What Made Bach Great? Johann Sebastian Bach 1685-1750

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  • Опубликовано: 16 окт 2018
  • In this episode we explore the life and music of Johann Sebastian Bach 1685-1750.
    Photography in Leipzig by Fabian Pape
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Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @johannsebastianbach3411
    @johannsebastianbach3411 4 года назад +6108

    Whenever I’m down, i watch this video as an ego boost.

    • @franciscocastillo2030
      @franciscocastillo2030 4 года назад +44

      Excelent Bach music. Relaxing.I just love it.

    • @LeoFreemanAUST
      @LeoFreemanAUST 4 года назад +214

      When do you start suing everyone for copyright?

    • @LL-ow1qt
      @LL-ow1qt 4 года назад +68

      Thank you for all your work, highly appreciated . 😂

    • @lvbdevinelove2329
      @lvbdevinelove2329 4 года назад +57

      Lol that made me laugh a little too hard

    • @lvbdevinelove2329
      @lvbdevinelove2329 4 года назад +28

      I really don't know why people don't worship you as a god. Oh wait

  • @Cre8tvMG
    @Cre8tvMG 4 года назад +667

    When I was a classical guitar major my prof told me that Music Theory was just everyone coming along after Bach and trying to explain what he did by nature.

    • @jcee6886
      @jcee6886 3 года назад +23

      Love this

    • @alansmollen
      @alansmollen 3 года назад +11

      Same here.

    • @andreww.8262
      @andreww.8262 2 года назад +8

      Mine told me the same

    • @askbrettmanning
      @askbrettmanning Год назад +3

      Amen 🙏

    • @Astro-X
      @Astro-X 7 месяцев назад +2

      So true! I have learned about retrograde motion in music theory class but never saw anyone really use it prominently, until I came across Bach....

  • @littlelamb2112
    @littlelamb2112 3 года назад +1553

    Saw him live back in the late 1720’s. Best concert I’ve ever been to. Legend forever ☺️

    • @jharris947
      @jharris947 2 года назад +71

      Was that the concert where Rod Stewart was second billing?

    • @deltaveedesignconsulting7697
      @deltaveedesignconsulting7697 2 года назад +63

      @@jharris947 Naw, that was Keith Richard.

    • @aussiebloke609
      @aussiebloke609 2 года назад +126

      "Everything you read on the internet is true."
      ~ Abraham Lincoln

    • @aussiebloke609
      @aussiebloke609 2 года назад +8

      @buzz magister Ooh, shades of Umberto Eco...I'll have to go read that one again. :-D

    • @sherbetdab1200
      @sherbetdab1200 2 года назад +13

      A day in the life of J S Bach - nip down the studio, improvise for a few hours, write it down, nip home, bite to eat, shag the missus.

  • @Mamo878
    @Mamo878 2 года назад +223

    "Now _there_ is music from which a man can learn something."
    - W. A. Mozart (on hearing Bach motets in Leipzig)

    • @joshsilvajr1227
      @joshsilvajr1227 Год назад +7

      If Mozart said that, who am I to disagree?

    • @freepagan
      @freepagan Год назад +3

      Wrong Bach!

    • @jaikee9477
      @jaikee9477 Год назад +4

      @@freepagan True, Mozart actually said this about Bach's son CPE, who happened to be his teacher and greatest influence. He also adored JC Bach, who later became incredibly successful in London. Mozart wasn't stupid. He knew how much he owed to old Bach. Mozart, as we know him, would be unthinkable without the Bach family.

    • @orestezanardo4468
      @orestezanardo4468 Год назад +2

      No mention of counterpoint? How bizarre

    • @Arcessitor
      @Arcessitor Месяц назад

      @@jaikee9477 And funnily, the Bach family probably wouldn't have been possible without Pachelbel.

  • @Kerphelio01
    @Kerphelio01 5 лет назад +929

    The word "Bach" means "creek" in German. So Beethoven once said "Bach? Ocean is what he should have been called..."

    • @berndlauert8179
      @berndlauert8179 5 лет назад +194

      It says „Nicht Bach, sondern Meer sollte er heißen“
      Meer means sea, and is also pronounced the same as mehr meaning more.
      So it is a double-pun

    • @lintflas1183
      @lintflas1183 4 года назад +91

      Beethoven greatly admired Bach. There are lots of letters written by Beethoven filled with superlatives about Bach. In many of his letters Beethoven repeatedly called him "the god of harmony". The letters were written between 1798-1802, more 25 years before Mendelssohn kicked off the Bach renaissance which lasts to the present day.
      Just like Mozart, he was fully aware of Bach's supreme importance.

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay 4 года назад +28

      SO, WHEN HE DIED, MUSIC WENT UP THE BACH ?

    • @happyhoneybigbear
      @happyhoneybigbear 4 года назад +16

      @@berndlauert8179 EXACTLY! And "Bach" leans more toward "River Bank" than creek, though is used for both. So glad to see others enjoying the surprisingly delightful sense of humor that Herr Beethoven had. I studied Trombone at the Koelner Musickhochschule in Cologne where the man himself studied and heard several wonderful tales of Beethoven's wry sense of humor from venerable instructors present there in the early 90's. Such a wonderful time in life. Thanks for reminding me of this wonderful gem!

    • @blakeschreckenbach679
      @blakeschreckenbach679 4 года назад +7

      My name roughly translates to "low water crossing" I like to say.

  • @rondameron7073
    @rondameron7073 5 лет назад +441

    Carl Sagen asked what should be included on the famous Voyager golden disk, physicist Freeman Dyson said, "I'd send just Bach ... but that would be showing off."

    • @josephhargrove4319
      @josephhargrove4319 4 года назад +18

      The version I heard decades ago (also in paraphrase) had to do with what we should broadcast into space to try to connect with other intelligent beings. What I remember was "We should broadcast Bach, all of it. And risk being seen as boastful!"
      richard hargrove
      --
      "La musique est une science qui veut qu'on rit et chant et danse."
      (Music is a science that would have one laugh and sing and dance.)
      -- Guillaume de Machaut (1300-77)

    • @dudeonbike800
      @dudeonbike800 4 года назад +12

      That's excellent! I can't believe I hadn't heard that one before. And so true then, when we were emerging from the disco 70's and into the "me, me, ME!" 80's. But compared to now, then was nothing. Given our (the United States) current sad state of affairs, just one measure of Bach is showing off. Humanity is saying more and more each day that we simply aren't worthy of many of the masterpieces of our culture. Our greed makes us unworthy. T
      As the greedy at the top undermine the foundations of society, our humanity suffers. We can no longer pursue the higher pursuits and are instead left to scratch and claw for the basic necessities. What has been true in the third world for generations is now becoming true in much of the developed world as well. The US is leading the way on devolution of society. Tax cuts don't create prosperity for a country, they only enrich the few at the top - those with all the power simply attaining more.
      So yes, sending Bach is showing off. Because if an intelligent life form found us - and almost by definition they'd be FAR MORE advanced than us - they'd discover a smouldering mass that lives far, FAR below the genius exhibited by Bach and our other truly shining stars of humanity.
      Shame on us. Shame on us all.

    • @frugallentigo6768
      @frugallentigo6768 4 года назад +1

      @Dude On Bike. Do you feel better now?

    • @lucasgust7720
      @lucasgust7720 4 года назад +3

      @daAnder71 yeah and It wasn't even Freeman Dyson, but the biologist Luis Thomas who said that.

    • @gavinfarkas8255
      @gavinfarkas8255 4 года назад +2

      It was Thomas Lewis that said that.

  • @monicacall7532
    @monicacall7532 2 года назад +314

    As a cellist I can’t say enough about the Six Solo Suites for Cello. They are the gold standard for cellists. If you can play these works musically and well you can play anything else in the repertoire. These six suites have been the soundtrack of my life expressing the entire range of emotions from deepest grief to absolute exultation and joy.

    • @musamusashi
      @musamusashi 2 года назад +9

      The greatest music ever written for the instrument.

    • @isaactakeuchimusic
      @isaactakeuchimusic 2 года назад +5

      SAME. My life

    • @whatever2045
      @whatever2045 Год назад +5

      As a cellist I was told the suites ramp up in difficulty. But then when I started working on the 2nd suite, fucking menuet throws a curve ball at me.

    • @monicacall7532
      @monicacall7532 Год назад +1

      Whatever, I agree about the minuets in Suite No. 2. I have small hands for a cellist, so yes, learning them was tough…has been learning both bourees in Suite No. 4 and the first gavotte in Suite No. 6.

    • @whatever2045
      @whatever2045 Год назад +1

      @@monicacall7532 Oh suite #4 is definitely not kind to people with small hands.

  • @sophieblack8864
    @sophieblack8864 2 года назад +58

    I grew up in the Soviet Union and studied classical piano between the ages 7-14. Musical school curriculum was quite strict and we had to play this or that composer's works no matter how much we liked it or not. So I had to improvise sometimes and that was not encouraged at all :). Bach was the only composer I practiced without any hesitation, by placing fingers exactly the way it was requested, without any need to change anything. Bach's music was/is so complete, perfect and divine, it had tamed the rebellious teenager in me.

  • @bcflyer99
    @bcflyer99 4 года назад +235

    Peter Ustinov said: Bach's music is so beautiful that it diminishes one's fear of death by virtue of its serene attachment to life.

  • @Phi1618033
    @Phi1618033 4 года назад +348

    If you ever find yourself asking the question: "If I'm looking up to all these great musicians, then who are all these great musicians looking up to?"
    The answer is Bach.

    • @robertgumpi7235
      @robertgumpi7235 4 года назад +7

      Tal Moore Great sentence. So it is.

    • @frankgliksman5919
      @frankgliksman5919 4 года назад +4

      Exactly.

    • @Phi1618033
      @Phi1618033 4 года назад +22

      @@richardwebb2348 "Not Brook but Ocean should be his name.
      " - Ludwig Van Beethoven ("Bach" is the German word for "brook")

    • @franziskakre8309
      @franziskakre8309 4 года назад +1

      @@richardwebb2348 Beethoven did not know the complete works of Bach. Only "Die Kunst der Fuge", no "Goldberg-Variationen", not the "Passionen" not his concerti, nt his organ works...

    • @julianmanjarres1998
      @julianmanjarres1998 3 года назад +6

      And guess who Bach looked up to... Yup, you guessed it...

  • @Normantnt
    @Normantnt 3 года назад +503

    "The aim and final end of all music should be none other than the glory of God and the refreshment of the soul." J.S.Bach

    • @osoialncuiq
      @osoialncuiq 3 года назад +33

      Bach music certainly refreshes my soul!

    • @pcuimac
      @pcuimac 3 года назад +3

      Souls and god don't exist.

    • @newbladey
      @newbladey 3 года назад +95

      @@pcuimac I'm an atheist too but you don't have to be this edgy in a youtube comments section lmao

    • @mastinho6761
      @mastinho6761 3 года назад +26

      @@pcuimac 1 - You can't prove that God exist BUT you also can't prove that God doesn't exist.
      2 - you're edgy.

    • @Nobddy
      @Nobddy 2 года назад +20

      @@pcuimac it can be taken as a metaphor too ya know? You don’t have to take everything literally (although Bach was probably being literal).

  • @doctorlyon
    @doctorlyon Год назад +42

    Composer Johannes Brahms said of Bach’s Chaconne from the D minor partita for solo violin: "The Chaconne is one of the most wonderful, incomprehensible pieces of music. On a single staff, for a small instrument, the man writes a whole world of the deepest thoughts and the most powerful feelings. If I were to imagine how I might have made, conceived the piece, I know for certain that the overwhelming excitement and awe would have driven me mad."

    • @the_bottomfragger
      @the_bottomfragger Год назад +5

      Such a nice quote. The piece is so incredibly stunning, I've played it many times, practiced it for hundreds of hours and still feel like I'm just getting to know it.
      It's the one piece I know that I'll never be finished with, ever.
      Beautiful words by Brahms.

  • @tonyhunt8081
    @tonyhunt8081 4 года назад +389

    Bach is one of those very rare individuals who actually is as good as the "hype".

    • @Allan-et5ig
      @Allan-et5ig 3 года назад +37

      Or even exceeds the hype?
      Bach - yeah - believe the hype...

    • @jaikee9477
      @jaikee9477 2 года назад +23

      He really exceeds the hype, not to mention that Mozart, Chopin, Beethoven, etc would totally agree with this statement.

    • @Peter-ih2tn
      @Peter-ih2tn 2 года назад +3

      good to know that he passed your test

    • @dr.juerdotitsgo5119
      @dr.juerdotitsgo5119 2 года назад +2

      I don't think there are "hypes" in classical music overall. The composers have well passed the test of time.

  • @snitsch68
    @snitsch68 4 года назад +222

    Jack Bruce (lead singer and bass player of Cream) said that " J.S. Bach wrote fabulous bass parts that every bass player should study cause they perfectly illustrate how to be functional and melodic at the same time."

    • @proverbalizer
      @proverbalizer 4 года назад +6

      I'ma study that bass in in Fugue in G minor

    • @VanMoon
      @VanMoon 4 года назад +20

      Jack Bruce studied classical cello and bass at a conservatory before he picked up electric bass guitar.

    • @ArbeiterInnenlieder
      @ArbeiterInnenlieder 2 года назад +11

      Bach practically invented the bassline. We owe him everything.

    • @richardshagam8608
      @richardshagam8608 2 года назад

      L learned (at the Bach museum in Eisenach, his birthplace) that he wrote the baseline first

  • @SteveKercherMusic
    @SteveKercherMusic 3 года назад +239

    I play Bach on the guitar almost everyday particularly the lute suites. I named my daughter Anna Magdalena after his wonderful wife. I'm pretty passionate about Bach too. Thanks for this!

    • @pluutoop
      @pluutoop 3 года назад +14

      Me too. He has penetrated my soul in a way that broke me into pieces and showed me who I really am and who I could become. He is the most generous composer. He wanted to save humanity with his music. I own him my life. ❤

    • @BeBopScraBoo
      @BeBopScraBoo 2 года назад +4

      john williams' performance of the gigue from 996 is the single greatest guitar performance of all time.

    • @StephiSensei26
      @StephiSensei26 2 года назад +6

      I'm so glad there are so many of us who put Bach into our lives everyday. Bach + Guitar = Heaven!

    • @jaikee9477
      @jaikee9477 2 года назад +4

      Good choice! Not to mention that Anna Magdalena was more than just his wife. She was an eminent soprano singer and musician and she was involved in the writing of some of his pieces. Also she did a lot of copywork.
      Many of Bach's original manuscripts have her handwriting on them.

    • @stevekercher1448
      @stevekercher1448 2 года назад +3

      @@jaikee9477 Indeed. She was a great musician and copyist. We may not have some of his pieces today without her.

  • @karlmahlmann
    @karlmahlmann 2 года назад +79

    “The aim and final end of all music should be none other than the glory of God and the refreshment of the soul.” - Johann Sebastian Bach

  • @U2B2024
    @U2B2024 4 года назад +633

    I love how Rick is equally passionate about Alice in Chains and Bach. That’s why this is such a great channel. For anyone new to Bach, I would recommend checking out Sheep May Safely Graze. It may not be Bach’s most complex piece. But it’s stunningly beautiful.

    • @pwk22
      @pwk22 3 года назад +3

      I did. Beautiful. Although, had I listened without video, I would have never tied the piece with sheep (though it's pacific).

    • @GeorgeBletchly
      @GeorgeBletchly 3 года назад +9

      Exactly what I was thinking. There aren't many people who are equally interested in and knowledgeable about both rock and classical music. I learned Sheep May Safely Graze when I was in my teens and I still take great pleasure in playing it 50 years later.

    • @jacklandy5704
      @jacklandy5704 3 года назад

      That's just your opinion. There's no need for you to attack other people's interests. Just stop.

    • @rhabdob3895
      @rhabdob3895 3 года назад

      Great Destroyer : better at concertos. But not better at heroin... I mean rock music.

    • @jacklandy5704
      @jacklandy5704 3 года назад +1

      @Great Destroyer
      I'm not attacking your interests. I'm trying to stop you from attacking other people's interests.

  • @USMCArchAngel03
    @USMCArchAngel03 4 года назад +405

    A wonderful thing about classical music is you can feel that these pieces are amazing, even if you have no idea why.

    • @leadingfiremansteve
      @leadingfiremansteve 4 года назад +5

      I completely agree !

    • @happyhoneybigbear
      @happyhoneybigbear 4 года назад +15

      Yes even the non-musicians in my Family (they are few but we have some) can inherently sense in their BONES that these pieces are Epic. My son is in San Diego and recently completed his training as a Combat Medic this month (as you know the Corps pulls their medics from Dept. of Navy) & he's been droppin' little nuggets to the fellas. He doesn't talk a lot....rather shocks the $h!t out of his comrades once you sit him in front of a piano. He's been showing these good men what real music is all about & they say the same as you: I don't know WHY, but this song kicks A$$. Hehe :-)

    • @USMCArchAngel03
      @USMCArchAngel03 4 года назад +8

      @@happyhoneybigbear Wow that's amazing. I'm infantry so Corpsman are very high on my favorite people list. God bless your son. Sounds like he's someone with a lot to offer.!

    • @paulkocabay1
      @paulkocabay1 4 года назад +1

      Absolutely

    • @happyhoneybigbear
      @happyhoneybigbear 4 года назад +3

      @@USMCArchAngel03 well God bless you all and all the commenters here as well, especially you archangel. Stay frosty, brother. And if you ever meet a medic named Jake Walsh ,that's my son and we are very proud of him.

  • @NoMeWithoutYou1
    @NoMeWithoutYou1 2 года назад +78

    After watching your Sting/Dominic Miller interview, I decided to revisit Bach after decades, and I end up right back here on your channel. :-)

  • @jaikee9477
    @jaikee9477 2 года назад +168

    "Bach is like an astronomer who, with help from ciphers, finds the most wonderful stars!"
    -- Frederic Chopin

  • @bariswheel
    @bariswheel 4 года назад +211

    St John's passion sounds like the soundtrack of the beginning of our universe .

    • @jordonhodges8493
      @jordonhodges8493 4 года назад +14

      Haha......wellll the Gospel according to John chap 1 describes the beginning
      "In the beginning was the word and the word was God and the word was with God. Holistic beginning of all, all meaning, all beauty, all truth, all good, and all matter.

    • @metteholm4833
      @metteholm4833 4 года назад +4

      ..or "something is about to happen here - and it is NOT going to be peaceful!"

    • @christophertaylor9100
      @christophertaylor9100 4 года назад +2

      St Matthew Passion is heart rending beauty; used to great effect by Martin Scorcese in "Casino"

  • @bassmaiasa1312
    @bassmaiasa1312 5 лет назад +497

    I was in seventh grade, in junior high school in Harlem, and our teacher took us out one night on a 'cultural enrichment field trip' to hear the ballet. I was 12 and not really interested in ballet, but the music for one of the dances caught my ear. I thought to myself "the violins are talking to each other." Later, I looked at the program and it was obvious I'd heard the Concerto for Two Violins. Looking back, I think that moment was the awakening of my musical life.

    • @mokoliveros8298
      @mokoliveros8298 5 лет назад +18

      Are you referring to the Largo movement of Bach's Concerto for Two Violins in D minor? Whenever I hear that piece, I imagine two humpback whales--a mother and its young--swimming together in graceful slow motion, while singing a duet. =D

    • @sierra3644
      @sierra3644 5 лет назад +19

      this is a very beautiful story

    • @Hevvvyyy
      @Hevvvyyy 5 лет назад +3

      fugue in g minor is my favorite one by him

    • @SAPprogramming
      @SAPprogramming 5 лет назад +7

      I had that same moment when I in elementary school at church with my dad at the St. Paul Cathedral. I remember I was fidgeting with the church bulletin at the almost end of mass - I remember fidgeting because of what came next on the organ - "sheep may safely graze." I saw my dad look at me with confusion as stopped to listen what sounds would come next.

    • @soakedbearrd
      @soakedbearrd 5 лет назад +26

      This is what great teachers do, they point you in a direction and watch you run with whatever catches your eye.

  • @allisonrich5061
    @allisonrich5061 2 года назад +151

    When life is crashing down all around me I listen to JS Bach to make things feel more ordered and calm. Bach's music is healing.

    • @johnboettger864
      @johnboettger864 10 месяцев назад +1

      I listen to Kamala Harris.

    • @Astro-X
      @Astro-X 7 месяцев назад

      @@johnboettger864 begone troll

  • @Jack-fs2im
    @Jack-fs2im 2 года назад +26

    Its impossible to define Bachs greatness,it is beyond definition.

  • @bleikrsound6127
    @bleikrsound6127 5 лет назад +311

    Brian May likes Bach so much, he adapted his hair-style.

    • @markglenn1712
      @markglenn1712 4 года назад +16

      Since he also has an advanced science degree, I'm sure he's happy with the Bach / Newton thing going on.

    • @JeffSyam
      @JeffSyam 4 года назад +4

      On one of BBC's Sky at Night when they invite Brian May, one of the co-hosts said: "I've never seen a scientist having so much resemblance with Isaac Newton to Brian May". At that time he has got his PhD.

    • @ejrandler
      @ejrandler 4 года назад +2

      @@markglenn1712 PhD in Astrophysics

    • @auxxik3805
      @auxxik3805 4 года назад

      You mean issac newton

    • @colebuckmaster966
      @colebuckmaster966 4 года назад +2

      Brian May sucks

  • @GamingRevenant
    @GamingRevenant 5 лет назад +346

    As an organist myself, having played Bach for over 8 years now... it's just incredible how each and every new piece I hear of him is so different and such a new world. Everytime I want to learn a new piece of him, I discover things where I'm like "wait, he also wrote things like this...?". His Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor is an absolute pinnacle in his repertoire, and is probably the most beautiful and exhilarating masterwork I've ever played.

    • @fatfrumosfat
      @fatfrumosfat 5 лет назад +8

      Nice to hear that as musician you like learn from bach ,who made universal mathematical music creations ,which are the fountain of wisdom of knowledge ! Its so nice that he made such a great dictionary of music styles ,his music its the future lol best of luck and have funPs our generation should sings bachs masterpieces lol

    • @johnprice362
      @johnprice362 3 года назад +5

      It is also quite stunning on pedal harpsichord

    • @talastra
      @talastra 3 года назад +6

      It's so obvious to note the Passacaglia, and yet sometimes a super-famous work is also a legitimately mind-blowing piece of eternity. And this is one such.
      In general, I find his organ works to be flabbergasting.

    • @johne6081
      @johne6081 3 года назад +6

      Thank you for the nod to the Passacaglia, which is one of my absolute favorite compositions, as well. We are in good company -- when I thanked our church organist for playing it, she confided that it was her favorite, as well.

    • @reflecting6189
      @reflecting6189 3 года назад +4

      i love the passacaglia. absolutely amazing. the way he keeps the bass going.. especially during the arpeggios.. its really well done on the Amorbach organ.. the album is on spotify

  • @elsenored562
    @elsenored562 2 года назад +127

    1:49 Air on the G String
    2:02 Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring
    2:29 Well-tempered Clavier
    3:29 Brandenburg Concerto No. 3
    3:50 Goldberg Variations
    4:01 Mass in B Minor
    4:23 Cello Suite No. 1
    5:04 Art of the Fugue
    6:30 Cantata No. 54
    7:25 [more of the same?]
    8:25 E Major Prelude
    10:04 [compare Alan Rawthorne: Oboe Concerto]
    11:27 St. John Passion
    => Watch "A Passionate Life" by Sir John Eliot Gardiner
    13:44 (end)

    • @cosmofoxgaming1268
      @cosmofoxgaming1268 2 года назад

      Cantata 54 😍😍😍😍😍😍😍🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰

    • @Moksi-iq7pl
      @Moksi-iq7pl Год назад +13

      7:25 Motet Jesu, meine freude BWV 227

    • @lunodavinci1427
      @lunodavinci1427 Год назад +1

      @@Moksi-iq7pl THANK YOU!

    • @myfairlady343
      @myfairlady343 Год назад +2

      @@Moksi-iq7pl one of his greatest works also un my ooinion

    • @chesneytube1
      @chesneytube1 Год назад

      obligatory air on the g string joke

  • @ianboggs9211
    @ianboggs9211 2 года назад +55

    Back in my late teens and early twenties, I sang in church choir. Singing bass was for a lot of the time not very challenging and a bit boring. That is until we sang some Bach.
    We would all learn our parts by listening to each part played individually on the organ, then sing along with it. Standard practice.
    At that age, I could sing bass or tenor in full voice and alto in falsetto. With Bach pieces, I sang the three parts in rehearsal just for the joy of it.
    With Bach, in almost every piece, each part is a complete and beautiful piece of music in and of itself. Then all of these beautiful pieces roll and flip over and blend with each other like no other music.
    To play a piece on an instrument is one thing. To sing with ones own voice several parts (like multitracking) and to feel the beauty of each and then to sing in the ensemble feeling all the parts is entirely something different.
    Bach can be movingly beautiful, disturbingly grave and pretty and joyous. Sometimes all at the same time.
    I know of no other who can do or has done that.
    Bach still proves that there is such a thing as serious fun. :)

    • @Robert_1685
      @Robert_1685 6 месяцев назад

      Actually, G.F. Händel certainly comes close.

    • @ianboggs9211
      @ianboggs9211 6 месяцев назад

      @@Robert_1685 yes. I'll drink to that. He did have his moments for sure. Water Music and Messiah come to mind.
      But the bass parts aren't quite the goisebump producers that JS created.
      There really is a lot of great music out there and I guess we can all have our favourites.

  • @nikosibarramante2677
    @nikosibarramante2677 4 года назад +541

    Bach was actually ‘forgotten’ in the years after his death. His ‘rediscovery’ is attributed to Felix Mendelssohn’s effort to promote his music. And Western music was better because of this.
    As someone who has played Bach’s music on the keyboard, sang and conducted his choral works, I would say that Bach’s genius lay on his almost unearthly understanding of the transition from modal music to triadic harmonic progression (today’s harmony), and his ability to utilize these into his music. Western music at that time was still moving from modes (it was a long transition since Monteverdi), and Bach was the master who knew how to wield the power of his music writing during these exciting period in history. Thank you Rick for sharing your experiences and knowledge. Leipzig can be a transformative place for a musician who is hungry for understanding.

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer 4 года назад +38

      Not true. He was not forgotten. At least not among musicians.
      It's just that performing his music, especially his cantatas, which make up the main body of his work, fell out of fashion.

    • @floriandevuyst
      @floriandevuyst 4 года назад +9

      Correct : Mendelssohn revealed Bach's deepness and greatness to the world through "St Mathaüs Passion". Amazing harmonics and complex architecture, event if the artwork didn't come complete because of a lost part.

    • @uumlau
      @uumlau 4 года назад +15

      @@Quotenwagnerianer or more aptly, he was resented, because he was just so darn good. Later composers didn't want to be compared to him.

    • @ErikaWeiss
      @ErikaWeiss 4 года назад +12

      He was not forgotten...that is a myth.

    • @TheNinnyfee
      @TheNinnyfee 4 года назад

      Yes, he definitely was a visionary.

  • @enkiitu
    @enkiitu 4 года назад +138

    I lived for a while three blocks away from the Thomas Kirche in Leipzig, while I was working as a singer in Leipzig’s opera house.
    Rick, I usually watch your videos because they are very entertaining, and I have to thank you for this one. Especially. I’ve sung many works by Bach, especially Matthäus Passion. Many times. And I love how broad your music palate is. I feel deeply identified with it.
    Apart from EVERYTHING else, Bach was an incredible melodist, if such a word exists. And he was a man, like you and I. It’s absolutely mind blowing the amount of works with such consistent quality, beauty, inventiveness, etc... that this guy wrote. Never was and never will be something like it.
    Thank you for this video, man.

  • @alefabbri9889
    @alefabbri9889 2 года назад +67

    Bach is simply magnificent. Bach wrote music in a divine way never equalled by any other composer ever. He managed to be the real voice of God.

    • @Torgo1969
      @Torgo1969 Год назад +2

      Except for Toccata and Fugue in D Minor...the voice of The Devil. I love it.

    • @autemniaequinoctius2030
      @autemniaequinoctius2030 Год назад +1

      @@Torgo1969
      yes, just 1 minute before he sinned and was thrown down

  • @jgischer
    @jgischer 2 года назад +19

    Oh man. That moment in the St. Johns Passion where the chorus enters. BOOM! It's a simple I(minor) triad, but all the meanderings and complications in the orchestra before that give it such force and presence.

    • @Raukura42
      @Raukura42 Год назад +1

      Totally agree. Just like the beginning of the Mass in B Minor when the orchestra and choir enter together. Imagine hearing that in a church with the sun coming through the stained glass of the cavernous interior for the urgent full throated cry of Kyrie Eleison.

  • @avielkharrat5788
    @avielkharrat5788 5 лет назад +290

    Your channel is absolutely fantastic. Here are no limits. Everything Music is well named in deed.
    It makes you dream, it makes you travel, it makes you go out of your boundaries, it educates you...
    I also greatly appreciate the fact that you respect your audience and the musicians you talk about. Clean channel here.
    Yet, you talk freely, boldly.
    Your channel is an invitation to love music, to love it more and more.

    • @RickBeato
      @RickBeato  5 лет назад +22

      Thank you.

    • @avielkharrat5788
      @avielkharrat5788 5 лет назад +6

      @@RickBeato you're so welcome. And thank YOU!
      Salut de Paris! 🤗🎸🎷🎶🎵🎼📯🎤🎹📣🎻🥁🎺

    • @BloodredRon
      @BloodredRon 5 лет назад +5

      Avi Elkharrat That’s exactly how I feel too. Great channel!

    • @gentbar7296
      @gentbar7296 5 лет назад +3

      agree

  • @offsetsammy
    @offsetsammy 5 лет назад +406

    Many musicians are stars, but Bach is the big bang.

    • @effiemars_
      @effiemars_ 5 лет назад +11

      Well, Bach didn't create music but ok

    • @kosatochca
      @kosatochca 5 лет назад +7

      Facu Maresca Though, he is literally called the Father of music

    • @effiemars_
      @effiemars_ 5 лет назад

      Yeah, not the big bang of it

    • @tomwilliams8591
      @tomwilliams8591 5 лет назад +11

      @@effiemars_ Well, 'father' of music would also imply that it was his child, something that came from him. You knew what point the person was trying to make, stop being needlessly pedantic.

    • @effiemars_
      @effiemars_ 5 лет назад +2

      Stop assuming and categorizing me, in any case. Okay so I'm a musician too, and if he's the father of musicians, is Bach my daddy? :$

  • @tomjohnson1252
    @tomjohnson1252 2 года назад +35

    My favorite composer of all. When I hear one of his pieces I can't believe how he came up with his notes. As I play them it just blows my mind.

  • @xrysostom
    @xrysostom 2 года назад +63

    When my younger daughter was about three years old, John Eliot Gardiner's first B-minor Mass recording caught her ear. The first notes of the Credo grabbed her and she couldn't let go. Then she saw the cover art-the Lamb Triumphant from the Ghent Altarpiece-and asked what all that was about. From then on, whenever she wanted to hear the music, she would say, "Papa, play 'the Lamb,'" and I would put the disks on. Since then, as a church musician and music teacher, she's continued to get what she can out of Herr Bach and to give him back what she can. I marvel at how he took that brutally difficult theme that he received from Frederick the Great-possibly a sequence written by his son CPE that he and the ruler thought to use to embarrass the elder Bach-that he turned into the genius of the Musical Offering.

    • @Noctifern
      @Noctifern Год назад +1

      I love John elliot gardiner. his recording of beethovens eroica is incredible and easily my favorite

  • @seanwalsh72
    @seanwalsh72 3 года назад +28

    I just cannot wrap my head around the fact that one man composed so much wonderful music. To say that Bach was a prolific composer would not do the man justice.

  • @TreyVittetoeMusic
    @TreyVittetoeMusic 5 лет назад +577

    Bach was a machine. The guy turned out so much music and had to work so quickly to keep up with his schedule. And yet his music was of such consistent superior quality. Thanks Rick, I love your subjects!

    • @lupash
      @lupash 5 лет назад +32

      Aristotle said that quality comes with quantity, like a habit. And not viceversa (viceversa as in quantity prevents quality and quality is inversely proportional to quantity), like many use to think.

    • @7177YT
      @7177YT 5 лет назад +4

      i think many pieces, intricate though they are, are just snapshots of ever evolving improvising material. i bet that's why he comes across so jazzy lol.

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 5 лет назад +11

      You do not have to publish everything you write. You practice, you write hundreds of hours of music and then publish a single hour worth of music, which is a masterpiece. Then you will have small quantity of exceedingly high quality. That is Gauss and Riemann versus Cauchy and indeed Euler in mathematics.

    • @7177YT
      @7177YT 5 лет назад

      @@u.v.s.5583 if u ever had a looked at eulers opera omnia, u know, those big ole tomes. if u did, you'd know that quality vs quantity argument is bullshit. lol. as for cauchy vs gauss, that metaphor is off quite a bit too. ;)

    • @kaloarepo288
      @kaloarepo288 5 лет назад +10

      Bach's contemporary Telemann wrote even more music than Bach did -I believe Telemann was the most prolific composer who ever lived -to a non-musician like me Telemann's music sounds as good as Bachs but experts say it's not -it was not as complicated but does music always have to be complicated?

  • @misterleary
    @misterleary 2 года назад +30

    One aspect why Bach's music is still great is that it's still alive and even a mediocre singer like me can participate. I live in Lueneburg, a town close to Hamburg, where Bach finished his education as a "Kantor" as a young man. He sang in the choir of my church and now I can sing his Cantatas and large choir works. We have 3 large church choirs in our town and there is a tradititon that his oratories sort of rotate over the years from one church to the other. So you can listen to the christmas oratory every year. And this is good practise in almost every town and city in Germany. Well, not this year, because of Covid-19 all concerts are cancelled.

    • @ac1646
      @ac1646 Год назад

      🥰

    • @nightshadegatito
      @nightshadegatito 7 месяцев назад

      More evidence that the planned’demic was truly Satan’s working. In Bach I trust.

  • @ignaciogomis272
    @ignaciogomis272 Год назад +11

    Among many, many other things , What makes Beato Great is his love for ALL kinds of music, other from the ones inside his field of expertise.
    And What makes him extraordinary is how he appreciates Bach's music and recognizes it's influence in his developement as a "modern" musician.

  • @PeterLaman
    @PeterLaman 5 лет назад +94

    There's so much that makes Bach great! If you listen to 30 main stream pop song, you probably hear almost the same thing 30 times. If you listen to the same Bach piece 30 times, you'll hear something new all 30 times. Bach's music is packed with gold. You can't just appreciate all of it if you only listen a few times. I've been playing Bach's Lute music on guitar for about 40 year now, and still I find new details, pieces of gold, like a different way to look at the voicings, or the harmonies. It just keeps challenging and inspiring. I don't there's any other composer like that.

    • @PhillipLandmeier
      @PhillipLandmeier 4 года назад +5

      This is true! There are pieces I've listened to and played for over 50 years and I STILL discover new things I hadn't noticed before. None of it ever gets old.

    • @steffen5121
      @steffen5121 4 года назад

      @Camille Desmoulins He wrote over 1.000 works, some of them over 2 hours long. I have no idea, but If you put them all together, you'd probably had 4 weeks of Musik non-stop.

  • @xolanimtha
    @xolanimtha 5 лет назад +29

    Bach was sent from heaven to unfold music! He was sent to compose and create sounds that will stand till the end of time! Bach was an inspired man! His sounds are so angelic!

  • @pietrosilvestri8107
    @pietrosilvestri8107 3 года назад +64

    Bach's music is the only music that can never bore you

  • @josephciolino2865
    @josephciolino2865 Год назад +41

    After 40 years of teaching music and the muisic of Bach, I've learned one thing is certain: the genius of Bach at it's most sublime can NEVER be put into words.

    • @johnboettger864
      @johnboettger864 10 месяцев назад

      One thing is certain, the rest is lies. The flower that once has blown, forever dies.

  • @Whiteyruss1
    @Whiteyruss1 4 года назад +875

    Bach said "Any music that doesn't bring God joy is just noise"

    • @dbcooper9935
      @dbcooper9935 4 года назад +68

      That pretty much sums up today.

    • @stephen5601
      @stephen5601 4 года назад +14

      DB Cooper thank you for saying that.

    • @danielmconnolly7
      @danielmconnolly7 4 года назад +59

      @@dbcooper9935
      I think he sensed that Rap would come along someday and kill everybody's good vibe...

    • @unknowjlm
      @unknowjlm 4 года назад +16

      @@danielmconnolly7 Depends on what type of rap you talk about. (the one you hear on the radio? Sure)

    • @philosyche
      @philosyche 4 года назад +50

      @@danielmconnolly7 i mean come on, shitting on all of rap and not taking the minimal effort of sub-categorising it is just ignorant and lazy. rap is a huge, all encompassing term

  • @livingbeings
    @livingbeings 5 лет назад +160

    I am so glad that my Beato Club dues go towards producing this kind of content. Thanks Rick.

    • @juliasessofiglio9549
      @juliasessofiglio9549 5 лет назад +15

      Thanks so much for being one of his patrons. I can't speak for everyone, but I am grateful beyond belief for his content, especially something like this.

    • @wesleyalan9179
      @wesleyalan9179 5 лет назад +5

      Its awesome!

  • @petetom1
    @petetom1 Год назад +6

    You cannot forget Bachs violin concertos. How double concerto is one of my all time favorite pieces.

  • @OmniphonProductions
    @OmniphonProductions 2 года назад +14

    Imagine walking into an 18th Century cathedral on Sunday morning and hearing Toccata & Fugue on the pipe organ...or walking back out into the world after hearing Prelude #1.
    In addition to the mathematical genius of his music and the monumental nature of his repertoire...the man could set a mood!!!

  • @bernardfinucane2061
    @bernardfinucane2061 4 года назад +56

    I think the Well Tempered Clavichord was written to demonstrate the advantages of tuning the instrument in a specific way -- well tempered and not even tempered. The pitch increases by the twelfth root of two each step up the chromatic scale, but that is an irrational number, so you have to fudge it somehow. The different methods of fudging are called temperaments.
    Bach put lots of fancy chords into the piece to show his method was best. But of course, it had to be beautiful to have any value as a demonstration. So in a way there is as much science as art in it.
    You can think of a keyboard as a digital slide rule. Moving up one octave, which is twelve steps, doubles the frequency of the tone. Moving half that is increasing by the square root of two. So if middle C is one, F# above it is the square root of two. G is 3/2, which is 1.5, according to Pythagoras, but it is actually seven steps up the chromatic scale, or 2^(7/12), which is about 1.498. That is why you have to fudge. E is supposed to be 5/4, 1.25, but it is actually 2^(4/12), the cube root of two, roughly 1.2599.
    Here's how you use a keyboard to calculate the square root of three: If G above middle C is 3/2, then G an octave higher is three, nineteen steps up the chromatic scale. Half that is about nine steps up from middle C, which is A. Follow the circle of fifths and you get C->G->D->A, which is (3/2)^3, or 27/8. But that A is an octave too high, so the A about middle C is half that, 27/16, or 1.6875. The square root of three is 1.732, only about 3% higher.
    Getting good approximations translates into having an instrument that sounds like it is in tune. It has to work for lots of different cases, meaning lots of different chords. That is the problem Bach was wrestling with.

    • @fulanodetal4856
      @fulanodetal4856 3 года назад +1

      Thanks for your comment, man!
      Though i'm struggling to fully understand all of this!
      What would you recommend me to read to achieve that understanding?
      Thanks again!

    • @khabriel
      @khabriel 3 года назад

      Thank for the lesson Sir.

    • @john9675
      @john9675 2 года назад +1

      You what ?

    • @DuncanEduardo
      @DuncanEduardo 2 года назад +1

      Brilliant comment Bernard.

    • @ron88303
      @ron88303 2 года назад +3

      @Doogyrevko wow Not boring; just above your pay grade.

  • @pteromalid
    @pteromalid 4 года назад +46

    Toccata and Fugue in d minor has been my favorite piece of music since I was a young child, listening to my father play it on pipe organ.

    • @thatellipsisguy8984
      @thatellipsisguy8984 3 года назад +2

      I’d say it has to be his. You hear notes in it that aren’t written or played but exist in the interplay between overtones - and that came out of his head...

    • @its1110
      @its1110 3 года назад +1

      @@thatellipsisguy8984
      I've thought that myself.
      Bach played with his fugues as a way to teach or illustrate the Art of Fugue. I can't think that "simplicity" would be an argument against a fugue being Bach's... it was part of his approach to and fun with music.

    • @mkshffr4936
      @mkshffr4936 3 года назад

      Try the Dorian. It will knock your socks off.

    • @scottparis6355
      @scottparis6355 3 года назад

      Really awful that people now hear the first bar and think "Ew, spooky. Phantom of the Opera. Halloween."

    • @its1110
      @its1110 3 года назад

      @@scottparis6355
      Yes. Very profound.
      That is surely not in any way Bach's mindset in that piece.

  • @tampazeke4587
    @tampazeke4587 Год назад +8

    I fell in love with Bach when I was 5 years old. My mother couldn't understand my obsession but thank goodness she indulged it.

  • @robcotnam47
    @robcotnam47 2 года назад +45

    All I know is, more of J.S. Bach's melodies and chord progressions make the hair on the back of my neck stand up than those of any other composer.

  • @ront8270
    @ront8270 4 года назад +60

    Rick..here’s my story : i was a mailman for thirty years and during my time I met a guy who plays in the symphony and loves to fish and I was was really new to the guitar but I was really into ..so I asked one day if he wanted to go fishing on the big lake eire and ,we went and on the way he explained how Bach harmonized all his music back then for the whole ride out there for a hour and half .. I never said more than that’s cool wow that entire 1.5 hrs their ...that’s was 8 year ago and we’re still great friends even when he’s half my age @62...soooo ur story of JSB WASSSS SOOOO GOOOD .. thanks for ur lessons and ur utube friends ...u all know who you are and thanks for sharing

  • @stevenm.6886
    @stevenm.6886 4 года назад +41

    I have listened to Bach’s works for 40 yrs or so, and do not pretend to know much about it other than it moves me like no other music can 🤷‍♂️

    • @danielmconnolly7
      @danielmconnolly7 4 года назад

      I give it a "7", it's easy to Waltz to...

    • @shelleysteva2251
      @shelleysteva2251 4 года назад +1

      Steven M. That is good enough. Music like his means civilization is worth saving

  • @marlonb.8243
    @marlonb.8243 2 года назад +25

    Mr. Rick Beato, this is your best take on any one musician. I never thought I would ever like classical, but Bach pushed me over the edge. I listen to all genre of music. Bach checks all the boxes for me for what I like in classical; just like how Django Reinhardt & Vince Guaraldi does it for me for jazz.

  • @cirkmannzirkel8229
    @cirkmannzirkel8229 Год назад +5

    The intro of the Johannes Passion, as well as Widerstehe doch der Sünde, brings tears of joy to my eyes immediately. It's as simple as that.

  • @ryokinor6223
    @ryokinor6223 4 года назад +323

    Bach was a virtuoso of the organ. He fathered 20 children.

    • @composingwithjames
      @composingwithjames 4 года назад +37

      He was prolific in more than one way

    • @marizacabral5141
      @marizacabral5141 4 года назад +3

      Yet they say he has no living descendants today.

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer 4 года назад +27

      @@marizacabral5141 That is not true. There are still descendants alive today, but they don't bear the name anymore since the paternal line, which carries the name, died out.

    • @marizacabral5141
      @marizacabral5141 4 года назад +3

      @@Quotenwagnerianer Do you happen to have the source of this information/research? I happen to have quite a bit of curiosity over the question of whether JSB has living descendants today.

    • @toon2u1
      @toon2u1 4 года назад +39

      his organ had no stops

  • @chrisboel1611
    @chrisboel1611 3 года назад +59

    I teach my middle school students about Bach and his music. By the time we get to the end of our unit on Bach, they have a very good introductory knowledge of his life and music. They could also tell you that Bach is my absolute favorite musician. Let’s face it, we could spend a lifetime pulling apart Bach’s music and still only scratch the surface. Thanks for this great video Rick.

  • @najinelson6742
    @najinelson6742 3 года назад +14

    Maybe Bach is the most influential musician ever. I love Gould playing Bach. His Toccata and Fugue in D Minor for organ is very famous, too, what an intro!

  • @ultrametric9317
    @ultrametric9317 2 года назад +23

    The two most impressive sounds I've ever heard were the launch of a Saturn 1B rocket, and Bach's E-flat "St. Anne" organ prelude/fugue played on the great organ in York Minster - this titanic sound bouncing off the stone walls of the cathedral that you could literally feel in your bones. It was like the voice of God.

    • @tomowenpianochannel
      @tomowenpianochannel Год назад

      Can honestly say I had a similar experience. Bach Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in C major, on a organ, in the main Cathedral in Madrid. Heard the notes outside, entered the cathedral. There are no words to describe the power, the possession of your soul, the all-encompassing world of sound, shaking the walls when the bass comes in, literally an earthquake of organised, positive, major key music, in the sunlight of Spain. If I could choose 50 moments from my life to repeat, that is one of them.

  • @DpHsHd
    @DpHsHd 5 лет назад +15

    Not only is Bach’s music the most spiritually and intellectually rewarding in the Western canon, from the perspective of sound; it’s also remarkably beautiful on paper. Every Bach score is a visual masterpiece - perhaps that’s harder for non-musicians to appreciate, but look at a full score of, say, the opening of the B Minor Mass or, (and far more condensed), the Adagio-Fugue from the first (G Minor) Sonata for solo violin.
    Both are so gorgeous to look at that, even if you didn’t realize that the black and white dots and lines encoded instructions for translation into sound, you could hang the printed music on your wall and just stand in awe.
    And Bach’s own autograph scores are even more beautiful than print.

    • @achenarmyst2156
      @achenarmyst2156 5 лет назад +1

      Peter Shoobridge Absolutely! After 4 years of playing the violin I started to study the 6 Sonatas and Partitas. My teacher recommended that I should buy the IMC edition. Having done that I was surprised to find a facsimile of the autograph manuscript at the back of that edition. For 40 years this continues to be my most precious music edition and I regularly present Bach‘s heavenly aesthetic score to friends of mine.

    • @danciuriak2011
      @danciuriak2011 5 лет назад

      I've had that same thought about the WTC preludes and fugues - each so remarkably different in appearance from the other.

  • @robertllr
    @robertllr 5 лет назад +183

    Well, you know you can't limit Bach's greatness to "Eight major works." But even so, how could anyone leave out the Chaconne? I'll let Brahms speak for me:
    "On one stave, for a small instrument, the man writes a whole world of the deepest thoughts and most powerful feelings. If I imagined that I could have created, even conceived the piece, I am quite certain that the excess of excitement and earth-shattering experience would have driven me out of my mind." - Johannes Brahms about Bach's Chaconne

    • @tatianacovington53
      @tatianacovington53 5 лет назад +4

      Look what Einstein did with chalk and a blackboard.

    • @Me-uv6kc
      @Me-uv6kc 5 лет назад +7

      He also left out the musical offering... Bach wrote a lot of titanic works

    • @jaimepimienta233
      @jaimepimienta233 5 лет назад +2

      Incidentally, the Chaconne written for the left hand by Brahms on the theme by Bach is featured in an old 1940’s movie with Peter Lorre: “The Beast with 5 Fingers.” The plot is stupid since it makes reference that the composition was composed by the fictional character in the movie.

    • @luclaflamme4712
      @luclaflamme4712 5 лет назад +2

      I cannot agree more...

    • @spielersubliminals8025
      @spielersubliminals8025 5 лет назад +3

      Keep in mind, Brahms was also a notorious perfectionist

  • @baronderochemont8556
    @baronderochemont8556 2 года назад +7

    The harpsichord solo on the Brandenburg Concerto number 5 is 3 minutes of pure rock’n roll madness!

    • @MyHomeExperiments
      @MyHomeExperiments Год назад +1

      I know right! Also check the oboe solo at Brandenburg Concerto 1 - 4th movement.

    • @ac1646
      @ac1646 Год назад

      Yes. It was one of our set pieces for critical analysis for O Level music and I've loved it ever since.

  • @HomeBrewedVapesReviews
    @HomeBrewedVapesReviews 2 года назад +8

    It took me many years to understand what it means to appreciate Bach. You hear some of his pieces so often that you take him for granted. Until you let yourself either sit and take it in, or something grabs you, you'll never really get it I don't think. But I can hear the range of emotions in his works, and am thankful for what he gave to us.

  • @mikeytimz4387
    @mikeytimz4387 5 лет назад +225

    What Makes Rick Beato Great?
    Quality Videos.

    • @nznegativeions
      @nznegativeions 5 лет назад +3

      Want some kneepads?

    • @mikeytimz4387
      @mikeytimz4387 5 лет назад +5

      Only if you promise to watch :)

    • @jazzerson7087
      @jazzerson7087 5 лет назад +5

      Always quality, yup, but this one was beautiful, the footage from inside the church is extraordinary, looks an overwhelming place. Well worth the wait on this.

    • @evil6564
      @evil6564 5 лет назад +1

      Prison Mike.

    • @tyflyer007
      @tyflyer007 5 лет назад +1

      @@nznegativeions Dude.......I thumbed your comment down 45 times and nothing happened.......bummer.....

  • @musiclistsareus1029
    @musiclistsareus1029 5 лет назад +373

    I heard a great quote by John Batiste that I'll have to paraphrase since I didn't write it down, Bach was better at music than anyone else has ever been at anything.

  • @stampcollector74
    @stampcollector74 Год назад +6

    Bach just touches my heart. ♥ He was a genius.

  • @alexisazede5222
    @alexisazede5222 2 года назад +9

    I love Bach's music ! And in my mind I often thank my piano teacher who made me love bach's music. Her key sentence was : "Dans Bach il n'y a pas la mélodie et l'accompagnement, dans Bach tout chante ! " (in Bach's music there is not the melody and the support, in Bach's music everything is singing !"
    Thank you Mr Beato !
    Alexis (from Nantes, France)

  • @wolf1303
    @wolf1303 4 года назад +31

    Bach is the greatest of all time! without Bach there wouldn't be Mozart, Beethoven, etc....awesome video

    • @thomassiegler9898
      @thomassiegler9898 3 года назад +8

      Without Monteverdi, Schütz, Pachelbel, Palestrina, Buxtehude, Couperin and Vivaldi
      there would be no Bach.

  • @greenviolist34
    @greenviolist34 3 года назад +226

    I've smoked a lot of weed in my life but I never get as high as when I listen to or play Bach.

    • @eisbaerbel
      @eisbaerbel 3 года назад +1

      Agree...😎

    • @dominikk8547
      @dominikk8547 3 года назад +10

      Maybe try both at the same time :)

    • @ilkeadrall710
      @ilkeadrall710 3 года назад +2

      I've ever smoked not a single tiny bit of weed and I won't but I concur that your sentence and Bach deserve a big like from me. I appreciate both and why not, your enlightment too.

    • @cjscarff6453
      @cjscarff6453 3 года назад +3

      I would like but it’s currently at 69 likes and I don’t want to disturb that

    • @ilkeadrall710
      @ilkeadrall710 3 года назад

      @@cjscarff6453 I wouldn't like to disturb that by giving you a first like and by hoping you sixty 68 more.

  • @trustyshellback4724
    @trustyshellback4724 2 года назад +13

    To me, J.S. Bach can be summed up by one word: "DIVINE". Air on the G String (Suite in D Major, BWV 1068) as played by Jonathan Scott on the grandiose pipe organ of Whitworth Hall, University of Manchester UK is the most MOVING music performance I've ever heard! It's on YT, go check it out yourselves! The composition and Jonathan's performance and the heavenly sound of that powerful organ is so hauntingly beautiful, it's simply magnificent! It literally moved me to tears! To me the composition conveys profound sadness, but simultaneously eternal glory, elation and celebration! Only a genius could achieve that and J.S. Bach WAS a musical genius! That term is thrown around so recklessly these days, but Bach was the real deal.

  • @killyourtvnotme
    @killyourtvnotme Год назад +28

    I get fatigued by Mozart and Beethoven, never Bach. There’s something so calming, complex, and regal about his works

    • @ritajohannessen9804
      @ritajohannessen9804 Год назад +3

      God.

    • @ritajohannessen9804
      @ritajohannessen9804 Год назад +7

      It's becauce Bach needed help from God, he always prayed for help, and he gave ALL the glory back to God.

    • @killyourtvnotme
      @killyourtvnotme Год назад +4

      @@ritajohannessen9804 I’ll take that answer

    • @jaikee9477
      @jaikee9477 Год назад +6

      "I play the notes as I have written, but it is God who makes the music" - Johann Sebastian Bach.
      Notice Bach, despite being a polymath, never took credit for his music. He always understood his music as something given to him by an outside force.

    • @ritajohannessen9804
      @ritajohannessen9804 Год назад +1

      @@jaikee9477 woow. Thank you ! This iş important.

  • @NystromJohan
    @NystromJohan 4 года назад +15

    A fantastic video and hommage to J.S. Bach. Thank you so much! I'm 56 now. J.S. Bach's music has been a huge part of my life since early teens. His music is such a comfort. Way better than any therapist! :-)

    • @alastertan5779
      @alastertan5779 Месяц назад

      Same here.
      Visited Leipzig, Thomas kirche Had an opportunity to pay my homage to Bach - finally.

  • @martinhurley7761
    @martinhurley7761 5 лет назад +52

    No need to block any of Ricks videos. The man is a legend

  • @ultima579
    @ultima579 2 года назад +13

    Every composer who has ever lived: “Bach is the father, we are his children”.

  • @faridrosero6040
    @faridrosero6040 2 года назад +10

    Bach is overwhelmingly awesome, this year I had the pleasure of learning one of his preludes and fugues, only four pages and yet it took me over 7 months to finish it and to be able to play it decently. I do not quite understand everything that is going on in the fugue, but god! It sounds so nice, and the act of playing turns into a mathematical and logical puzzle that you not only have to solve but also have to communicate that puzzle in the language of arts. I get lost everytime I play that piece, and it's amazing.

  • @richardgordon8110
    @richardgordon8110 5 лет назад +86

    RICK. I'M 72 AND AM IN THE PROCESS OF LEARNING HIS 2 PART INVENTIONS.

    • @beback_
      @beback_ 5 лет назад +6

      RICHARD GORDON Right on, man

    • @nicholasrees1838
      @nicholasrees1838 5 лет назад +2

      Not sure how far through you are but I'd recommend the d minor (no. 4 I think) and the c minor as being particularly good. Of course all the rest are good too!

    • @raulperez2308
      @raulperez2308 5 лет назад +3

      hows it goin man? 19 y.o. here, currently with the well tempered clavier, some of the stuff is bloody hard

    • @garymoeller892
      @garymoeller892 5 лет назад +3

      Maikind K. There is no better advice than this!

  • @JamesCorbettMusic5000
    @JamesCorbettMusic5000 4 года назад +13

    I’m a jazz musician that’s digging into Bach, Mozart, Chopin and Scott Joplin pieces. Each one of those composers is having a profound impact on my playing and improvising. Especially Bach! Just on my 6th piece out of WTC book 1

  • @ericwedin4154
    @ericwedin4154 3 года назад +4

    Nothing brings as much comfort and joy as Bach’s music. Nothing.

  • @chrisbrewer4285
    @chrisbrewer4285 8 месяцев назад +1

    The most beautiful sound to ever come out of a musical instrument "Concerto for Two Violins"

  • @gligachaz5047
    @gligachaz5047 5 лет назад +42

    This is like heaven after watching a video of a man spending a week in VR headset.
    Thank goodness for Bach.

  • @TheParadisecove
    @TheParadisecove 4 года назад +13

    "Bach, left a legacy that musicians and music historians will be delving into for centuries to come. His limitless musical exploration expressed the order of the physical and biological universe in exquisite mathematical precision in detail. His music was written to express and define beauty in all creation, and his influence on all successive composers is unparalleled and remains so to this day." Rick Beato
    Wow!!

  • @Songwriter777
    @Songwriter777 Год назад +3

    Rick, one day you will be remembered just as reverently as Bach was. In my humble opinion.

  • @chuckcochran8599
    @chuckcochran8599 Год назад +6

    By far, my most favorite Composer of all time. The body of work he left behind is phenomenal in its scope, depth and complexity. I spent a number of years just studying his reharmonizations of hymns, and just scratched the surface.
    Thank you Rick. In my humble opinion, this is probably one of the most important educational videos you've done to date.

  • @mandobob
    @mandobob 5 лет назад +11

    His sheer output, quality, and variety - choral, orchestral, organ, chamber, solo instrumental, keyboard. Mind boggling. Perhaps the greatest European composer and maybe the best of all time. I love Beethoven and Mozart but Bach is best.

  • @wolfmanjock
    @wolfmanjock 5 лет назад +7

    I have that grin starting when I listen or look at Bach’s music. Absolutely elegant, but a juggernaut of musical movement. I love the quote about him better at music than anyone else has been at anything. I’ve never heard that one before!

  • @cyndifoore7743
    @cyndifoore7743 2 года назад +1

    Bach’s music is so beautiful it makes me cry.

  • @rickbarrington
    @rickbarrington 2 года назад +12

    Absolutely one of your top videos. It has the polish of a top class production, done with authority and reverence. The best tribute to a giant amongst musical icons, as relevant to millennials as rockers like me

  • @FighterFred
    @FighterFred 5 лет назад +69

    It is very strange. I've now played Bach at the piano for 30 years and still find new perpectives. If you look closely, you will find one bar with the same structure as the others but with a mind-boggling dissonance that is out of this world, adding mysticism to the piece. The dissonances are essential and there with a specific purpose. They are not random. Bach will be with me until the end.

    • @matthewtrout1440
      @matthewtrout1440 5 лет назад +4

      Keep in mind the tuning would have been different back then, and people still argue over what kind of tuning Bach used. This is pretty much true for all composers up until equal temperament became the standard piano tuning. What sounds pure or dissonant in modern tuning may have sounded much different in whatever tuning the composer was originally using.

    • @nigelft
      @nigelft 5 лет назад +2

      @@matthewtrout1440
      Speaking of tuning, you reminded me of a quote from no less than András Schiff as to how he practices everyday. His answer was simple as it was profund: he simply picks two, or three, out of the '48', and that's it; to paraphrase him 'everything you need to know about how to play the piano is there in both books. I have no need for anything else'.
      For me, that says it all; yes, one can argue at what pitch A, for instance, was tuned at (and probably not at 440Hz ...), but irrespective of that, the Well-Tempered and the Goldberg Variations are, like the Cello Concertos, the K2 of any music; there are pieces which are more like Mt. Everest, but K2 is recognized as technically the far more challenging, despite being lower in altitude.
      Hence why I think music can indeed be seperated into two periods BB (Before JSB) and AB (After); even if we simply have had the Cantatas (which I haven't even yet begun to listen to in any depth), his music legacy would still be enormous. However, what we have is music that will surely still be played well into the next millennium ...

    • @sean8470
      @sean8470 5 лет назад

      @Craig Johnson same here; working on just the 2nd and 3rd variation; not easy even these!

    • @patriciayeiser6405
      @patriciayeiser6405 5 лет назад

      Try the harpsichord. Or clavichord.

    • @killboybands1
      @killboybands1 5 лет назад +1

      @@nigelft Matthew Trout is referring to the tuning of the intervals, not if A was at 440 or not. For example. The Well-Tempered Clavier was in a temperament called Werkmeister III. In the Key of C, the 3rds would be almost pure while the Key of F-sharp is much more dissonant.

  • @captainbienvenuecanadianav7060
    @captainbienvenuecanadianav7060 4 года назад +88

    He was jailed briefly for dueling with a bassoon player. Apparently, he insulted the fellow by claiming his bassoon playing reminded him of the bleating of a sheep.The two men drew on each other and went at it.

    • @DonVal86
      @DonVal86 4 года назад +4

      Captain Bienvenue Canadian Avenger He also went into rehab briefly because of a cocaine addiction. Thank God he came out of it. 🙏

    • @gavinfarkas8255
      @gavinfarkas8255 4 года назад +4

      Nanny goat bassoonist is the best insult ever by a classical musician. He also kinda just didn't go to work for a few months because he went full on fan boy to Buxtehude.

    • @ingonagel7169
      @ingonagel7169 4 года назад +2

      He was a lively chap. Never heard this story, believe it though.

    • @arlissspeace4724
      @arlissspeace4724 3 года назад +5

      I dated a sheep for a time and she sounded EXACTLY like a bassoon.

    • @thatellipsisguy8984
      @thatellipsisguy8984 3 года назад +1

      Arliss Speace sure it was a ewe? bassoon is pretty low...

  • @wolframseifert8111
    @wolframseifert8111 2 года назад +2

    I was introduced to Bach by my dad who was a huge fan. As a kid I wasn't impressed, but as a teen I liked the "Play Bach" Jazz-Adaptations by Jaques Loussier, that were very successful in Europe back then (I live in Germany). In more than 35 years as a professional studio and live guitar player I never met Bach's music again, until this year. My father, plagued with Alzheimer's Disease, listened to this music intensely and had his most joyful moments with it, the last connection to his former life, while all memories were fading away. He passed away in October...maybe he is listening to the maestro playing himself in heaven at this moment... I decided to do a RUclips project, contemporary versions of all 15 of Bach's Inventions for piano, played on various guitars in a modern context in different styles. Because of the pandemic there were less gigs, so time for a new musical experience. This Inventions are so great, the groove and the strength of only two piano voices is unmatched and works so well on guitar complemented by some jazz, rock and funk grooves. I found a lot of Bach's musical language in typical jazz phrases I had played for years too, especially his diminished arpeggios and the use of the harmonic and melodic minor scales. This sounds so modern and timeless, every improvising musician should check this out. This man must have been an alien, being so ahead of his time.

  • @1923dsa1
    @1923dsa1 3 года назад +70

    Bach was required to write a piece of music each and every week for Sunday mass. The almost inhuman task of accomplishing this writing leaves one absolutely in awe of this fellow. How much music was in this guy? Further, he was not in some prince's or King's petting zoo either. He wrote the things he heard in his head. Bach also took to writing secular music, which pissed off the clergy throughout Christendom. He was accused of writing "unnatural harmonies" as Rick Beato ably demonstrates in this video. For this faux paux he was sacked at more than one church. He also had a fiery temper and was not hesitant to display this temper when given inferior musicians to work with, or, when improperly paid. I would have mentioned his two-part inventions and 3-part Sinfonias in his accomplishments. While not nearly as ornate as some of his work, they are simply charming. Yet, his music was largely forgotten until old Felix revived them and the rest is history. He was a man for all seasons.

    • @rogerbee1234567
      @rogerbee1234567 2 года назад +6

      he makes me believe in god

    • @MooMooManist
      @MooMooManist Год назад +2

      He was not in princely lodgings indeed - he lived in noisy surroundings, with kids running around all the time.

    • @cosmofoxgaming1268
      @cosmofoxgaming1268 Год назад +1

      Let’s not forget his short stint in prison!

    • @nightshadegatito
      @nightshadegatito 7 месяцев назад

      Sounds like if he were alive and famous today he would have been disappeared by the CIA

  • @SirJosephSanchez
    @SirJosephSanchez 5 лет назад +48

    I'll never forget when I first heard the beginning of St. John Passion. It is the most horrifyingly beautiful thing I have ever heard.

    • @pittssr
      @pittssr 4 года назад +4

      Exactly the same! Had to listen another 500 times. Those intentional dissonances! The first phrase takes like a minute to resolve, but resolve it does. So satisfying. Then there is a sense of complete exhaustion and peace in the terminal chorus.

    • @pablojlascano8322
      @pablojlascano8322 4 года назад

      Hey, the St. Matthews' is just as impressive. Even more so since you have double orchestra and double choir, that hi-definition stereo Bach!

  • @davidberndt6275
    @davidberndt6275 4 года назад +33

    Rick, this video needed to be an hour. 13 minutes just barely gets started :) appreciate your work!

    • @ryanmadsen3982
      @ryanmadsen3982 3 года назад +4

      I took a college class on Bach that really just scratched the surface. If this video motivates even one person to start listening to Back then Rick has done a great service.

  • @tonytripp1
    @tonytripp1 2 года назад +5

    Rick, I discovered your channel and I am compelled to write you a comment. Very rarely do I find someone online that is as spot on with music as you are. And this Bach video just confirmed EVERYTHING. I have much respect for you and your work. Keep on making these great videos and educating the people on "what makes music great." We need more of this in our insane world.

  • @albertopa58
    @albertopa58 2 года назад +5

    Glad you included Glenn Gould playing of Bach. Gould was also a genius. May he rest in peace.

  • @ddrse
    @ddrse 5 лет назад +122

    I actually had the pleasure of meeting Bach, in a bar in Brooklyn.

    • @notmyrealname5473
      @notmyrealname5473 5 лет назад +22

      haha that is a funny joke because Bach is sadly no longer alive so it would be impossible to ever meet him.

    • @clarktferrill
      @clarktferrill 5 лет назад +19

      Let me quess....He said ,I'll be Bach. ...that was Arnold

    • @ddrse
      @ddrse 5 лет назад +10

      No he said baby got Bach

    • @ultimobile
      @ultimobile 4 года назад +11

      your Bach is worse than your Byte

    • @FirstLast-il6ok
      @FirstLast-il6ok 4 года назад +1

      ultimobile back met him in Brooklyn not Boston ;)

  • @SDsc0rch
    @SDsc0rch 4 года назад +34

    this youtube channel....... is addictive!
    i'm not a musician, i'm not big into music - but i find this content fascinating
    keep it up! : )

  • @studentsmusic
    @studentsmusic 2 года назад +4

    Really amazing that rick came to my country for that and obviously he is a very deep thinking person not only about pop/jazz/rockmusic. That makes him a perfect ambassador for the universal power and spirit of music itself. I studied/lectured music in germany and of course have a deep relationship to bachs incredible work and message. Also being a jazz, rock, electronic guy i will never oversee, what he composed and his life circumstances those days even finding the time to teach his children. The „simplest „ 2 voice invention can take years to play it properly or to understand the depth of its cleverness. Good, that rick also spreads that message. Music - be in it!

  • @KatySei
    @KatySei Год назад +2

    Toccata and fugue BWV 565, shows how great bach's improvisation was.