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Georg Böhm

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Georg Böhm (September 2, 1661 - May 18, 1733) was a German Baroque organist and composer. He is notable for his development of the chorale partita and for his influence on the young J. S. Bach.

Life

Georg Böhm was born in 1661 in Hohenkirchen, Thuringia, Germany. His father, an organist in Hohenkirchen, was his first music teacher. Böhm studied at the university in Jena.

In 1693 he settled in Hamburg, which was an important music center and one receptive to Italian music, thanks to the Hamburg Opera. Böhm worked in Hamburg for some years and, it is thought, studied there with the celebrated organist Johann Adam Reincken.

Böhm later moved to Lüneburg, a town where French music was prized and played. In 1698 he became the organist in residence at the Johanneskirche (Church of St. John) in Lüneburg, a position he held until his death in 1733.

Influence on J. S. Bach

CPE Bach stated to Forkel in 1775 that his father "loved and studied the works of the Lüneburg organist Georg Böhm". J. S. sang soprano in the choir of St. Michael's Church in Lüneberg in 1700, in which city Böhm lived most of his life.

Works

Böhm is mainly known for his compositions for the organ and harpsichord (primarily preludes, fugues, and partitas). Many of his works were designed with flexibility of instrument in mind: a particular piece could be played on the organ, the harpsichord, or the clavichord, depending on the situation in which the performer found himself. Böhm's music is notable for its use of the stylus phantasticus, a style of playing based on improvisation.

Chorale partitas

Böhm's most important contribution to North German keyboard music is the chorale partita, a large-scale composition consisting of several variations on a particuilar chorale melody. He effectively invented the genre, writing several partitas of varying lengths and on diverse tunes. Later composers also took up the genre, most notably Johann Sebastian Bach. Böhm's chorale partitas feature sophisticated figuration in several voices over the harmonic structure of the chorale. His paritias generally have a rustic character and can be successfully performed on either the organ or the harpsichord.

See also

References

Further reading

Discusses in-depth most of Böhm's chorale settings, including the main themes in each. There is a fair amount of related discussion as well, including aspects of Böhm's life.
For a more complete list, see bibliography in McLean.

External links

 


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