Home / Composer / Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach / Repertoire

Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach

Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
Composer - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
The second surviving son of J.S. Bach, Carl Philipp Emanuel was the most innovative and idiosyncratic member of an extremely talented musical family. His music, unlike that of his father or that of the master he influenced, Haydn, did not define an era so much as reveal a deeply personal response to the musical conventions of his time.
C.P.E. Bach could play his father's technically demanding keyboard pieces at sight by the time he was seven. Also an exceptional student in areas other than music, he enrolled at the University of Leipzig in 1731 to study law, then transferred to the University of Frankfurt an der Oder. He graduated in 1734, but remained in that backwater town giving keyboard lessons, involving himself in public concerts, and learning the composer's craft.
By 1740 Bach was in Berlin as harpsichordist to Frederick the Great of Prussia. Here he was first exposed to Italian opera seria, and its dramatic style infiltrated his instrumental music. Little of this was heard at court, where Bach accompanied the flutist-king in one reactionary concerto after another by Quantz. He made several attempts to find a new position, but the stress of the king's disfavor was partially relieved in 1756, when Frederick became distracted by the Seven Years' War and was frequently away from the court. Bach found a select audience for his remarkable and experimental series of keyboard works such as the so-called "Prussian" and "Württemberg" sonatas (composed in the early 1740s) and the Sonatas with Varied Repeats (1760).
Bach finally got himself released from Frederick's service in 1768 in order to succeed Telemann as cantor at the Johanneum in Hamburg, also serving as music director for the city's five major churches; he held this post until his death.
Stylistically distant from his father's rigorous polyphony, C.P.E. Bach was something of a proto-Romantic; he was the master of Empfindsamkeit, or "intimate expressiveness." The dark, dramatic, improvisation-like passages that appear in some of Mozart's and Haydn's works are due in part to his influence; his music in time became known all over Europe. His impulsive works for solo keyboard, which lurch into unexpected keys, change tempo and dynamics abruptly, and fly along with wide-ranging themes, are especially compelling. One account of Bach's after-dinner improvisations described the sweaty, glazed-eyed musician as "possessed," an adjective that would be applied to equally intense and idiosyncratic musicians in the Romantic age. Many of his symphonies are as audacious as his keyboard pieces.
In the area of chamber music, Bach pulled the keyboard out of its subsidiary Baroque role and made it a full partner with, or even leader of, the other instruments. Yet here he fashioned the music to the public's conservative expectations, as he did with his church music. He composed prolifically in many genres, and much of his work awaits public rediscovery.
Bach also produced an important account of performance practice in the second half of the eighteenth century, translated into English as Essay on the True Art of Playing Keyboard Instruments. ~ James Reel, All Music Guide
To Start | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | To End | Next
188 results
Sort by: 
Results per page: 
Bach: Concerto for flute, strings&continuo in A major, H. 438, Wq. 168
Composed: Jan 1753
Bach: Concerto for organ (or harpsichord), strings&continuo in G major, H. 444, Wq. 34
Composed: Jan 1755
Bach: Fantasia&Fugueà 4, for keyboard in C minor "No. 7", H. 75.5, Wq. 119/7
Bach: Magnificat for 4 voices, chorus, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 3 trumpets, 2 horns, strings&continuo in D minor, H. 772, Wq. 215,
Composed: Jan 1749
Bach: Marcia für die Arche, for 3 trumpets&timpani in C major, H. 621, Wq. 188
Bach: Rondo, for keyboard No. 2 in C minor (Kenner V/4), H. 283, Wq. 59/4
Composed: Jan 1784
Bach: Symphony for strings&continuo in E minor, H. 652, Wq. 177
Composed: Jan 1756
Bach: Sei sinfonie, symphonies (6) for strings&continuo ("Hamburg"), H. 657 662, Wq. 182
Composed: Jan 1773
Bach: Orchester sinfonien (4), collection of symphonies for orchestra, H. 663 666, Wq. 183/1 4
Composed: Jan 1776
Bach: Sonata for flute&keyboard in E major, H. 506, Wq. 84
Refine Search
 
About us | Contact us | Terms & conditions | Privacy policy | Sitemap | Press Room | Passionato Guides
Become a music critic – recommend or rate your favourite composers, artists and music, from Passionato downloads or from other performances in your classical music collection. Let Passionato and other classical music enthusiasts know what you think; be a regular reviewer and become one of our top-rated classical Aficionados.
Classical music creates new genres constantly splitting off from and being absorbed back into the mainstream, re-invigorating it. There are, for example many different types of classical music forces such as chamber, instrumental and orchestral. Styles such as romantic, neo-classical, serialism ... Passionato can help you make sense of it all!
Classical music, one of the oldest forms of music has modified its sound over many centuries. What makes the Baroque distinct from that of the Classical period? What makes a piece of classical music inherently Romantic? What does the 20th century period even mean? Passionato is here to guide you every step of the way.
At Passionato you can search for classical music composers in our composers A-Z list.. From the most popular, like Bach, Beethoven or Mozart, to those more obscure composers. You can read composers’ biographies, catalogues, recording recommendations, download composer’s recordings or listen to multiple samples of each work.
If you’re new to classical music downloads read our download tutorial to help you easily access the music the you want. Visit our FAQ section which features answers to the most commonly asked questions about Passionato. If you require further assistance, our dedicated customer services team is ready to help with any enquiry.
As recommended by:
The Passionato range includes
... with more being added all the time

Portions of Content Provided by:
  
AMG Portions of Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC.
All Music Guide is a registered Trademark of All Media Guide, LLC.
© 2008 Passionato Ltd. Passionato and the Passionato logo are registered trademarks in the UK and other countries. All rights reserved.
iTunes© is a registered trademark of Apple Inc. Apple is not a partner or sponsor of Passionato.
Special deals announced via Twitter!
Find us on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.
© 2010 Copyright Passionato Ltd