedrich, the ‘Bückberg’ Bach (1732 - 1795)

By Georg David Matthieu - 1. haendel.it2. kottanelkul.reblog.hu, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=186279

Johann August Abraham (1733 - 1733)

Johann Christian, the ‘London’ Bach (1735 - 1782)

By Thomas Gainsborough - Art Renewal Center, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=38077

Johanna Carolina (1737 - 1781)

Regina Susanna (1742 - 1809)

From Bach’s first marriage -

Catharina Dorothea (1709 - 1774)

Wilhelm Friedemann Bach (1710 - 1784)

By Wilhelm Weitsch - https://www.bridgemanimages.com/it/weitsch/wilhelm-friedemann-bach-c-1760-oil-on-canvas/nomedium/asset/312452, CC0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=111429477

Johann Christoph and Maria Sophia (1713 - 1713)

Carl Philipp Emmanuel Bach (1714 - 1788)

By Franz Conrad Löhr - http://www.bpk-images.de/?18671877727020631900&MEDIANUMBER=00092233, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=44147555

Johann Gottfried Bernhard (1715 - 1739)

Leopold Augustus (1718 - 1719)

Taken from the Bach Gesamtausgabe (BGA), vol. 44 [B.W. XLIV]: "Joh. Seb. Bach's handschrift" (Joh.Seb.Bach's manuscripts), Originally published by the Bach-Gesellschaft in Leipzig, 1895. This image is in the public domain. Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1409618

Apparently, after the death of Johann Sebastien Bach in 1750, his sons came into conflict over the division of his estate and moved on in separate directions. Anna Magdalena was left alone, with no financial support from family members, to care for herself and her two daughters as well as her step-daughter from Bach’s first marriage. She became increasingly dependent on charity and handouts from the city council. Possibly the only family member who helped her was Carl Philipp Emmanuel Bach, her stepson from Bach’s first marriage whose letters show he provided her with regular financial assistance. She died in poverty on the 27th February 1760 and was buried in an unmarked pauper’s grave at Leipzig’s St John’s Church.

Anna Magdalena Bach is best known by the two musical notebooks compiled and given to her by her husband, Johann Sebastien Bach. These notebooks served as both a family journal and a medium of instruction. It contains selections and entries by various family members over a period of time. There is a wide range of pieces in these notebooks - there are chorales, arias and solo harpsichord pieces amongst them. The first notebook of 1722 contains pieces composed by Bach himself. The second notebook of 1725 contains pieces composed by Bach but also contains pieces by other composers and friends. Some of the other composers include Francois Couperin, Georg Böhm and possibly some of his sons such as Carl Philipp Emmanuel Bach. After Anna Magdalena’s death, the 1725 Notebook came into the possession of her stepson, Carl Philipp Emmanuel Bach.

The Anna Magdalena Bach Notebook of 1725 is covered in green with a gold border and has two locks and a red satin ribbon. The initials A. M. B. and the date 1725 are stamped on the front in gold lettering. Later on it is thought the Carl Philipp Eamanual Bach added to the initials “Anna Magdal Bach”.