Born 5th September 1735, died 1st January 1782.
Signing himself as 'John Bach' in the last 20 years of his life when he was living in London, he was a dear friend of, and mentor to the young W.A.Mozart.
His huge output includes ( spookily) 27, yes, twenty-seven keyboard concertos ( did Mozart ever know that?) as well as at least 30 symphonies, 6 woodwind concertos, a violin concerto ( definitely authenticated, unlike the spurious cello concerto which is actually by the 20thC composer Casadesus), many Operas, and most notably, approximately 20 'Symphonies Concertantes' or 'Concerted Symphonies' featuring diverse soloists (e.g. 2 violins and cello; flute, oboe and bassoon; oboe, violin, cello and piano; oboe, violin, viola and cello; 2 clarinets and bassoon etc).
There can be no doubt that in the past 200+ years his 'star has waned' but perhaps he is now due for a re-appraisal?
I wondered recently whether J.C. Bach was maybe better appreciated in the 19th-20th centuries and I looked at the Proms Archive to see how many of his works had been played in the 117 years of the Proms.
ONLY ONE J.C. Bach work has ever been played at the Proms, and that was a 10-minute Overture/ Symphony as long ago as 1950.
Signing himself as 'John Bach' in the last 20 years of his life when he was living in London, he was a dear friend of, and mentor to the young W.A.Mozart.
His huge output includes ( spookily) 27, yes, twenty-seven keyboard concertos ( did Mozart ever know that?) as well as at least 30 symphonies, 6 woodwind concertos, a violin concerto ( definitely authenticated, unlike the spurious cello concerto which is actually by the 20thC composer Casadesus), many Operas, and most notably, approximately 20 'Symphonies Concertantes' or 'Concerted Symphonies' featuring diverse soloists (e.g. 2 violins and cello; flute, oboe and bassoon; oboe, violin, cello and piano; oboe, violin, viola and cello; 2 clarinets and bassoon etc).
There can be no doubt that in the past 200+ years his 'star has waned' but perhaps he is now due for a re-appraisal?
I wondered recently whether J.C. Bach was maybe better appreciated in the 19th-20th centuries and I looked at the Proms Archive to see how many of his works had been played in the 117 years of the Proms.
ONLY ONE J.C. Bach work has ever been played at the Proms, and that was a 10-minute Overture/ Symphony as long ago as 1950.
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