Chicago Bach Chamber Choir

Chicago Bach Chamber Choir Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Chicago Bach Chamber Choir, Performance & Event Venue, Chicago, IL.
(1)

J S. Bach+  died on July 29th in 1750. 🙏Final years and death (1740–1750)From 1740 to 1748 Bach copied, transcribed, exp...
07/30/2023

J S. Bach+ died on July 29th in 1750. 🙏

Final years and death (1740–1750)
From 1740 to 1748 Bach copied, transcribed, expanded or programmed music in an older polyphonic style (stile antico) by, among others, Palestrina (BNB I/P/2), Kerll (BWV 241),Torri (BWV Anh. 30), Bassani (BWV 1081),Gasparini (Missa Canonica)and Caldara (BWV 1082). Bach's own style shifted in the last decade of his life, showing an increased integration of polyphonic structures and canons and other elements of the stile antico. His fourth and last Clavier-Übung volume, the Goldberg Variations, for two-manual harpsichord, contained nine canons and was published in 1741.Throughout this period, Bach also continued to adopt music of contemporaries such as Handel (BNB I/K/2)and Stölzel (BWV 200), and gave many of his own earlier compositions, such as the St Matthew and St John Passions and the Great Eighteen Chorale Preludes, their final revisions. He also programmed and adapted music by composers of a younger generation, including Pergolesi (BWV 1083)[85] and his own students such as Goldberg (BNB I/G/2).

In 1746 Bach was preparing to enter Lorenz Christoph Mizler's Society of Musical Sciences [de].[87] In order to be admitted Bach had to submit a composition, for which he chose his Canonic Variations on "Vom Himmel hoch da komm' ich her", and a portrait, which was painted by Elias Gottlob Haussmann and featured Bach's Canon triplex á 6 Voc.[88] In May 1747, Bach visited the court of King Frederick II of Prussia in Potsdam. The king played a theme for Bach and challenged him to improvise a fugue based on his theme. Bach obliged, playing a three-part fugue on one of Frederick's fortepianos by Gottfried Silbermann, which was a new type of instrument at the time. Upon his return to Leipzig he composed a set of fugues and canons, and a trio sonata, based on the Thema Regium (theme of the king). Within a few weeks this music was published as The Musical Offering and dedicated to Frederick. The Schübler Chorales, a set of six chorale preludes transcribed from cantata movements Bach had composed some two decades earlier, were published within a year.[90][91] Around the same time, the set of five canonic variations which Bach had submitted when entering Mizler's society in 1747 were also printed.

Two large-scale compositions occupied a central place in Bach's last years. From around 1742 he wrote and revised the various canons and fugues of The Art of Fugue, which he continued to prepare for publication until shortly before his death. After extracting a cantata, BWV 191 from his 1733 Kyrie-Gloria Mass for the Dresden court in the mid-1740s, Bach expanded that setting into his Mass in B minor in the last years of his life. Although the complete mass was never performed during the composer's lifetime, it is considered to be among the greatest choral works in history.

In January 1749, Bach's daughter Elisabeth Juliane Friederica married his pupil Johann Christoph Altnickol. Bach's health was declining. On 2 June, Heinrich von BrĂĽhl wrote to one of the Leipzig burgomasters to request that his music director, Johann Gottlob Harrer, fill the Thomaskantor and Director musices posts "upon the eventual ... decease of Mr. Bach".[96] Becoming blind, Bach underwent eye surgery, in March 1750 and again in April, by the British eye surgeon John Taylor, a man widely understood today as a charlatan and believed to have blinded hundreds of people. Bach died on 28 July 1750 from complications due to the unsuccessful treatment.

An inventory drawn up a few months after Bach's death shows that his estate included five harpsichords, two lute-harpsichords, three violins, three violas, two cellos, a viola da gamba, a lute and a spinet, along with 52 "sacred books", including works by Martin Luther and Josephus. The composer's son Carl Philipp Emanuel saw to it that The Art of Fugue, although still unfinished, was published in 1751. Together with one of the composer's former students, Johann Friedrich Agricola, the son also wrote the obituary ("Nekrolog"), which was published in Mizler's Musikalische Bibliothek [de], a periodical journal produced by the Society of Musical Sciences, in 1754.

Source: Wikipedia

07/29/2023

Did you know? Johan Sebastian Bach lost his little daughter and then three sons and then his wife. Then he remarried and then he and his second wife, Anna-Magdalena, lost four more daughters and three sons. Eleven beloved children...

Many researchers have wondered: how Bach managed to handle these losses? How did he not stop breathing, how did his heart not stop? And most importantly, how could he continue to write music? Kantati, cello suites, messes, concerts... The most beautiful music the world has heard. Do you know how he did it?

At the end of the his music, he always wrote "Soli Deo gloria" (Glory to God alone) and in the beginning, "Lord help.” Therefore, you can pray during Bach's music because the music itself is prayer. You could, then, consider Bach's music a conversation between humanity and God.

02/17/2023

WHEN BACH TOOK A BEATING

Johann Sebastian Bach didn’t like students much. Unfortunately for him, the church in Arnstadt where he first worked had a student choir and orchestra. There was no mention of the ensemble in his contract, but it turned out he was expected to conduct them anyway.

He resented the job, partly because he wasn’t getting paid for it, but mostly because they weren’t very good. Discipline was another problem. Bach was only 20, and many of the students were older. Few were inclined to follow his orders, and so the relationship steadily grew worse.

One evening, Bach was returning home with his cousin Barbara Catharina. As they crossed the market square, they saw a group of students sitting in a corner. One of them ran to catch him up. Bach turned, and to his horror saw the man towering over him brandishing a large stick. The student’s name was Geyersbach. He was a bassoonist in the student orchestra and had a bone to pick.

"Why have you been making abusive remarks about me?" Geyersbach demanded. Bach, immediately on the defensive, replied that he had not, and even if he had, no one could prove anything.

"You may not have insulted me," Geyersbach fumed, "but you insulted my bassoon. Anybody who insults my bassoon insults me!"

Bach didn’t like the way this was going. His disgruntled student was getting more and more angry.

Finally Geyersbach yelled, "You dirty dog," and began hitting the composer with his stick.

Given Bach’s unpopularity with the students, he was quite used to verbal assaults. He had taken to carrying a dagger in his belt in case things got out of hand. He reached down for it, but Geyersbach saw what he was doing, dropped the stick and wrestled him to the ground.

The two rolled around the market place exchanging blows. Eventually, the other students caught them up and forcibly pulled them apart. Bach got to his feet and brushed himself down. When he had regained his composure, he and his cousin continued on their way. The students restrained Geyersbach until the composer was out of sight, for fear of a second attack.

Bach wasn’t going to let the matter rest. He appealed to the church court, demanding Geyersbach be disciplined. At the hearing, Bach’s cousin was able to confirm his version of the evening’s events. But when Geyersbach was called, it turned out the composer had indeed called him a "nanny-goat bassoonist" at a rehearsal, much to the amusement of the other performers. The council ruled that no punishment was necessary, and advised Bach to try harder to get on with his students.

The incident did little harm to Bach’s career, which eventually culminated in his appointment as Kapellmeister�at Leipzig. His duties there included running the famous boys’ choir. Fortunately he was now better able to keep his young performers in line. Unlike his Arnstadt students, the boy choristers usually did as they were told, and none ever went so far as to attack him with a stick!

01/02/2022
08/20/2021
The more you know!
05/13/2021

The more you know!

12/14/2020

The Bach Chamber Choir is making plans for it's 39th season September 2021 thru May 2022. We're also looking ahead to our 40th Anniversary Season; September 2022 - May 2023.

We're anticipating scheduling auditions in January. Look for more plans after the start of the new year.

A blessed holiday season from the Bach Chamber Choir.

03/18/2020

Our Spring 2020 concert and the Coffee Cantata performances are postponed until we're safely on the other side of the Coronavirus.

Watch for details.

Hey Fans!Plan to join the Bach Chamber Choir for our Spring Concert!
04/10/2019

Hey Fans!
Plan to join the Bach Chamber Choir for our Spring Concert!

03/30/2019

Bach Chamber Choir - Singers.... Dress rehearsal is at Trinity Episcopal Church in Aurora Saturday, March 30th at 10 am.

CONCERT is on Sunday at 3:00 PM (call 1:45 pm --or when you can get there.)

All black or a tux is suitable too.

12/02/2018
We won't be taking requests this concert, but we'll have a delightfully grand time singing a beautiful Christmas Concert...
11/28/2018

We won't be taking requests this concert, but we'll have a delightfully grand time singing a beautiful Christmas Concert. Our string players are from the Lake County Symphony Orchestra!

December 1st @ 4:00 PM
Saint James Lutheran Church
7400 West Foster Avenue
Chicago, IL 60656
773-633-9159

Address

Chicago, IL
60656

Telephone

+17736339159

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Chicago Bach Chamber Choir posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Nearby event planning services


Other Performance & Event Venues in Chicago

Show All