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Post by Deleted on Sept 16, 2017 11:11:27 GMT -5
Good evening to you all once again! Kleines c asks us all to use this particular thread, topic or forum to talk about anything off-topic. Due to unprecedented demand from around the world, everyone reading ' The Third' is cordially invited to listen to BBC Radio 3 promptly at 14:00 (BST) tomorrow afternon, Sunday, 17 September 2017, for the Early Music Show. In the fading light of December 1717, a carriage rumbles along the road to Cöthen. As the candlelit moated castle comes into view, the approaching family crane their necks to get a better look at their new home-town. The rural setting is a far cry from the hubbub of Weimar but there's promise in the air. The family are of course the Bachs, Johann Sebastian and his wife Maria Barbara, and four children: nine-year-old Catharina Dorothea, seven-year-old Wilhelm Friedman, three-year-old Carl Philipp Emanuel, and the toddler Johann Gottfried Bernhard. This journey, taken 300 years ago, marked a new and exciting development for the young family, and considerable promotion for Bach. Looking back on the moment, Sebastian would later write: a 'change in my fortunes... took me to Cöthen as Cappellmeister. There I had a gracious Prince, who both loved and knew music, and in his service I intended to spend the rest of my life. Hannah French delves into the history surrounding his move to Cöthen, his eventual departure, his relationship with the Prince Anhalt Cöthen, and the music he composed there. BBC Radio 3 - The Early Music Show - Bach's arrival in CothenUnmissable, Uncle Henry?
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Post by Deleted on Sept 16, 2017 15:58:40 GMT -5
How about Johann Sebastian Bach's arrival in Cothen? Does that turn you on, Uncle Henry? In the fading light of December 1717, a carriage rumbles along the road to Cöthen. As the candlelit moated castle comes into view, the approaching family crane their necks to get a better look at their new home-town. The rural setting is a far cry from the hubbub of Weimar but there's promise in the air. The family are of course the Bachs, Johann Sebastian and his wife Maria Barbara, and four children: nine-year-old Catharina Dorothea, seven-year-old Wilhelm Friedman, three-year-old Carl Philipp Emanuel, and the toddler Johann Gottfried Bernhard. This journey, taken 300 years ago, marked a new and exciting development for the young family, and considerable promotion for Bach. Looking back on the moment, Sebastian would later write: a 'change in my fortunes... took me to Cöthen as Cappellmeister. There I had a gracious Prince, who both loved and knew music, and in his service I intended to spend the rest of my life. Hannah French delves into the history surrounding his move to Cöthen, his eventual departure, his relationship with the Prince Anhalt Cöthen, and the music he composed there. BBC Radio 3 - The Early Music ShowIs it worth tuning into this particular radio programme tomorrow, Alistair?
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