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Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach (June 21, 1732 – January 26, 1795), the 9th boy of Johann Sebastian Bach, sometimes known as a "Bückeburg Bach". He is does'nt to exist as confused using Bach's first cousin once removed, Johann Christoph Bach.
Innate at Leipzig, Germany, he was taught music by his father. He exposed at a St. Thomas School, & a bit of guess he exposed law at a University there, however no record of that. Around 1750, Count Wilhelm of Schaumburg-Lippe appointed Johann Christoph harpsichordist at Bückeburg, and around 1759, he became Konzertmeister. When there, Bach collaborated by owning Herder.
Bach wrote keyboard sonatas, Symphonies, oratorios, liturgical choir pieces and motets, operas and songs. Because of Count Wilhelm's predilection for Italian music, Bach got to adapt his style accordingly, however he retained stylistic traits of the music of his father & of his brother, C. P. E. Bach.
He educated his nephew Wilhelm Friedrich Ernst Bach in music as his have father experienced, & Wilhelm Friedrich Ernst went in to turn into director to Frederick William II of Prussia.
A 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica says of him "He was an industrious composer, ... whose work reflects no discredit on the family name." Prof Peter Schickele, in comparing his vary ego, a fictitious composer P. D. Q. Bach, to Johann Sebastian's other sons, said that P.D.Q. possessed "the obscurity of Johann Christoph Friedrich."
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