Leipzig After Bach: Church and Concert Life in a German City

Author:   Jeffrey S. Sposato (University of Houston)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press, USA
ISBN:  

9780190616984


Publication Date:   24 May 2018
Format:   Undefined
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Leipzig After Bach: Church and Concert Life in a German City


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Overview

Leipzig, Germany, is renowned as the city where Johann Sebastian Bach worked as a church musician until his death in 1750, and where Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy directed the famed Gewandhaus orchestra until his own death in 1847. But the century in between these events was critically important as well. During this period, Leipzig's church music enterprise was convulsed by repeated external threats-a growing middle class that viewed music as an object of public consumption, religious and political tumult, and the chaos of the Seven Years and Napoleonic wars. Jeffrey S. Sposato's Leipzig After Bach examines how these forces changed church and concert life in Leipzig. Whereas most European cities saw their public concerts grow out of secular institutions such as a royal court or an opera theater, neither of these existed when Leipzig's first subscription concert series, the Grosse Concert, was started in 1743. Instead, the city had a thriving Lutheran church-music enterprise that had been brought to its zenith by Bach. Paid subscription concerts therefore found their roots in Leipzig's church music tradition, with important and unique results. These included a revolving door between the Thomaskantor position and the Gewandhaus directorship, as well as public concerts with a distinctly sacred flavor. Late in the century, as church attendance faltered and demand for subscription concerts rose, the Gewandhaus dominated the musical life of Leipzig, influencing church music programming in turn. Examining liturgical documents, orchestral programs, and dozens of unpublished works of church and concert music, Leipzig After Bach sheds new light on a century that redefined the relationship between sacred and secular musical institutions.

Full Product Details

Author:   Jeffrey S. Sposato (University of Houston)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press, USA
Imprint:   Oxford University Press, USA
ISBN:  

9780190616984


ISBN 10:   0190616989
Publication Date:   24 May 2018
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Undefined
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

"Leipzig is widely celebrated for its importance to music history, and for the role its beautiful churches played in the German Reformation. But the period between Johann Sebastian Bach's death in 1750 and Felix Mendelssohn's years in Leipzig in the 1830s and 40s has been largely ignored-until now. Leipzig After Bach fills this gap in our knowledge, and shows us why the musical and church traditions of Leipzig from 1750 to 1850 are critical to our understanding of the city's past and present.""--Mayor Burkhard Jung, City of Leipzig ""In the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries Berlin, Hamburg and Vienna had their opera houses, which provided the focus for civic music-making. Leipzig was different, there was no opera house. Instead, in Bach's time, an active musical life overflowed from its churches into coffee houses and other locations, that was especially effective around the time of the Leipzig trade fairs, held three times each year. But by Mendelssohn's time the services in the churches began to sound like sacred concerts. In this significant study, much of it based on unpublished archival sources, Jeffrey S. Sposato skillfully charts the ebb and flow between religious and secular influences in the musical life of Leipzig from the time of Bach to the time of Mendelssohn, a period that until now has been imperfectly understood.""--Robin A. Leaver, Emeritus Professor of Sacred Music, Westminster Choir College, Princeton"


Leipzig is widely celebrated for its importance to music history, and for the role its beautiful churches played in the German Reformation. But the period between Johann Sebastian Bach's death in 1750 and Felix Mendelssohn's years in Leipzig in the 1830s and 40s has been largely ignored-until now. Leipzig After Bach fills this gap in our knowledge, and shows us why the musical and church traditions of Leipzig from 1750 to 1850 are critical to our understanding of the city's past and present. --Mayor Burkhard Jung, City of Leipzig In the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries Berlin, Hamburg and Vienna had their opera houses, which provided the focus for civic music-making. Leipzig was different, there was no opera house. Instead, in Bach's time, an active musical life overflowed from its churches into coffee houses and other locations, that was especially effective around the time of the Leipzig trade fairs, held three times each year. But by Mendelssohn's time the services in the churches began to sound like sacred concerts. In this significant study, much of it based on unpublished archival sources, Jeffrey S. Sposato skillfully charts the ebb and flow between religious and secular influences in the musical life of Leipzig from the time of Bach to the time of Mendelssohn, a period that until now has been imperfectly understood. --Robin A. Leaver, Emeritus Professor of Sacred Music, Westminster Choir College, Princeton


Author Information

Jeffrey S. Sposato is Associate Professor of Musicology and Director of Graduate Studies at the Moores School of Music, University of Houston. His book The Price of Assimilation: Felix Mendelssohn and the Nineteenth-Century Anti-Semitic Tradition (OUP, 2006) was named a Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2006 and a Royal Philharmonic Society Music Award finalist. His other publications include William Thomas McKinley: A Bio-Bibliography (Greenwood, 1995), as well as articles and reviews in 19th-Century Music, Music & Letters, Choral Journal, Musical Quarterly, Ars Lyrica, Notes, The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (second edition), and several edited collections.

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