Why is Bach so great and important…
Hmm, difficult question to answer. One could say that he was both the pinnacle of the development of music up to his time, and the foundation of much that came after him. You could say he was a “hinge” in musical history, not unlike Monteverdi before him, or Beethoven after him.
Why was (and is, and will remain) he great? Hmm, some random and quick thoughts:
1) His music is always recognisable from the onset, in each and every piece, and usually within a bar or even less. To be able to do so in a huge body of works in all shapes, sizes and forms and even in the very simplest ones is something only the very greatest of composers manage, and even then not as consistently as Bach.
2) All his music is of high, higher or even highest quality, written with full attention to each detail (no matter how small) and purpose; no run-of-the-mill works one even finds in Beethoven and Mozart.
3) The unsurpassed, and probably unsurpassable, ability to write music that is always fresh, always new. There is not a single work that ever gets boring.
4) The great emotional content, that is never a mere effect, but neither ever an “ego-document”, so that his music can speak to the emotions of people of all kinds and backgrounds. His music is clean of any personal input (i.e. you can never tell how Bach felt
personally at the moment he was writing this or that music), never about his own “ego” (as is Mahler’s or Beethoven’s), yet always humane. Especially in his vocal music the emotional content is always precisely cut to the textual intent (the “affect” if you want) that is always completely natural, open and honest. Rather to the contrary of much music of his contemporaries, where the
affect is mostly
effect (if, in the good ones, to considerable effect!). Though this, one can always relate to the music, despite the temporal and cultural distance between Bach and us. (One more reason why his music is always new and fresh!). Bach’s music doesn’t express emotion, or emulate it. His music IS the emotion!
5) His music is always “exactly right”. You cannot alter one note, let alone add of remove one, without deteriorating the music. As such, his music is the most perfect I know. Most composers who compulsory want to “perfect” their music write music that is, to greater or lesser degree, stiff and unnatural. Bach’s is perfect
naturally, as if it could not be different. Yet compare that to the fact that Bach often used the same music in various guises (for ex, transcribe a violin concerto for harpsichord), and
both versions sound perfect. In all other composers adaptations sound like
adaptations.
6) His supreme mastery in each and every field he worked in. Be it church cantata (which was a “public work”), abstract composition (such as the Partitas and Suites), educational works (such as the Notenbüchlein), grand vocal/orchestral works (the High Mass), whatever keyboard or instrument and even dramatic works (the “Secular Cantatas”). Play a Bach Violin Concerto and a Vivaldi one. Play a Bach Cantata and a Telemann one. Etc., etc.. No other composer was ever so completely successful in every field they worked. In Bach’s days, all composers were expected to work in every field; the result is that every composer displays stronger and weaker abilities, some were better in Concertos, some better in vocal works. Bach is strong in every field (barring opera, which he didn’t write; I have no doubt he would have excelled there too). Later composers started focussing on their “strong points”, and avoided their weak points. Hence no Brahms Opera or Mahler Concerto.
Personally, I can only say Bach is so great because he wrote as Bach. And he is important to my mind just as eating and drinking is to my body: ultimate sustenance. Only yesterday evening, after a rather unusual troublesome day, I listened to his Sonata no. 3 for Solo Violin (played by the incomparable Johanna Martzy). The power of that music! Truly when listening to that I could say that, for as long as the music played, “Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen”. Few other composers manage that so fully!
As to Alistair’s comparison, I one heard a musician say that for him, if Bach wasn’t in Heaven performing, he had no intention of going there. And that if Heaven exists, Bach has been the one composer who listened under the window. Can’t argue with that!
Just some random thoughts, written quickly. Add more if you want.
This thread has been running for almost a day and a half now, yet gep has still not responded; come on, gep - where are you when your input is needed?(!)...
Best,
Alistair
I hope this suffices, for now!
All best,
gep