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  1. Wilhelm Friedemann Bach was born on 22 November 1710 and was the eldest son of Johann Sebastian Bach. He received an extensive education at first the Lutheran grammar school in Köthen (from 1717) and then St Thomas’s School in Leipzig from 1723, followed by the University of Leipzig, where he enrolled in 1729 to study law, philosophy and ...

  2. Wilhelm Friedmann Bach [45] (Composer) Born: November 22, 1710 - Weimar, Thuringia, Germany. Died: July 1, 1784 - Berlin, Germany. Life. Wilhelm Friedemann Bach [45] was the eldest, and by common repute the most gifted son, of J.S. Bach [24]; a famous organist, a famous improvisor, and a complete master of counterpoint.

  3. Wilhelm Friedemann Bach und oft nur Friedemann Bach genannt (* 22. November 1710 in Weimar; † 1. Juli 1784 in Berlin) war ein deutscher Komponist und Organist des Spätbarock im Übergang zur Klassik. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Leben und Wirken. 1.1 Weimar, 1710–1717. 1.2 Köthen, 1718–1723. 1.3 Leipzig, 1723–1733.

  4. Wilhelm Friedemann Bach (1710-1784) was the first son of Johann Sebastian Bach and Maria Barbara Bach. He was taught by his father and soon he became proficient on several instruments.

  5. Wilhelm Friedemann Bach (1710–1784), oldest son of Johann Sebastian Bach, enjoys an outstanding reputation as one of the most independent-minded composers of his age. Yet his work—only partly available in modern editions—represents the ambitious attempt to absorb the legacy of his father and to develop the taste of his own generation further.

  6. Feb 7, 2012 · 07 February 2012. Cite. Permissions. Share. Extract. Three centuries and two years after his birth, Wilhelm Friedemann Bach (1710–84), the oldest son of Johann Sebastian, remains an enigma, his music rarely performed or recorded.

  7. Wilhelm Friedemann Bach (22 November 1710 – 1 July 1784) was a famous German composer and organist. [1] He was born in Weimar. He was the son of Johann Sebastian Bach, who taught him to play the harpsichord and organ. Johann Sebastian wrote some pieces and put them in a book called Notebook for Wilhelm Friedemann Bach. [1] .

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