Something I've been thinking about for a time now, is Bach's supposed religious dedications for all his pieces towards God. I don't have a beef with it. But, consider the fact that at his time, really the only way to make a living as a musician was for Kings or for Church? Also, church largely dictated society and "philosophy" and nearly all things. Maybe his dedications were political? So, what better way to secure a position than to dedicate one's art to God, amidst a time when music was scarcely even thought of as an artform in and of itself, but as almost strictly a service to church (or to whims of Royalty)? Maybe, anyway, he was even quite passionate about his music beyond what anybody could ever know, and did what it took to get it into the world?
Also, people seem to love to talk about Bach's secular, non-dance-related, and non-song-related writings, such as his WTC and the inventions and sinfonias as works which were not meant for performance. Well, in the days of his life, instrumental music, and especially keyboard music, scarcely had its own identity. The constructs of society did not support this music as stand alone art, but who's to say Bach wrote it with no intention for it to be performed? Maybe that doesn't matter so much, I guess, as it seems many/most people don't prefer to sit in a concert of Bach. But, even so, perhaps there is still more to be gleaned from the writing itself if one does not approach it as though it were living in a realm of musical outcast - but perhaps as music before its time.
And, lastly, generally Bach was not ignored. He was actually quite respected in his time, but the way music was treated at the time was generally not such that music was immortalized in the ways we think of it today.
Okay, bye bye!