Johann Pachelbel (1653-1706)Organ Works Vol.1
Johann Pachelbel is widely known for his Canon and Gigue for three violins and basso continuo,a composition that has now undergone arrangement after arrangement.Organists,at least,remain familiar with the quantity of music he wrote for the instrument on which he was a distinguished performer.Born in 1653 in Nuremberg,he is the leading representative of the South German school of organ music in the generation before that of Johann Sebastian Bach,a prolific composer of a body of work that is of significance in itself,apart from any influence it may have had on later musicians.
Pachelbel benefited from a sound general education and when the inability of his father to support him compelled his withdrawal after one year from study at the university in Altdorf,he was able to continue with a scholarship at the Regensburg Gymnasium Poeticum,taking extracurricular organ lessons from a pupil of Johann Kaspar Kerll,the latter a pupil of Carissimi and perhaps of Frescobaldi in Italy.In 1673 Pachelbel became assistant organist at St Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna,where Kerll now held the position of principal organist.Whether Pachelbel was actually a student of Kerll or not,he was clearly influenced by his association with a leading musician familiar with the Italian style.Four years later he moved to Eisenach as court organist,leaving the following year,during a period of court mourning,and taking up the position of organist at the Protestant Predigerkirche in Erfurt,under the strict professional rules of that establishment.The period of twelve years spent at Erfurt brought association with the Bach family as godfather to Johann Sebastian's sister Johanna Juditha and as the teacher of his brother Johann Christoph,to whose house in Ohrdruf Johann Sebastian moved after the early death of his parents.
In 1690 Pachelbel moved to Stuttgart as court organist,escaping,after the French invasion of 1692,to serve as town organist at Gotha.In 1695 the death of the existing incumbent allowed him to return to Nuremberg as organist at St Sebald,the principal church in the city.By this stage in his career he enjoyed a considerable reputation as a performer and composer and this new and final appointment was offered to him by invitation not through the usual competition.He retained the position until his death in 1706.
Pachelbel's Praeludium in D minor starts with a theme in the pedals,then imitated on the manuals,repeated in a related major key and followed by a passage of impressive chords and arpeggios.A passage largely in sequence leads to a section of chords and a solemn conclusion.
The first of the five works based on chorales here included uses Komm,Gott Sch?pfer,heiliger Geist (鈥楥ome,God Creator,Holy Ghost鈥?,Martin Luther's translation of the Venite,Creator Spiritus.In Erfurt Pachelbel had been instructed to provide a carefully prepared prelude to the chorale to be sung by the congregation and thereafter to accompany each verse.This organ chorale,a prelude of this kind,takes the hymn melody as its cantus firmus,the basis of a four-part texture.
The modal Fantasia in G minor,one of six such works,is largely chordal in texture,as suspension follows suspension in unusual shifts of harmony.The Toccata in C major opens with an extended passage over sustained pedal notes,over which the opening figure is developed.
In Gott der Vater wohn uns bei (鈥楪od the Father dwells with us鈥?Pachelbel takes as his source a version by Luther of a popular German hymn or Leise,adding three voices to the cantus firmus in a relatively extended work.
Four further Toccatas,in G minor,E minor,C minor and C major respectively,from the sixteen in existence,offer examples of the form,with an element of drama in the curious modulations of the work in E minor and a pedal note foundation for the Toccatas in C minor and C major,as upper parts weave a unified texture above.
Pachelbel left three Ricercares,examples of an older form in which imitation plays a strong part.The Ricercar in C minor proposes an ascending chromatic subject,other parts entering in imitation,as the subject is duly inverted and explored,with livelier figuration in the last section,as the later subject is finally combined with the first,both also in inversion.The Ricercar in F sharp minor,a less usual key,follows a similar pattern in its inversions and imitations of the brief opening subject and second thematic material treated in the same way.The two subjects and their inversions are intricately combined in conclusion.
Three of Pachelbel's 26 surviving fugues are here included.The first,one of a dozen in C major,proposes a cheerful subject,echoed by other entering parts as the work develops.The Fugue in D minor is characteristic again of the developing form.The subject descends chromatically,with a contrasting countersubject,duly explored.The Fugue in D major is based on a livelier subject and demonstrates the basic unity of the form.
The Chaconne is a Baroque variation form in which an ostinato bass,with its consequent harmonies,serves as the foundation of a series of short variations.Pachelbel's Ciacana in F minor is based on four descending notes in the bass,above which inventive variations appear,effective in their contrasting figuration.The second example,from the six in existence,the Ciacona in D minor,follows a similar pattern,based on a different ostinato,testimony to Pachelbel's interest and skill in variation forms.
Three final works are based on Christmas chorales.The first of these,Gelobet seist du,Jesu Christ (鈥楶raised be thou,Jesus Christ鈥?,is again a three-part chorale prelude based on the chorale as cantus firmus,a hymn derived by Luther from earlier German popular tradition.Der Tag,der ist so freudenreich (鈥楾he day that is so joyful鈥?is an example of a so-called combination-form,in which an opening prelude-fugue is followed by a section based on the chorale as a cantus firums.Vom Himmel hoch da komm ich her (鈥楩rom Heaven on high I come鈥?,adapted by Luther from the biblical account of the birth of Christ,is built on the chorale melody in longer notes in the pedals.