J.S Bach – A Life in Music – Peter Williams

Bibliographical details
- Author: Peter Williams
- Publisher: Cambridge University Press
- First edition (hardcover): 2007
- Later paperback editions and reprints: issued in the years following the first publication
- Length: approximately 400–420 pages, depending on the edition
The book was conceived as a full-scale scholarly biography, combining historical narrative with sustained musical discussion. The subtitle A Life in Music signals Williams’s central idea: Bach’s life is best understood through his works, not merely alongside them.
The Author: Peter Williams
Full name: Peter Fredric Williams
Born: 14 May 1937, Wolverhampton, England
Died: 20 March 2016
Peter Williams was one of the leading Bach scholars of his generation, internationally respected both as a musicologist and a performer.
Education and academic career
Williams studied music at Cambridge University, where he completed advanced research in musicology. He later held senior academic posts in the United Kingdom and the United States, including positions at the University of Edinburgh and Duke University. He was especially influential in the field of performance practice, bridging historical research and practical musicianship.
Scholarly profile
Williams was particularly renowned for his work on:
- Bach’s organ music
- Historical keyboard instruments
- Questions of authenticity, sources, and interpretation
Unlike many purely archival scholars, he combined hands-on knowledge of instruments with rigorous historical analysis, which strongly shapes the tone and method of this biography.
Approach and structure of the book
J. S. Bach: A Life in Music is not a conventional narrative biography focused on anecdote or psychology. Instead, Williams organizes Bach’s life around professional posts, compositional genres, and musical problems.
The book follows Bach chronologically—from Eisenach and Ohrdruf through Arnstadt, Mühlhausen, Weimar, Köthen, and Leipzig—but at each stage the emphasis falls on:
- What Bach was composing
- Why those works were written
- How they relate to his duties, ambitions, and musical thinking
Music is treated as primary biographical evidence, not as a decorative supplement to life events.
View of Bach
Williams presents Bach as:
- A highly pragmatic professional musician
- Deeply rooted in Lutheran tradition
- Technically exacting and intellectually demanding
- Less romanticized than in older biographies
The portrait avoids mythologizing Bach as an isolated genius. Instead, he emerges as a composer who worked intensively within institutions, responding to practical needs while steadily refining an extraordinarily complex musical language.
Critical position within Bach literature
This biography occupies a distinctive place between:
- Large documentary lives focused on archives and letters
- More popular, narrative-driven biographies
Williams assumes a serious reader, willing to engage with musical discussion even without extensive score examples. The book is especially valued for:
- Its clarity of musical judgment
- Its refusal to speculate psychologically without evidence
- Its insistence that Bach’s greatness lies in craft, continuity, and depth, rather than dramatic self-expression
In summary
J. S. Bach: A Life in Music is a major modern biography, written by a scholar-performer who understood Bach from the inside. It offers a measured, intellectually rigorous, and musically grounded portrait, ideal for readers who want to understand how Bach lived through his music, and how his music was shaped by the realities of his working life.