ABSTRACT

This volume of essays brings together the best of recent scholarship on Johann Christian Bach, the youngest son of J.S. Bach and a friend and mentor of Mozart. J.C. Bach had a cosmopolitan career, beginning in Berlin as a pupil of his half-brother, C.P.E. Bach, then a sojourn to Italy where he studied with Padre Martini in Bologna; after making his successful debut with operas for Turin and Naples he moved to London, where he became a leading composer and impresario. The articles selected for this volume represent the principal themes of scholarly research and writing over the past fifty years. The introduction provides a survey of J.C. Bach‘s career and an overview of recent literature. The collection includes English translations of two articles first published in German in the Bach-Jahrbuch, as well as one article published as recently as 2015. An appendix lists the complete contents of The Collected Works of Johann Christian Bach, using the Warburton catalogue numbers.

part II|213 pages

Instrumental Music

chapter [11]|11 pages

The Wind Music of J. C. Bach

chapter [12]|22 pages

Johann Christian Bach

chapter [16]|43 pages

Johann Christian Bach (1735–82)

part III|163 pages

Vocal Music

chapter [20]|12 pages

J. C. Bach’s Operas

chapter [21]|17 pages

The Misadventures of Artaserse (Turin, 1760)

J. C. Bach’s First Italian Opera from Production to Performance

chapter [24]|5 pages

J. C. Bach’s Vauxhall Songs

chapter [26]|13 pages

The Case of J.C. Bach’s

Lucio Silla *