Description
Although Johann Peter Kellner received only a relatively brief training in music, he attained a quite considerable compositional level, not least because of his contacts with members of Bach’s circle of friends. Until 1762 Johann Peter composed a number of cantatas along with his son Johann Christoph that have been brought together in the Schüler-Jahrgang (Pupil’s Annual Cycle). The organ in a concertizing function occupied a central place in Johann Peter’s cantata oeuvre around 1755 and lends this genre an individual character. Influences from Johann Sebastian Bach, Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel, and increasingly Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach were eminent in the composition of Kellner’s cantatas, which are situated in the transitional period of musical styles between the Baroque and the use of empfindsam or galant stylistic means. After some 250 years these cantatas from the generation of Bach’s pupils are now being made available to the broader public on this recording produced in a historical setting with the use of the restored Kellner-Weise organ (1736).