{"id":36,"date":"2022-06-14T15:00:04","date_gmt":"2022-06-14T14:00:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/emuso.com\/?page_id=36"},"modified":"2022-06-14T15:03:06","modified_gmt":"2022-06-14T14:03:06","slug":"bachs-6-brandenburg-concertos","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/emuso.com\/bachs-6-brandenburg-concertos\/","title":{"rendered":"Bach’s 6 Brandenburg Concertos"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

Brandenburg, in Bach’s day, was a political and military powerhouse. It had been part of the Holy Roman Empire since the mid-12th Century, and its ruler – the Markgraf, or Margrave – was charged with defending and extending the northern imperial border, in return for which he was allowed to be an Elector of the Emperor. The house of Hohenzollern acquired the margraviate of Brandenburg in 1415, and the family embraced the Reformation a century later with such authority that they came to be regarded as the leaders of German Protestantism. Potsdam was chosen as the site of the electoral court in the 17th Century.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Extensive territorial acquisitions under Frederick William, the “Great Elector,” before his death in 1688, allowed his son Frederick III to secure the title and the rule of Brandenburg’s northern neighbor, Prussia, with its rich (and nearby) capital city of Berlin. He became King Frederick I of Prussia in 1701. Frederick, a cultured man and a generous patron, founded academies of sciences and arts in Berlin, and he built the magnificent palace Charlottenburg for his wife, Sophie Charlotte, which became one of the most important musical centers in early 18th-Century Germany. When Frederick William I succeeded his father in 1713, however, he turned the court’s focus from music to militarism, and dismissed most of the excellent musicians that his father had assembled. Several of them found employment at the court of Anhalt-C\u00f6then, north of Leipzig, where a young prince was just starting to indulge his taste and talents for music. Frederick William did, however, allow his uncle, Christian Ludwig, younger brother of the late King Frederick and possessor of the now-lesser title of Margrave of Brandenburg, to remain at the palace and retain his own musical establishment.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Johann Sebastian Bach met Christian Ludwig, Margrave of Brandenburg, in 1719, during his tenure as music director at the court of Leopold of Anhalt-C\u00f6then, the young prince who had recently signed up some of the musicians fired by Frederick William I. Bach worked at Anhalt-C\u00f6then> from 1717 to 1723, and he and Leopold seem to have gotten along splendidly. The Prince enjoyed travel, fine art a= nd, above all, music, and he respected and encouraged Bach in his work, even occasionally participating in the court concerts as violinist, gambist or harpsichordist. Provided by Leopold with an excellent set of instruments and a group of fine players, Bach enjoyed a fruitful period at C\u00f6then. Many of his greatest works for keyboard, chamber ensembles and orchestra date from those years.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Early in 1719, Leopold sent Bach to Berlin to finalize arrangements for the purchase of a new harpsichord, a large, two-manual model made by Michael Mietke, instrument-builder to the royal court. While in Berlin, Bach played for Christian Ludwig, who was so taken with his music that he asked him to send some of his compositions for his library. Bach lost an infant son a few months later, and in 1720 his wife died. So it was more than two years before he fulfilled Brandenburg’s request.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

By 1721, however, Leopold had become engaged to marry a woman who looked disapprovingly upon his huge expenditures for musical entertainment. Bach seems to have realized that when she moved in, he would probably be moved out, so he began casting about for a more secure position. He remembered the interest the Margrave Brandenburg had shown in his music, and he thought it a good time to approach him again. So he picked six of the finest concertos he had written at C\u00f6then, copied them out meticulously, had them bound into a sumptuous volume, and sent them to Christian Ludwig in March 1721 with a flowery dedication in French. But this was all to no avail. No job materialized at Brandenburg, and in 1723, Bach moved to Leipzig’s St. Thomas Church, where he remained for the rest of his life.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

It is highly likely that the Margrave of Brandenburg never heard any of these magnificent instrumental works that have immortalized his name, since records indicate that his modest orchestra might not have been able to negotiate their difficulties and instrumental requirements. The Concertos apparently lay untouched in his library until he died thirteen years after Bach had presented them to him. Fortunately, they were preserved by the noted theorist and pedagogue Johann Philipp Kirnberger, a pupil of Bach, and the concertos came eventually into the collection of the Royal Library in Berlin. They were brought to light during the 19th<\/sup> Century Bach revival, and they were first published in 1850. These six concerti have since come to be recognized as the supreme examples of Baroque instrumental music.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

The Brandenburg Concertos<\/em><\/strong> differ from those of later eras in both instrumental disposition and form. These are concerti grossi (great concertos), works in which a small group of soloists (concertino) rather than a single instrument is pitted against the orchestra (ripieno). Most of the fast movements of the Brandenburgs use a formal procedure known as “ritornello”, which is based on the contrast of sonority between concertino and ripieno. First the orchestra presents a collection of thematic ideas from which much of the movement grows. Then the soloists take over for an episode, sometimes borrowing material from the opening orchestral introduction, sometimes providing something new. The orchestra then returns (ritornello is Italian for “return”), and this is followed by another solo episode, and that by another orchestral ritornello, and so forth. The remaining fast movements are based on dance types, while the slow movements are usually lyrical and through-composed, a sort of elaborate wordless aria.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Brandenburg Concerto No. 1 in F major, BWV 1046<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n