Artist's albums
Sound of Baroque - Reinhard Goebel
2023 · compilation
A Classical Dawn: Pachelbel
2022 · compilation
Pachelbel: Innovations
2022 · compilation
Pachelbel: Classical Moods
2022 · compilation
Pachelbel: Organ Works, Volume 2
2022 · album
Christ, unser Herr, zum Jordan kam, P61
2022 · single
Toccata in D Major, P460
2022 · single
最美神曲 卡農 Canon
2022 · compilation
Pachelbel Playlist
2022 · compilation
Pachelbel's Canon (and more)
2021 · compilation
Pachelbel: Organ Works, Volume 1
2021 · album
Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott, P106
2021 · single
Ciacona in F Minor, P43
2021 · single
Stay at Home with Pachelbel
2021 · compilation
Christmas with Pachelbel
2020 · compilation
Johann Pachelbel - Baroque Epoche
2020 · compilation
Magnificat
2020 · compilation
Pachelbel: Canon and Gigue
2020 · compilation
Canon
2020 · single
Complete Organ Works III
2019 · album
Kanon in D-Dur (Canon in D Major)
2019 · single
Pachelbel: Complete Keyboard Music, Vol. 1
2018 · album
Pachelbel: Complete Keyboard Music, Vol. 3
2018 · album
Pachelbel Canon
2018 · single
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Biography
Johann Pachelbel is unfairly viewed as a one-work composer, that work being the popular, Canon in D major, for three violins and continuo. He was an important figure from the Baroque period who is now seen as central in the development of both keyboard music and Protestant church music. Some have summarized his primary contribution as the uniting of Catholic Gregorian chant elements with the Northern German organ style, a style that reflected the influence of the Protestant chorale. A Lutheran, he spent several years in Vienna, where he was exposed to music by Froberger and Frescobaldi, which influenced his work with the chorale-prelude. His music in this genre would, in turn, influence the compositions of Johann Sebastian Bach, among others. It should be noted that many of Pachelbel's works are difficult to date, thus rendering judgments about his stylistic evolution questionable in many cases. Pachelbel was also a gifted organist and harpsichordist. Pachelbel was born in August of 1653 and baptized on September 1. He showed musical talent early on and began studies first with Heinrich Schwemmer and later with George Kaspar Wecker, the latter instructing in composition and on the organ. Pachelbel received his general education at St. Lorenz high school, and in 1669, he enrolled at the university in Altdorf. Pachelbel did not come from a wealthy family and earned meager sums serving as organist at the Lorenzkirche. He thus could not garner enough money to keep up with the tuition costs at the university and had to leave after about a year. After a brief period of private study following his departure, Pachelbel traveled to Vienna and obtained an assistant organist post at St. Stephen's Cathedral in 1673. Four years later, he took a position as court organist in Eisenach, where Bach would be born in 1685. He would become a close friend of the Bach family and teach both Johann Sebastian and Johann Christoph. Pachelbel left after a year at Eisenach, however, and became organist at the Predigerkirche in Erfurt, in 1678. The composer married Barbara Gabler in 1681, and by 1683, he was a father. However, in September of that year, tragedy struck as a plague swept through Erfurt, taking his wife and infant son. Four sets of chorale variations appeared around this time under the title of Musicalische Sterbens-Gedancken (Musical Thoughts of Death). During this period, his organ chorales would become his most important works. In August 1684, Pachelbel married Judith Drommer. One of their seven children would be the composer, organist, and harpsichordist Wilhelm Hieronymus Pachelberg, born 1686. In 1690, Pachelbel took a post as Court organist at Stuttgart and appeared quite satisfied, but left after two years due to an impending invasion by French forces. He served next as municipal organist at Gotha, from the fall of 1692 until April 1695. He returned to Nuremberg around the latter time, eventually to become organist at St. Sebalduskirche (summer, 1695). He would serve for nearly 11 years in this post, producing his most famous vocal scores, as well as his great Magnificat fugues. In 1699, he produced his important collection of six arias, Hexachordum Apollinis, for organ or harpsichord. Pachelbel was buried in Nuremberg on March 9, 1706, and apparently had died on March 3.