Bach Music in the castle of heaven

John Eliot Gardiner

Book - 2013

"From one of Bach's greatest living interpreters, a landmark study which explains in ... detail how the composer worked, how his music is constructed, how it achieves its effects--and what it can tell us about Bach the man"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2013.
Language
English
Main Author
John Eliot Gardiner (author)
Edition
First United States edition
Item Description
"Originally published in Great Britain as Music in the castle of heaven, by Allen Lane"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
xxxiv, 628 pages, 24 unnumbered pages : illustrations (chiefly color), map ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780375415296
  • Under the cantor's gaze
  • Germany on the brink of enlightenment
  • The Bach gene
  • The class of '85
  • The mechanics of faith
  • The incorrigible cantor
  • Bach at his workbench
  • Cantatas or coffee?
  • Cycles and seasons
  • First Passion
  • His "Great Passion"
  • Collision and collusion
  • The habit of perfection
  • "Old Bach."
Review by Choice Review

As conductor of his Monteverdi Choir and English Baroque Soloists in more than 50 recordings of Bach's vocal works, Gardiner is the perfect performer to approach this repertory. This book should convince those who know only Bach's instrumental music to explore the heart of Bach's works, the cantatas, passions, and the B Minor Mass. The first half of the book explores the milieu of the irascible and stubborn Bach, who sought perfection in his music in the midst of difficult work conditions and the demands of church and family. Gardiner asks of himself interesting questions: What was life like in the Latin School in Thuringia where Bach studied and in the provincial towns where he worked? What was the theological environment in Bach's Leipzig? Interspersed are Gardiner's own comments on the Bach Cantata Pilgrimage that he made with his choir in 2000. Side studies into the scores themselves, the best being a description of the St. Matthew Passion autograph, are fascinating. For a study of Bach's life and works, Christoph Wolff's Johann Sebastian Bach: The Learned Musician (CH, Sep'00, 38-0223) is best, but Gardiner's beautifully written and focused book is also a must for all lovers of Bach. Summing Up: Essential. All readers. J. P. Ambrose emerita, University of Vermont

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by New York Times Review

ON JAN. l, 1869, the mother of two of Richard Wagner's children, though not quite yet his wife, began keeping a diary. Though, calling the 14-year account that Cosima Wagner eventually produced a diary is like calling a battleship a boat. At the start of his idiosyncratic new book, "Richard Wagner: A Life in Music," Martin Geek notes that Cosima's journals ended up running nearly one million words. Full of mythologizing and after-the-fact edits, they give us, in conjunction with Wagner's own copious writing and correspondence, an unprecedented opportunity: For no other cultural figure of his significance do we have a record of daily life so relentlessly extensive. At the other end of the paper-trail spectrum is Johann Sebastian Bach. His known writing - letters, testimonials, receipts, contracts, everything - can be collected in a couple of hundred pages. Even in his own time - and even to his family - he was something of an enigma. As the eminent early-music conductor John Eliot Gardiner relates in his learned, amiable first book, "Bach: Music in the Castle of Heaven," when one of Bach's sons was asked by Johann Forkel, an early biographer, what caused his father to move from Lüneburg, Germany, to Weimar in 1702, the son could only reply, "Nescio" ("I do not know"). He told Forkel, "Since he never wrote down anything about his life, the gaps are unavoidable." Absent greater insight into Bach's life, scholars have tended toward romantic guesswork. Gardiner writes that the presence of what appear to be raindrops on a score owned by Bach indicates it "may have traveled in his rucksack" during a youthful move from Ohrdruf to Lüneburg in 1700, but that's pure speculation. As far as the sublime vocal works - the cantatas and passions, motets and oratorios - that are the main subject both of Gardiner's career and his new study, we do not have "even snippets of testimony" to help us understand how Bach's audience received them. "Did he adjust to public reaction in the way, for example, that Dickens did when writing his novels in serial installments?" Gardiner asks before glumly answering himself: "We simply have no idea." Even when Bach seems to let us in, he keeps his distance. Gardiner wisely observes, of Bach's habit later in life of inserting his name into his works in musical code, that the gesture is "self-referring rather than self-revealing." We require inverse things from books about Wagner and Bach - the one seemingly so present to us, the other so remote. With Wagner we want to narrow our focus to the music that can sometimes feel overwhelmed by the hectoring, logorrheic man who wrote it, with his anti-Semitism and misogyny and frustratingly changeable philosophical passions. With Bach we seek the elusive man hiding, perhaps, under the dense, spectacular music. Geek's "Richard Wagner" and Gardiner's "Bach" go about these respective tasks with intelligence and energy. As eloquent a writer as he is a musician, Gardiner brings to his study the invaluable perspective of the practitioner. It has a true-life ring when he writes about the "heart-stopping" effect the soprano's entrance in the motet "Fürchte Dich Nicht," by Bach's cousin Johann Christoph, can have, "especially if the sound of the soprano reaches the listener at some remove (say, from a church's distant gallery)." One of the stars of the revolution over the past 50 years that has brought period instruments into the mainstream of early-music performance, Gardiner is perhaps best known for his sprawling Bach Cantata Pilgrimage of 2000. For a year he and the Monteverdi Choir and English Baroque Soloists traveled through 14 countries performing nearly 200 of Bach's church cantatas at the points on the liturgical calendar for which each was originally composed. This depth of knowledge permeates his writing. In a footnote on the B minor Mass he writes, "You know you are 'in the groove' when everyone can swing the adjacent inégale semiquavers in a deliciously bluesy lilt without any sense of underlying pressure." The reader doesn't need to know a semiquaver from a diminished seventh to know that Gardiner's account would have gained texture from sharing even more of his own experiences. As it is, it's an eccentric, endearing volume, particularly in its early chapters, which involve chatty, humane digressions into Germany's history, education system and 17th-century musical life that place Bach in a context so well defined that we end up feeling we know him better than we do. The book jumps around in time too much to be an ideal introductory biography - for that, there's Christoph Wolff's authoritative "Johann Sebastian Bach: The Learned Musician" (2000) - and it isn't a comprehensive study of Bach's music. While the analyses of the vocal works are creative and sensitive, the instrumental masterpieces, from the "Brandenburg" Concertos to the "Goldberg Variations," are covered only in passing. Still, working from the limited textual evidence, and using the music as credible support, the book does press a fresh, persuasive interpretation of Bach's personality. Far from the still-popular perception of him as a figure of cool, calm majesty, Gardiner advances a man and a body of work more seething, ornery and unruly, a "natural dissident" and restive employee with "a congenital problem with authority." A curious thing about reading this book and Geek's in tandem is that Wagner, a celebrated nonconformist, ends up seeming less of a rebel in Geek's telling than Bach does in Gardiner's. A professor of musicology at the Technical University of Dortmund, Germany, Geek describes a Wagner who is grounded, focused and even cautious, a savvy realist and ironist rather than a flamboyant, flailing ideologue. AS ARRESTING AS GEEK's vision of Wagner can be, his book is even less useful as straightforward biography than Gardiner's. Concentrating on the music rather than the life, Geek rambles through the operas in chapters separated by brief essays on figures related to Wagner and his legacy, from the fabulously successful (and Jewish) composer Giacomo Meyerbeer, whose generosity toward Wagner was met only with resentment, to the film director Sergei Eisenstein, who led "Die Walküre" in Moscow in 1940. Suffused with his readings of contemporary productions of the operas, Geek's musical analyses are succinct and superb, and he is skilled at finding clues to Wagner in the interstices of his career, like the early rarity "Rienzi" or what he calls "the revolutionary drafts" of never-completed works that Wagner envisioned before embarking on the "Ring" cycle. Geek's observations have an aphoristic precision, as in his comparison of "Der Fliegende Holländer" to a woodcut print and his description of the otherworldly characters in "Parsifal" as "a community of human ghosts." (A miniaturist by temperament, he sometimes resorts to banalities when treating the larger currents: It is not news that Wagner paints "an impressive picture of the corrupting influence of power" in "Götterdämmerung.") Despite the vividness of his musical interpretations, Geek can't keep Wagner's outsize philosophy and outsize life waiting in the wings. As a result the book falls between two stools: not quite biographical enough to satisfy readers who want a life and not quite enough a work of musicology to satisfy students of music. While Gardiner's Bach emerges, in glimmers, from the thickets of counterpoint, Geek's Wagner retains his old tendency to shout so loud you can't quite hear his music. ? ZACHARY WOOLFE writes about music for The Times.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [December 8, 2013]
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A celebrated conductor of baroque music debuts with an examination of Bach's compositions, descriptions of various works and some inferences about the genius who created them. Although Gardiner celebrates Bach's accomplishments through this dense, demanding but rewarding work, he reminds readers continually that the composer was no saint--"a thoroughly imperfect being," he calls him near the end. But the author's focus is not so much on the man but on the music. Gardiner does explain the various geographical moves Bach made in his career, his duties in the various venues where he worked, the amazing demands from his employers--and from his own work ethic; the author writes about Bach's coevals, his marriages, and his children and extended family. But all is in service to the principal item on his agenda: the music. Gardiner is an unabashed Bach fan, praising the composer throughout, even comparing his music to the voice of God. However, he recognizes human weaknesses, as well--for example, his contentious relationship with authority. Gardiner takes us through the major types of works--the cantatas (including some interesting passages about the Coffee Cantata), the St. John Passion and St. Matthew Passion, the motets and the Mass in B Minor. Some of his detailed analysis will leave behind his general readers but will surely animate musicians and musicologists. Although he occasionally alludes to extramusical worlds (mentioning Uncle Remus stories, Philip Pullman, Shakespeare, cake-baking and a variety of famous painters), Gardiner's textual world is principally a musical one. He also examines Bach's Lutheranism and how he revealed his religious ideas in the music--and in the interactions between the music and the words. He speculates that near the end of Bach's life, the composer seemed to express some doubts about life beyond the grave. An erudite work resting on prodigious research and experience and deep affection and admiration.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1 Under the Cantor's Gaze In the autumn of 1936 a thirty-year-old music teacher from Bad Warmbrunn in Lower Silesia suddenly appeared in a Dorset village with two items in his luggage: a guitar and a portrait in oils of Bach. Like old Veit Bach, the founder of the clan, escaping from Eastern Europe as a religious refugee almost four centuries earlier, Walter Jenke had left Germany just as Jews were being banned from holding professional posts. He settled and found work in North Dorset, married an English girl and, with war imminent, looked for a safe home for his painting. His great-grandfather had purchased a portrait of Bach in a curiosity shop sometime in the 1820s for next to nothing. Doubtless he did not know at the time that this was - ​and still is - ​by far the most important Bach portrait in existence. Had Jenke left it with his mother in Bad Warmbrunn, it would almost certainly not have survived the bombardment or the evacuation of Germans from Silesia in the face of the advancing Red Army. I grew up under the Cantor's gaze. The celebrated Haussmann portrait of Bach1 had been given to my parents for safekeeping for the duration of the war, and it took pride of place on the first-floor landing of the old mill in Dorset where I was born. Every night on my way to bed I tried to avoid its forbidding stare. I was doubly fortunate as a child in that I grew up on a farm and into a music-minded family where it was considered perfectly normal to sing - ​on a tractor or horseback (my father), at table (the whole family sang grace at mealtimes) or at weekend gatherings, outlets for my parents' love of vocal music. All through the war years they and a few local friends convened every Sunday morning to sing William Byrd's Mass for Four Voices. As children my brother, sister and I grew up getting to know a grand miscellany of unaccompanied choral music - ​from Josquin to Palestrina, Tallis to Purcell, Monteverdi to Schütz, and, eventually, Bach. Compared to the earlier polyphony, Bach's motets, we found, were a lot more difficult technically - ​those long, long phrases with nowhere to breathe - ​but I remember loving the interplay of voices, with so much going on at once, and that pulsating rhythm underneath keeping everything afloat. By the time I was twelve I knew the treble parts of most of Bach's six motets more or less by heart. They became part of the primary matter in my head (along with folksongs, ribald poems in Dorset dialect and heaven knows what else, stored in my memory) and have never left me. Then, during my teens, I came to know some of his instrumental music: the Brandenburg Concertos, the violin sonatas and concertos (with which, as a distinctly average fiddle-player, I often struggled - ​and usually lost - ​between the ages of nine and eighteen, at which stage I switched to the viola), some of the keyboard pieces and several cantata arias for alto, of which my mother was very fond. Even now I cannot hear arias such as 'Gelobet sei der Herr, mein Gott' ('The Lord be praised') or 'Von der Welt verlang ich nichts' ('I ask nothing of the world') without a lump in my throat, remembering her voice floating across the courtyard from the mill-room. But my early apprenticeship in Bach, the nurturing of a lifelong engagement with his music and a longing to understand the stern Cantor at the top of the stairs, I owe to four remarkable teachers - ​three women and one man - ​who helped to determine the kind of musician I was to become. The man was Wilfred Brown, the great English tenor, who visited my school when I was fourteen, singing both the Evangelist and the tenor arias in a performance of Bach's John Passion. I was so captivated that, unpardonable in a principal second violin, at one point I stopped playing altogether and just gawped. As an interpreter of Bach's Evangelist, Bill Brown was nonpareil. His singing was characterised by an extraordinary subtlety of inflection and word-painting, and by a pathos that was inseparable from his own Quaker beliefs and the humility they brought, something I recognised from my mother's Quaker upbringing. Later on he offered to give me singing lessons from the time I was sixteen until I was twenty-two, sometimes travelling to Cambridge to do so and always refusing a fee. Imogen Holst, daughter of Gustav and amanuensis to Benjamin Britten, was a regular visitor to my parents' home and sometimes led their choral weekends and gave singing lessons to me and my sister. She, I suppose more than any other musician I had encountered at that early stage, stressed the importance of dance in Baroque music. This was so clearly visible in her own interpretation and her way of conducting Bach that someone once filmed her just from the waist downwards while conducting the B minor Mass. To this day, thanks to Imo, I feel that the worst interpretative sin (committed with painful regularity even now) is to plod in Bach; denying or resisting the rhythmical elasticity and buoyancy of his music ensures that its spirit shoots out of the door. In speaking touchingly of her father, she stressed the indispensability of music, that it was a part of life that 'can't be done without'. Letting Bach dance was one lesson well learnt; the other was how to make him 'sing'. This sounds so obvious and so much easier than it is in practice. Not all of Bach's melodies are singer-friendly or melodious in the way that, say, Purcell's or Schubert's are. Often angular, the phrase-lengths uncomfortably long, peppered with little curlicue flourishes and ornaments, they require a lot of purpose, underpinned by iron breath-control, before they can truly sing. And that applies not just to the vocal lines, but to the instrumental ones as well. This I learnt from my violin teacher, Sybil Eaton, a pupil of the celebrated Greek violinist and musicologist Minos Dounias. Sybil certainly 'sang' when she played the fiddle, but, through her inspirational teaching and sheer love of Bach, she was also able to help her pupils to take melodic wing, whether we were playing concertos, solo partitas or obbligato parts to arias from the Passions or the cantatas. The person who crystallised all these ideas for me was Nadia Boulanger, justly recognised as the most celebrated teacher of composition in the twentieth century. When she accepted me as a student in Paris in 1967, she had just turned eighty and was partially blind, but with all her other faculties in tip-top order. Her way of teaching harmony was founded on Bach's chorales, which she regarded as models of how to establish a beautiful polyphony - ​with each voice being accorded equal importance while still playing a different role in the four-way conversation, now advancing, now retreating: contrapuntally conceived harmony, in other words. She insisted that the freedom to express yourself in music, whether as a composer, conductor or performer, demanded obedience to certain laws and the possession of unassailable technical skills. One of her favourite sayings was 'Talent [by which I think she meant technique] without genius is not worth much; but genius without talent is worth nothing whatsoever.' Confined for two years to an unvarying diet of harmony and counterpoint exercises and solfège (the particularly nasty but effective French system of ear-training), I metaphorically kicked and scratched like a cornered animal. On at least one occasion, from sheer frustration, Hindemith's Elementary Training for Musicians ended up in the gutter - ​thrown out of the window of my bed-sit in the 4th arrondissement. But I owe her a colossal debt. She had a way of challenging every preconception as well as a knack of exposing one's shortcomings, technical or otherwise, quite mercilessly. She saw something in me that I did not even see in myself. It was only after I had left the boulangerie that I realised that what had seemed like torture at the time was actually an act of kindness, equipping me to avoid certain professional embarrassments in the future. And, despite her severity, she was extraordinarily generous, even bequeathing to me her unique collection of transcriptions of Renaissance and Baroque music (from Monteverdi to Rameau), including scores and parts of her favourite Bach cantatas, all meticulously annotated - some of my most treasured possessions. How was I to translate this painfully acquired theory and ear-training into actual sound when standing in front of a choir and orchestra? Luckily by this stage (1967-​8), while I was a student in Paris and Fontainebleau, from time to time I had access to an 'instrument' in London - ​the Monteverdi Choir. It had all started back in 1964 when I was in my third year at Cambridge. My tutor, the social anthropologist Edmund Leach, authorised me to take a year off from the History tripos to sieve through the possible directions my life might take and, crucially, to find out whether I really had it in me to become a full-time musician. Ostensibly I was there to read Classical Arabic and medieval Spanish; in practice the task I set myself was to perform Monteverdi's 1610 Vespers, a work that, although I had first heard it as a child, was still very little known and had never before been performed in Cambridge. Despite the dual handicap of my relative inexperience as a conductor and my little formal musical training up to that point, I had set my heart on conducting one of the most challenging works in the choral repertoire. I spent the best part of that year studying the original part-books on microfilm and, with the encouragement of the Professor of Music, Thurston Dart, preparing a new performing edition. I also ended up doing everything involved in planning a public performance in King's College Chapel - ​from assembling and training the choir and orchestra, to having the tickets printed and putting out the chairs. Vibrant colour contrasts and passionate declamation seemed to me to be the hallmark of this music. The test for me was whether I could draw any of that from a group of student singers trained in a totally different tradition. To that extent the Monteverdi Choir started life as an anti-choir - ​in reaction to the well-mannered euphony and blend which characterised the celebrated chapel choir at King's in my day, whose mantra was 'Never louder than lovely'. Their style was summed up for me by a performance, at Boris Ord's memorial service, of Jesu, meine Freude - ​that most extended and interpretatively challenging of Bach's motets - ​sung in English with effete and lip-wiping prissiness: 'Jesu . . .' (pronounced Jeez-ewe), followed by a huge comma and expressive intake of breath, '. . . priceless treasure' (pronounced trez-ewer). I seethed. How had the wonderfully exultant music that I had known since I was a child come to be treated in such a precious, etiolated way? Was this not like adding a layer of face powder and a few beauty spots to the dour old Cantor's portrait? My first attempt at performing Monteverdi's masterpiece took place in March 1964 with some of the same performers. It fell a long way short of the ideals I had set for it, yet people who heard it were encouraging, even enthusiastic. For me it was not just a test of skill, but the epiphany I had been searching for. The decision was made: better to follow an overwhelming passion, even one that would need years of study and practice and with absolutely no guarantee of success, than to pursue safer career paths for which I might already have had the rudimentary technical qualifications. I was encouraged to persist in my rebellion against the vestiges of Victorian performance and to find a more permanent footing for the Monteverdi Choir. My starting-point, then as now, was to bring passion and expressivity to the vocal music of the Baroque, and, as appropriate, to the nationality, period and personality of the composer. In a typical programme, such as we gave in the Cambridge Festival in 1965, devoted to music by Monteverdi, Schütz and Purcell, we set out to enable listeners to hear the idiosyncratic approach of each master sung in the original language, to follow each composer as he experimented with music based on recitation over a figured bass line and revelled in the new expressive range it offered. It was heady stuff, and our efforts were doubtless crude and exaggerated; but at least they did not sound half-baked or indistinguishable from Anglican pieties during a wet November Evensong. I was desperately short of working models. Nadia Boulanger no longer conducted. Nor did Thurston Dart, from whose Sherlock Holmes-like approach to musicology I had learnt a great deal in the postgraduate year that I studied with him after he moved to King's College, London. I did, however, have the luck to observe the distinguished keyboard virtuoso and conductor George Malcolm. George knew how to draw dazzling performances of a most un‑English ardour from his choir at Westminster Cathedral, and, amazingly, he took the trouble to travel up to Cambridge to hear my first Vespers performance. Here was a true master and, I felt, a kindred spirit, whose approbation and encouragement at that stage made all the difference to me, although he had virtually given up choral conducting. Then, at a friend's invitation, I went to hear Karl Richter conduct his Munich Bach Choir in 1967. Richter was acclaimed as the foremost exponent of Bach's choral music at the time, but even his muscular LP recordings of cantatas hadn't prepared me for the oppressive volume and sheer aggression of the motet Singet dem Herrn as delivered by seventy lusty Bavarians from the gallery of the Markuskirche. This was a world apart from the mincing 'holy, holy' approach of King's or the Bach Choir in London in their annual Good Friday Matthew Passion outing at the Royal Festival Hall, but hardly more inspiriting. Nor did Richter's thunderous approach to the Goldberg Variations next day on a souped‑up Neupert harpsichord, given in the Musikhochschule (Hitler's former residence), do much to restore my faith. Here, as in most of the live performances or recordings that I had access to, Bach came over as grim, sombre, po‑faced, lacking in spirit, humour and humanity. Where was the festive joy and zest of this dance-impregnated music? A few years later I heard a performance of the John Passion under Benjamin Britten, a very fine conductor who combed out the separate strands of Bach's elaborate counterpoint before my ears, revealing the work's drama from the inside. Yet, even so, to me it sounded fatally 'English'. I felt a similar disappointment when I first heard Mozart played in Salzburg and Vienna in 1958: the elegant surface of the playing seemed to overlay and disguise the turbulent emotional inner life of the music. Excerpted from Bach: Music in the Castle of Heaven by John Eliot Gardiner All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.