Dieterich Buxtehude was a cardinal musician during the mid-Baroque period
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Dieterich Buxtehude was a cardinal musician during the mid-Baroque period
Dieterich Buxtehude born at
Early Life And ChildhoodDieterich Buxtehude was originally born as Diderich Buxtehude and both the date and the place of his birth were under dispute for several decades. Historians confirmed that he was born in Helsingborg in Skane, a part of Denmark then but now in Sweden. There have been countless theories suggesting that he was actually born at Odelsoe in Holstein, which was a part of the Danish Monarchy and is now modern Germany. With the confusion between the origins of his birth, Buxtehude Germanized his name and officially turned it to Dieterich Buxtehude. His early life suggests that he developed an interest and passion for music from a very young age and was exposed to the organ by his father, Johannes Buxtehude, who was also an amateur organist at the St. Olai church situated at Helsingor. In the following years, young Buxtehude received whatever training he could from his organist father, and went on to debut as an organist in the year 1657 at Helsingborg. This was followed by a dramatic, repeat performance the following year in Helsingor. Buxtehude was employed at the St. Mary’s church in Helsingor that still has the remnants of the early Baroque period and the old organ which Buxtehude used for his performances. It was here that Buxtehude became the official organist at his father’s former church. He then moved to another congregation in Helsingor in the year 1660. Personal Life This Danish-German composer then moved to Lubeck in the year 1688 and performed as an organist at the St. Mary’s church, where he won accolades and recognition from all music lovers around the country and, slowly, around Europe. Here, he succeeded Franz Tunder and married Tunder’s daughter in the year 1668. Together, Buxtehude and his wife Anna Margarethe, had seven daughters of which, the first one died in infancy. His father decided to join the family after he retired as an organist from St. Olai in the year 1673. Senior Buxtehude died a year later and Dieterich composed a heart-wrenching funeral melody for his father. Following this remorseful event, Buxtehude’s brother, a barber by profession, joined the family and lived with them in the year 1677. After this turbulent emotional period, Buxtehude rose to remarkable prominence and came to be recognized by music composers from all over Germany who personally came to visit and congratulate him on various occasions. He stayed an organist all his life at the ‘Marienkirche’. CareerApart from composing music, Buxtehude was also in charge of providing chorales, act as a treasurer and manage the church he worked for. He drew eminent personalities such as George Frideric Handel and Johann Sebastian Bach for his performances in the year 1705. Dieterich, with his commendable latitude in his musical career, would later go on to influence a long list of future Baroque composers that would include Bach, Handel, Mattheson and George Philipp Telemann. Such was the glory of Buxtehude that in the early years of 1705, Bach is said to have walked more than 200 kilometers to meet this prodigious music composer, listen to his famous ‘Abendmusik’ and learn from him. Some of his most popular concerts were held in December in the year 1705, for which Bach travelled long and far for. As a part of his musical journey, the music composer arranged and wrote music for all special occasions, public concerts, funerals and marriages that took place in the city. His styles were mainly nuclear to vocal, instrumental and chamber music, out of which, most of his styles remained unknown till their discovery in the early twentieth century. Some of his best compositions were those that were created by the organ. These mainly consisted of Preludes, chaconnes, chorales, toccatas and passacaglia. One of his influential works, Passacaglia in ‘C’ Minor went on to influence the works of many other music composers later. Buxtehude had a variety of harpsichord pieces to his legendary music repository that are now hidden and camouflaged by the works of other modern composers of the day. Buxtehude’s vocal compositions were mainly created for Church cantatas and were a tad different than Bach’s versions in the Baroque period. He followed a simple, liturgical, sacred verse that had no artistic quality to it as opposed to the far more complex and decorative renditions by Bach. Death And LegacyBuxtehude had the ability to capture the imagination of music from a listener’s perspective and went on to weave his modest pieces of music into beautiful, ornamental pieces. He was considered to be one of the greatest organists of the time and has often been compared with Bach and Scheidt’s talent. Apart from inspirational, devotional music, the composer is also known to have written some uncommon works that used large quantities of the viola, which went on to be admired by the masses. The composer died on 9th May 1707 of natural reasons, and was buried in the St. Mary’s cathedral a week later.