![]() ![]() And there are chapters devoted to tent-pole works such as the Passions, the B Minor Mass, and the cantatas (Gardiner knows the choral music best, so that’s what he concentrates on). Gardiner solves this problem ingeniously, by writing about the composer’s time (the German states were just beginning to recover from the death and destruction of the 30 Years War), his religion (the Reformation was in full stride), and his profession (music was the family business, with uncles, cousins, and siblings all engaged as composers, choir directors, band leaders, organists, and teachers-all jobs Bach himself held at one time or another). So, because Bach himself was a man of few words, at least when it came to writing things down, a biographer has his work cut out for him. We know roughly as much about Bach the man as we know about Shakespeare. A man of parts, he also runs an organic farm in Dorset, England, where he raises cattle, sheep, and feed crops. Gardiner, not coincidentally, is a renowned, Grammy-winning conductor and a pioneering proponent of the period instrument movement, founder of the Montiverdi Choir and Orchestra, the Orchestre de l’Opera de Lyon, the English Baroque Soloists, and the Orchestre Revolutionnaire et Romantique. ![]()
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