Johann Sebastian Bach is often remembered today as a serene, church-bound genius, quietly producing some of the most sublime music ever written.
But the real Bach was more fiery and headstrong than that image suggests. Fiercely aware of his own talent—and not afraid to say so—he was never content to settle for second-best when it came to employment. Throughout his career, he clashed with superiors, demanded better conditions, and wasn’t above walking away when he felt undervalued.
That strong sense of self-worth came to a head in the autumn of 1717, when Bach tried to leave his post in Weimar for a more prestigious position in Köthen. His employers didn’t take it well. In fact, they threw him in jail. Yes, one of history’s greatest composers was briefly imprisoned—simply for wanting a better job. So how did it come to that? And what does it tell us about Bach the man?
We know little about Bach's prison cell
The Weimar court secretary’s minutes concerning Bach’s time in jail state that ‘On 6 November 1717 Bach, till now Konzertmeister and Hoforganist, was put under arrest in [the] justice room for obstinately demanding his instant dismissal. He was released on 2 December with a grudging permission to retire from the Duke’s [Duke Wilhelm Ernst’s] service.’ Harsh treatment indeed, but what sensible employer would want to lose Bach as their personal composer and organist?
Bach was in jail for just under four weeks, and very little is known about what his prison actually looked like. In reality, the ‘justice room’ in which he was held probably looked more like a comfortable debtors’ prison than a full-on cell. He certainly won’t have been without means of communication and he may perhaps have used the time to compose some of The Well-Tempered Clavier.
The musician EL Gerber, whose father had been a Bach pupil in the 1720s, believed that parts of The Well-Tempered Clavier had been written when Bach was ‘bored, depressed and without an instrument’. The idea that he could construct even the most complex counterpoint simply in his head has become one of the most intriguing sides of Bach both as a person and as a composer.
Why did Bach go to jail?
For all his brilliance, however, the status Bach holds today is a far cry from the year 1717, when it was his fellow German composer Georg Philipp Telemann who was sweeping up all the job offers. The ducal chapel at Gotha had made overtures to Telemann earlier that year, hoping he would accept the post of Kapellmeister.
Soon afterwards, then Duke Wilhelm Ernst himself also tried secure Telemann’s services for the same position at the Weimar court – a job that Bach himself coveted. As it happened, Telemann turned down both these jobs in favour of his long-term position in Frankfurt. But Bach’s disappointment at the Duke passing him over for promotion in favour of an external appointment must have been intense.
Happily, by August Bach had secured a job as Kapellmeister at the court of Prince Leopold in Cöthen. His current employer, however, evidently wanted to have his cake and eat it – having previously snubbed Bach for the role of Kapellmeister, the Duke was nonetheless damned if he was going to let him go to find a similar job elsewhere.
Bach was far luckier than a certain horn player...
The subsequent confrontation led to Bach’s arrest and imprisonment, setting something of a dramatic precedent in Weimar. When, several years later, Duke Wilhelm Ernst’s successor August Ernst had to deal with a troublesome horn player’s resignation, the unfortunate musician was sentenced to 100 lashes and jail. When caught escaping prison, the poor man was hanged.
Bach’s brief time inside ended more peacefully, of course. On his release, he settled into his new role in Cöthen, where he would write some of his most famous instrumental music including the suites for solo cello, sonatas and partitas for solo violin, the seminal Brandenburg Concertos, and the English Suites.
What was Bach's last job?
But just four years later he was starting to look elsewhere again. Dissatisfied with life in Cöthen, Bach’s hunt for a new job eventually took him to Leipzig in 1723 as music director and cantor of St Thomas Church in Leipzig. And there he remained for the rest of his life.