Overture Magazine 2013-2014 March-April 2014 | Page 25

C H O O S E K E S W I C K . O RG the 1950s and immediately vaulted onto the classical hit parade: Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons and the Brandenburg Concertos. And interestingly, there are strong links between these two sets of concertos — aside from the fact that they are both enormously appealing and tuneful works —for the young Bach avidly studied Vivaldi’s latest concertos and adopted their forms and many of their techniques for his own orchestral music. Unlike The Four Seasons, however, the Brandenburgs were not originally written as a set. Some of them — the First Concerto seems the most likely — may have been created in the early 1710s when the young composer was serving at the court of Weimar. Most of them, though, were likely written for the court of Cöthen, where Bach served as kapellmeister from 1717 to 1722. These were extraordinarily happy and productive years, for his employer Prince Leopold was a an accomplished musician who sang and played the violin, viola da gamba, and bass viol; as Bach said, he “both loved and understood music.” Prince Leopold maintained an orchestra of 17 players of the highest calibre to whom he added guest artists whenever the music demanded. In 1719, Bach was sent to the Margrave’s court in Berlin to purchase a fine new har