Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I The historical context: society, beliefs and world-view
- 1 The Bach family
- 2 Bach and the domestic politics of Electoral Saxony
- 3 Music and Lutheranism
- 4 Bach's metaphysics of music
- 5 ‘A mind unconscious that it is calculating’? Bach and the rationalist philosophy of Wolff, Leibniz and Spinoza
- Part II Profiles of the music
- Part III Influence and reception
- Notes
- Select bibliography
- General Index
- Index of works
1 - The Bach family
from Part I - The historical context: society, beliefs and world-view
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I The historical context: society, beliefs and world-view
- 1 The Bach family
- 2 Bach and the domestic politics of Electoral Saxony
- 3 Music and Lutheranism
- 4 Bach's metaphysics of music
- 5 ‘A mind unconscious that it is calculating’? Bach and the rationalist philosophy of Wolff, Leibniz and Spinoza
- Part II Profiles of the music
- Part III Influence and reception
- Notes
- Select bibliography
- General Index
- Index of works
Summary
The musical family is by no means an unfamiliar phenomenon, and nearly everyone must be acquainted with at least one household in which practically every member delights not only in listening to music but also in singing or playing musical instruments. Even with the weakening of family ties and the proliferation of ready-made forms of home entertainment in western society today, it is still possible for many a paterfamilias to echo the words that J. S. Bach wrote in 1730 in a famous letter to his former schoolmate Georg Erdmann:
From my first marriage three sons and a daughter are still living … [and] from my second marriage one son and two daughters … The children from my second marriage are still small, the boy (as firstborn) being six years old. But they are all born musicians, and I assure you that I can form both a vocal and an instrumental Concert within my family, especially since my present wife sings with a pure soprano voice, and my eldest daughter, too, can join in quite well.
Moreover, musical talent of an unusual kind has manifested itself in modern times in families such as the Menuhins and the Torteliers. One could discuss at length the relative importance of heredity and environment in the formation of musical families at whatever level of attainment, but it seems quite clear that the role played by environment is more important in fostering a talent for music than it is in influencing other forms of artistic and intellectual endeavour. By its nature, musical activity impinges on everyone within earshot (and, some would say, even on the child in the womb) and therefore invites at least some degree of communal engagement. Literature, painting and mathematics (to mention three branches of cultural activity closely connected to music) are, on the other hand, solitary pursuits, and - the Brontes, the Breughels and the Bernoullis notwithstanding - the musical family is a phenomenon rarely paralleled in the other arts.
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- The Cambridge Companion to Bach , pp. 7 - 16Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997