Johann Sebastian Bach
Donald Macleod looks at five decades of Bach's music, revealing a picture of the composer's evolving style.
Donald Macleod concentrates on some of Bach's earliest surviving works. Next, he explores Bach's output during the 1710s, much of which the composer spent at the court of Duke Wilhelm Ernst of Weimar. Macleod then looks at what was probably Bach's most fertile decade - the 1720s - one which marked the beginning of his 27-year spell as Cantor at the Thomasschule in Leipzig. Bach's musical activities during the 1730s were numerous; on top of his regular job keeping Leipzig's four main churches supplied with cantatas, he took on a secular concert-giving role as director of the Collegium Musicum in Leipzig and Somehow managed to find time to invent the keyboard concerto.
Duration:
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Composer | Johann Sebastian Bach |
This clip is from
Featured in...
Discovering Bach—Composer of the Week
Listen to programmes examining the life and works of Johann Sebastian Bach.
The Story of Music in 50 Pieces: Further Listening—Howard Goodall's Story of Music
More programmes related to the series: The Story of Music in 50 Pieces
Baroque Composers—Baroque Spring
Listen to programmes about some of the major composers of baroque music.
More clips from Composer of the Week
-
Wrth fynd efo Deio i Dywyn (trad.) arr. Jayne Davies
Duration: 01:46
-
Lisa lΓΆn (traditional) , arr. Jayne Davies
Duration: 03:12
-
Morfydd Owen's Llwyn Owen, arr. Edward-Rhys Harry
Duration: 05:17
-
Blacklisted!—Sofia Gubaidulina (b 1931), An Incorrect Path
Duration: 01:21