Johann Pachelbel Mark Jose
Johann Pachelbel Mark Jose
Johann Pachelbel
Mark Jose
(1653 – 1706) 02/06/06
Period 4
German composer and organist. He studied music with Heinrich Schwemmer and
G. C. Wecker, attended lectures at the Auditorium aegidianum and entered the university
at Altdorf in 1669, where he also served as organist at the Lorenzkirche. He was forced to
leave the university after less than a year owing to lack of funds, and became a scholarship
student at the Gymnasium poeticum at Regensburg, taking private instruction under
Kaspar Prentz. In 1673 Pachelbel went to Vienna and became deputy organist at St.
Stephens Cathedral; in 1677 he became organist in Thuringen at the Eisenach court,
where he served for slightly over a year. This was an important move, since it was here
that he became a dose friend of the town’s most prominent musician,
Johann Ambrosius Bach, the future father of Johann Sebastian, and his family.
In 1678, Pachelbel obtained the first of the two important positions he was to hold
during his lifetime when he became organist at the Protestant Predigerkirche at Erfurt,
where he established his reputation as organist, composer, and teacher. Pachelbel
undertook the musical education of the young man who, not many years later, would
teach his brother Johann Sebastian all he knew when the latter came to live with his family
following the death of their parents.
Pachelbel started a family in Erfurt; after the early death of his first wife and their
child, he remarried and produced a highly artistic household: of the couples seven
children, two would later become organists, including his eldest son Wilhelm Hieronymus
who acted as Pachelbels successor at Nuremberg for thirty-nine years, another son who became an instrument maker and a daughter who achieved recognition as a painter and
engraver.
Pachelbel left Erfurt some years later, apparently looking for a better appointment,
musician and organist for the Wurttemberg court at Stuttgart (1690-92), and then in
Gotha (1692-95), where he was town organist. His travels finally led him home when he
was invited to succeed Wecker as organist of St. Sebald, Nuremberg, after his former
teachers death in 1695; he obtained his release from Gotha that same year and remained at
St. Sebald until his death. He died in the first months of 1706 at the young age of 52.
Johann Pachelbel was one of the dominant figures of late seventeenth-century European
keyboard music.
Many of Pachelbels students, in particular, had actively transmitted his inimitable
art of chorale variation,