Bach - Meanings of Counterpoint
Bach - Meanings of Counterpoint
Bach - Meanings of Counterpoint
of Counterpoint
DAVI D YE AR S LEY
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 0 521 80346 2 hardback
CONT E NT S
List of illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
List of abbreviations
1. Vor deinen Thron tret ich and the art of dying
page x
xiii
xv
xvi
1
42
93
128
173
209
Bibliography
Index
239
251
ix
I L L US T R AT I O N S
1.1
1.2
page 3
19
1.4
22
1.5
23
27
1.7
29
2.1
43
61
63
2.4
68
2.5
72
78
1.3
1.6
2.2
2.3
2.6
List of illustrations
2.7
2.8
3.1
4.1
4.2
85
86
108
144
4.3
150
152
5.1
177
5.2
185
194
196
6.1
Forschungen uber
dessen Grabstatte, Gebeine und Antlitz (1895)
213
6.2
216
217
5.3
5.4
6.3
6.4
Forschungen uber
dessen Grabstatte, Gebeine und Antlitz (1895)
6.5
219
221
6.6
223
echte
Bach portraits and skull; from Heinrich Besseler, Funf
Bildnisse Johann Sebastian Bachs (1956)
226
6.7
xi
1
Vor deinen Thron tret ich and the art
of dying
bitt
wend dein genadig Angesicht
von mir, dem armen Sunder
nicht.
Before your throne I now appear,
O God, and humbly bid you,
turn not your gracious face,
away from me, poor sinner.
The chorale comes on the last page of one of the most important autograph collections of
Bachs organ works, containing the Trio Sonatas (BWV 525530), the Canonic Variations
(BWV 769a) and the Great Eighteen Chorales (BWV 651668). For a summary of
scholarship on the source for BWV 668, see Russell Stinson, J. S. Bachs Great Eighteen
Organ Chorales (Oxford, 2001), 3338.
Figure 1.1 Vor deinen Thron tret ich, BWV 668, manuscript fragment
appended to the Art of Fugue; for example the deceptive cadence found
in m. 10 of BWV 668 provides a more satisfying reading than that offered
by the authentic cadence at the same place in BWV 668a (Example 1.1).
Here is a last word that, in its two versions, suggests a concern for careful
revision. Yet in the note (Nachricht) which appeared on the reverse
side of the title-page to the first edition of the Art of Fugue (1751), Carl
Philipp Emanuel Bach claimed that shortly before his death his father
had dictated the chorale extemporaneously (aus dem Stegereif) to an
unnamed friend.3
C. P. E. Bach was not present in Leipzig at the time of his fathers
death, yet his account of the genesis of the last chorale was accepted
3
For an investigation into the myths surrounding the composition of Vor deinen Thron see
Christoph Wolff, Bach: Essays on his Life and Works (Cambridge, Mass., 1991), 282294.
Martin Luther, A Sermon on Preparing to Die, in Luthers Works, ed. Jaroslav Pelikan
and Helmut Lehmann, 56 vols. (St. Louis and Philadelphia, 195576), XLII, 95115, at
p. 101.
For more on exemplary Lutheran deaths see Rudolf Mohr, Protestantische Theologie und
Frommigkeit im Angesicht des Todes wahrend des Barockzeitalters hauptsachlich auf Grund
hessischer Leichenpredigten (Marburg, 1964), 229308.
For an annotated bibliography see Robin Leaver, Bachs Theologische Bibliothek/Bachs Theological Library (Neuhausen-Stuttgart, 1985). In all of the works of Muller
and Pfeiffer
referred to below it is not known which editions of the numerous printings were owned
by Bach. My citations are of the editions that I have examined.
theologian and
church superintendent August Pfeiffer (eight volumes), and the Rostock
Superintendent Heinrich Mullers
after an extended trip to find that his wife, Maria Barbara, was
dead and buried. She had been in fine health when he left.
Even for the devout, however, belief alone would not make the dying hours easy: although it was the door through which one entered
eternity, death was plainly to be feared. The literature on dying typically includes admissions by authors, self-evidently pious, that they
too fear death. In Anti-melancholicus, a book that belonged to Bach and
one which contains a lengthy chapter on the final struggle with death
(Todes Kampff), August Pfeiffer unleashed his most grimly descriptive
language: I take fright as well whenever I think that my limbs, which
I so carefully nourished and clothed and so tenderly cared for in my
lifetime and which did me such steadfast service, should moulder and
rot in the earth, and become a stinking carcass, dung, and filth, and perhaps be carried off by a thousand worms or maggots.11 For, as Bach
would have learned on reading Pfeiffer, Muller
Heinrich Muller,
Figure 1.2 The battle with death, August Pfeiffer, Liebes-Ku (1732)
professions to help the dying man (Bach dies despite every possible
care given him by two of the most skillful physicians) and the final
peaceful departure for the next life, even noting the exact time of his
death, on July 28, 1750, a little after a quarter past eight in the evening,
in the sixty-sixth year of his life.15
15
NBR, 303.
the internalization
of these passages is meant to provide a bulwark against temptation so
that even the anguish of death will not distract the dying person from
adhering to the content of these memorized words.
Indeed, last words were crucial not only to the dying, but to their
survivors as well. For the former, the reiteration of individually chosen
16
17
18
Liebes-Ku, 691692.
10
21
22
Quoted in Winkler, Die Leichenpredigt, 171. For another example of chorale singing at
the deathbed, see Mohr, Protestantische Theologie, 288.
Gottfried Wimmer, Caspar Neumanns . . . Sterben-Lied (Leipzig, 1730), 9; quoted in
Martin-Christian Mautner, Mach einmal mein Ende gut: Zur Sterbekunst in den Kantaten
Johann Sebastian Bachs zum 16. Sonntag nach Trinitatis (Frankfurt, 1997), 287.
11
23
24
25
12
28
29
13
to
of Buxtehude manuscripts in two letters to Heinrich Bokemeyer: August 6, 1729 and
October 3, 1729. See J. G. Walther, Briefe, ed. Klaus Beckmann and Hans-Joachim Schulze
(Leipzig, 1987), 6283, esp. 70. See also Snyder, Dieterich Buxtehude, 126128.
14
mark the death of Emperor Leopold I.30 Through this direct contact
and his later study of Buxtehudes funerary works, Bach would have
familiarized himself with the full range of musical approaches to death,
from the monumental Castrum doloris to the contained and controlled
Mit Fried und Freud.
Just as Walther had constructed a piece of learned counterpoint using Buxtehudes Mit Fried und Freud as a model, Buxtehude had based
his own effort directly on Prudentia prudentiana by Christoph Bernhard,
onetime director of music in Hamburg (a city well within Buxtehudes
musical orbit). Also descended from Prudentia prudentiana or perhaps,
more directly, from Buxtehudes Mit Fried und Freud is a work by
the Copenhagen organist Martin Radek entitled Jesus Christus unser
Heylandt, in ordinari und doppelten Contrapunt gesetzt ( Jesus Christ our
Savior, set in ordinary and double counterpoint), which survives in
a copy by Walther.31 For his contribution to the art of writing in
30
31
15
16
where the fugal subject is answered by its exact melodic inversion, and
culminates in a section combining the opening theme with three countersubjects (Example 1.4). Walther singled out the piece among Strungks
keyboard works; C. P. E. Bach listed Strungk as one of his fathers influences, and it would seem unlikely that this, perhaps Strungks most
famous keyboard piece, would have remained unknown to Bach.
Though more flamboyant than Bachs Vor deinen Thron in its use of counterpoint, Strungks Ricercar would have offered Bach the chance to play
17
33
34
For a discussion of the musical sources including music by Strungk that Bach studied
and made manuscript copies of as a youth see Robert Hill, Der Himmel wei, wo
diese Sachen hingekommen sind: Reconstructing the Lost Keyboard Notebooks of
the Young Bach and Handel, in Bach, Handel, Scarlatti: Tercentenary Essays, ed. Peter
Williams (Cambridge, 1985), 161172.
Adam Gumpelzhaimer, Compendium musicae latino-germanicum, 9th edn. (Augsburg,
1632). This canon is taken from Pietro Cerones El melopeo (Naples, 1613), 11301131.
See Denis Brian Collins, Canon in Music Theory from c. 1550 to c. 1800 (Ph.D. diss.,
Stanford University, 1992), 324328. For a solution to the canon see Wil Dekker, Ein
Karfreitagsratselkanon aus Adam Gumpelzhaimers Compendium musicae (1532), Die
Musikforschung 27/3 (1974): 323332.
For these poems, along with English translations, see Snyder, Dieterich Buxtehude, 127.
18
19
In a lengthy appendix to the Harmonologia, Werckmeister again ponders the relationship between the cosmological order and invertible
counterpoint, stating that a piece in invertible counterpoint can reach
its perfection in its inversion (replica) and is therefore A mirror of
nature and Gods order (ein Spiegel der Natur und Ordnung Gottes).37
Werckmeister gives musical form to this allegorical conception in a
four-part setting of the chorale Vater unser im Himmelreich employing
invertible counterpoint at the octave and twelfth, presenting ten of the
possible permutations; he does not conclude the piece but simply writes
and so forth (u.s.w.), suggesting that these combinations could be
continued until the musical system returns to its original configuration,
the progression of the voices recreating in microcosm the cycles of the
planets.38 The constant motion of the heavens is thus analogous to the
perpetual revolution of the parts in a well-constructed piece of double
counterpoint, whose inversions mirror the perfection of heaven and provide earthly beings with a glimpse of Gods unending order, a prelude
to the heavenly concert.
But the relationship between these phenomena was more than simply one of likeness: the mechanics of the heavens were not simply
allegorized by double counterpoint, they were manifested in its workings. Bernhards choice of the word revolutio for the contrapuntally inverted verses of Prudentia prudentiana is suggestive of this same celestial
35
36
38
20