![]() It's a scene Gardiner sets at the beginning of his new book, BACH: Music in the Castle of Heaven, published today by Knopf. Each week the musically inclined family gathered for serious singalongs, which included Bach's motets. Bach's music also hung in the air of the Gardiner home. It was one of only two fully authenticated portraits of Bach by Elias Gottlob Haussmann, painted around 1750, and came to the Gardiner home in a knapsack, delivered on bicycle by a Silesian refugee who needed to keep it safe during World War II. On his way to bed, he couldn't help glancing up at the famous 18th-century portrait of Bach that hung in the first floor landing of the old mill house in Dorset, England where Gardiner was born. ![]() ![]() Johann Sebastian Bach has been a central figure in the life of British conductor John Eliot Gardiner since he was a youngster. This rare portrait of Bach, by Elias Gottlob Haussmann, hung in John Eliot Gardiner's home during World War II.Ĭourtesy of William H. ![]()
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