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Johann Jakob Froberger

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Johann Jakob Froberger (May 18, 1616May 7, 1667) was a German Baroque composer, keyboard virtuoso, and organist. He was very well known during his lifetime and modern scholars consider him to be one of the most important keyboard composers before Johann Sebastian Bach.

Life

Froberger was born in 1616 in Stuttgart and probably received first music lessons from his father. In 1634 he moved to Vienna and became court organist there in 1637. In the same year he went to Rome to study under Girolamo Frescobaldi. Froberger returned to Vienna in 1641 and remained there until 1657, frequently travelling to carry out diplomatic missions for Ferdinand III: he visited Brussels, Dresden, Antwerp, London, and, most importantly, Paris, where he lived for three years (1650-1653) and studied French style. After Ferdinand's death, Froberger went to Alsace where became a music teacher. He died in Héricourt in 1616.

Works

See also: List of compositions by Johann Jakob Froberger.

General information

The fourth suite from one of the Vienna manuscripts.
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The fourth suite from one of the Vienna manuscripts.

Froberger's surviving output consists of a large number of keyboard compositions (intended for organ, harpsichord or clavichord), several dozens of harpsichord suites and two motets. A few toccatas of the so-called elevation variety and the two motets mentioned are the only sacred pieces of these; Froberger's interest in sacred music was apparently low.

The three principal sources for Froberger's music are the following manuscripts:

Many other manuscripts contain his music, particularly the well-known Bauyn manuscript and the recently discovered Strasbourg manuscript (possibly compiled by Michael Bulyowsky).

Two standard numbering systems are used to idenfity Froberger's works. These are:

Harpsichord suites

One of the toccatas from the Vienna manuscripts.
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One of the toccatas from the Vienna manuscripts.

Froberger is usually credited as the creator of the Baroque suite: it was the typical Froberger suite that established allemande, courante, sarabande and gigue as the obligatory parts of a suite. There is some controversy surrounding the placement of the gigue; in Froberger's autograph manuscripts it is almost always the second movement, while most suites by later composers of the era place the gigue at the end of the suite. Most of the suites display influence of French lute music.

Froberger was one of the earliest composers who produced programmatic pieces, which he would usually include in his suites. These pieces are always very personal, written in an affective style and with individual titles. They include the following (in alphabetical order):

Allemande faite en passant le Rhin dans une barque en grand péril. Note the 26 numbered passages with explanations of each.
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Allemande faite en passant le Rhin dans une barque en grand péril. Note the 26 numbered passages with explanations of each.

These works frequently feature musical metaphors: in the lamentations on the deaths of the lutenist Blancrocher and Ferdinand III, Froberger represents Blacrocher's fatal fall down a flight of stairs with a descending scale, and Ferdinand's ascent into heaven with an ascending one; in the Ferdinand III lamentation he ends the piece with an single voice repeating an F three times. The Allemande, faite en passat le Rhin contains twenty-six numbered passages with explanation for each. The structure and style of Froberger's programmatic works contributed to the development of the unmeasured prelude.

Other keyboard works

Froberger's toccatas are reminiscent of Frescobaldi's. Most feature multiple sections alternating between free, improvisatory music and parts written in imitative counterpoint. Almost all other pieces are also sectional. The majority of the ricercars are of the imitative variety, with multiple sections exploring different themes in a fugal manner. The fantasias are more or less similar to ricercars (some exploring the same themes), only either with no sections at all or with less contrasting sections, and usually exploring subjects written using predominantly long note values. Froberger's capriccios and canzonas typically have several fugal sections; some of the canzonas are variation canzonas that feature a single theme varied through several sections. Chromaticisms are rare, even in toccatas. The imitative works are characterised by economy of themes during the episodes (which are often based on the subject), alterations of the subject after the initial exposition and, unusually for the period, frequent use of subjects on scale degrees other than 1 and 5.

Influence

Only a few compositions were published during his lifetime, however, Froberger's music was widely spread in Europe in hand-written copies, and he was one of the most famous composers of the era. Because of his travels and his ability to create music in a variety of national styles, Froberger, along with other cosmopolitan composers such as Johann Kaspar Kerll, contributed greatly to the exchange of musical traditions in Europe. He influenced more or less every composer of the century and his music was known and performed well into the 18th century.

Louis Couperin, Georg Böhm, Dieterich Buxtehude and Johann Pachelbel are among the composers who were influenced by Froberger; various less known composers such as François Roberday or Johann Caspar Ferdinand Fischer also knew his music and borrowed from it. Johann Sebastian Bach was influenced by Froberger, although only to a certain degree. One of the fugues of the Well-Tempered Clavier uses a subject from Froberger's Ricercar No. 4 (FbWV 404) - however, Bach probably picked the theme from J.C.F. Fischer, who borrowed it from Froberger for his Ariadne musica, published some 20 years before the Well-Tempered Clavier.

External links

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