The Greatest Composer of All Time: Johann Sebastian Bach
What do Beyoncé, the Police, the Beatles, Lady Gaga, Yngwie Malmsteen, Nina Simone, Béla Fleck and Pat Metheny — pop, rock, jazz, bluegrass and metal artists — all have in common (besides being renowned musicians)? They have all been influenced by a single, genius composer from over a quarter of a millennium ago: the greatest composer of all time.
If you ask AI, a friend or family member who the greatest composer of all time is, you’ll get a range of answers. You will often get a list of names — including the likes of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven, Igor Stravinsky, Frédéric Chopin and Johann Sebastian Bach.
People have preferences. It’s a subjective question. So they say.
But if you put the same question to subject-matter experts — contemporary musicians and composers from different genres and backgrounds — you’ll likely get a more definitive answer.
Johann Sebastian Bach.
The German Master
Johann Sebastian Bach was born in the late seventeenth century (AD 1685) during the Baroque period of music in the northern part of deeply protestant Germany (then the Duchy of Saxe-Eisenach).
Bach’s family were devout Lutherans — and he was surrounded by musicians in his family from a young age.
His father likely taught him the basics of music; however, by the time Bach was ten years old, his parents had both tragically passed away.
Bach held various positions under the patronage of German nobility before being appointed director of church music in Leipzig, where he provided four churches with music and taught musical education at the St Thomas School.
A prolific composer, by the time he died Bach had written some 1128 works (with an additional twenty-three or so unfinished or lost) — works of complexity and beauty unrivalled in modern times.
On top of being perhaps the greatest organist of all time, Bach is believed to have also mastered the violin, horn, brass, contrabass, cello, oboe, bassoon, flute and recorder. He is renowned for his technical ability mathematical genius and emotional depth — both as a master musician and as a composer.
But is he really the greatest composer of all time?
Bach: The Greatest Classical Composer Ever
When BBC Music Magazine asked 174 leading contemporary classical composers to name the best classical composers of all time, Bach unsurprisingly took the top spot:
“All hail JS Bach, whose spirit dwells in practically every note written since his death. With supreme contrapuntal skill, Bach sculpts music of perfect form and balance, bestowing it with an emotional power that has echoed through the centuries. From the aching beauty of the cello suites and the bewildering ambition of the keyboard works to the dramatic force of the cantatas, no one has, and could possibly, come close to Bach’s genius.”
But it’s not just classical composers who look up to Bach as the greatest of all time.
What Musos Hear That You Don’t
In March this year, multi-instrumentalist and music producer Rick Beato, whose YouTube Channel has over 4 million subscribers, released a video entitled, “The Bach Effect: What the GREATS Hear That You Don’t”.
“Imagine a world where the echoes of a single unparalleled genius resonate through the ages,” Beato begins, “influencing not just genres, but the very heart and soul of the greatest musicians we’ve come to adore.”
In the video, Beato explores portions of his interviews with some of the most acclaimed contemporary musicians — from a range of genres: bluegrass, jazz, heavy metal, rock — noting how often Bach’s name comes up in the conversations.
The musicians he interviews include the likes of seventeen-time Grammy-award-winning artist Sting (and his sideman and guitarist Dominic Miller); seventeen-time Grammy-award-winning banjo player Béla Fleck; Swedish heavy metal guitarist Yngwie Malmsteen, and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Peter Frampton.
Bach’s impact on each of these artists — and their admiration towards his work — was clear.
Bach’s Enduring Legacy in Western Music
Twenty-time Grammy-award-winning jazz guitarist Pat Metheny summed it up this way:
“I’ve never looked at the guy next to me like, ‘maybe I’m doing a little better than that guy,’ — compared to Bach, man, we all suck.”
Bach’s music transcends his own time period in a way that few — if any — other composers’ work has.
To quote Beato:
“Bach’s compositions are not just masterpieces of the Baroque era. They are the very foundation on which much of modern music is built.”
This includes not only modern classical but jazz, pop, rock — even bluegrass, country and heavy metal — among other genres.
As Sydney-based writer and musician Ria Andriani explained in a recent piece for ABC Classic, “Many Beatles songs, including All You Need is Love, Blackbird and Penny Lane, were inspired by [Bach’s] music. Lady Gaga sampled his harpsichord in her hit song Bad Romance.”
Similarly, Beyoncé’s cover of Blackbird in her country-inspired album COWBOY CARTER — released in March this year — preserves Bach’s influence as found in the original 1968 Beatles song.
Musical and Mathematical Genius
Musicians and keen listeners have always known that JS Bach was a master mathematician as well as a genius composer.
Bach Akademie Australia founder and violinist Madeleine Easton told ABC Classic she would often find “clever little devices” hidden in the score:
“I’d look at the notes on the page and it would form a cross.”
On other occasions, she would see that Bach had used note patterns to write his own name in the musical score.
However, researchers are only just beginning to use information theory to uncover the full extent of Bach’s mathematical genius.
A study published this year by researchers from the University of Pennsylvania explored the mathematical patterns in Bach’s music, which help to convey information.
Scientific American wrote the following about the research:
Baroque German composer Johann Sebastian Bach produced music that is so scrupulously structured that it’s often compared to math. Although few among us are emotionally affected by mathematics, Bach’s works—and music in general—moves us. It’s more than sound; it’s a message. And now, thanks to tools from information theory, researchers are starting to understand how Bach’s music gets that message across.
Not only was Johann Sebastian Bach an expert composer who could convey feeling and emotion through his music. He was also an incredibly gifted mathematician — as is evidenced by the degree of complexity, structure and order in his music.
Conclusion
Whether one believes that Bach is truly the greatest composer of all time — or simply recognises that he is indisputably among the greatest — is perhaps a relatively unimportant distinction.
What is galling, however, is the dismissive attitude that some people have towards him — as though the fact that they do not personally appreciate his music somehow reflects poorly on Bach!
To those people, I would simply quote Georg Christoph Lichtenberg’s (perhaps harsh) observation: “When a book and a head collide and a hollow sound is heard, must it always have come from the book?”
The same applies to great composers.
Bach was a musical genius unrivalled in his own time — and arguably in all of history. But what was it that motivated Bach to produce the music that he did?
I’ll explore that question in my next piece.
Recommended reading:
- Gant, Andrew, Johann Sebastian Bach: A Very Brief History, SPCK Publishing, 2018.
___
Image courtesy of Wannapik Studio.
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Wow this is some article. Bach’s desire to glorify God is one of my great inspirations and that besides his music. Every piece of music he left the three latin words. Soloi Deo Gloria!!!!!
Perhaps his greatest piece of music was this:
Jesu, Joy Of Man’s Desiring
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S6OgZCCoXWc
My father was always listening to Bach. I hated it as a child, but, as I grew up I loved it and all other forms of classical music and opera. This was the only good legacy Papa left me which raises my spirits in bad times.
I’m so excited to see this article, Cody, after listening to, and collecting Bach’s music (45 CD’s across all genres) for close to 50 years! There were a number of points I knew about, but that you offered even more detail, and there were some I didn’t.
And I was so pleased to see the video explanation by one of my favourite musicians, the director of the Australian Chamber Orchestra (regarded as one of the world’s finest), Richard Tognetti. And it is so revealing to hear Tognetti, an atheist, encourage people to “listen to Bach properly…and really try to concentrate, spiritually, sonically, and then suddenly this door will open…”
So even atheists are moved in the spirit they deny exists by Bach!
One small point of interest to us as Christians is the extent to which Bach’s faith in God was his inspiration, whether he was composing sacred music or instrumental works. At the beginning of every manuscript, he wrote “JJ”, which stands for “Jesu Juva” (“Jesus Help Me”) and at the end “SDG”, which stands for “Soli Deo Gloria” (“To the Glory of God Alone”).
Also, as we’re talking about his music, and you offered a book to read for further knowledge, why not a playlist? So here’s three works that are featured on the Tognetti video, the Cello Prelude, the Violin Chaconne, and St Matthew’s Passion, the last a brilliant production by yet another atheist, producer Jonathan Miller.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCicM6i59_I
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=omOnU8R4Kyc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K3SrPkdRqSU&t=108s
And for good measure, a few more where people will quite possibly hear tunes which are familiar, but they weren’t aware that it was Bach.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GWtoeYznx8E
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OKgLEWv9imE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nnuq9PXbywA
I look forward to your next article Cody. I hadn’t realised across the genres as to how many different artists were influenced by Bach’s creativity and genius. I never tire of his music and find myself making up “tunes” along his lines if I listen long and hard enough. His gift was a real blessing to mankind for which I praise God.
Great to see this deserving artilce now at number one. It is great when good news goes to the top!!!!!