Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

Taken as gospel

Written with great love and understand­ing, this novel about Johann Sebastian Bach’s creation of the St Matthew Passion is itself a masterpiec­e.

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The Great Passion by James Runcie BLOOMSBURY, £16.99 REVIEW BY ALLAN MASSIE

The Great Passion is a wonderfull­y rich, audacious and, to me, surprising novel; surprising because all I have previously read of James Runcie’s work are his Grancheste­r detective novels, charming investigat­ions of Crime Light, which might be taken as a sort of homage to what is known as Golden Age mysteries. On the evidence of these books, I would never have expected anything on the scale and magnificen­ce of The Great Passion.

The title refers us to Johann Sebastian Bach’s St Matthew Passion and a central passage recounts the circumstan­ces of its compositio­n. The narrator, Stefan Silbermann, the son of an organ-maker, is sent, aged 11, after his mother’s death to the choir school of St Thomas’s church in Leipzig. A shy red-headed boy, bullied and unhappy, he runs away, the school being as harsh and vicious as any we are familiar with in a Dickens novel. However, the quality of his treble voice and his knowledge of organ constructi­on have attracted the notice of the Cantor, JS Bach himself, who takes him into this own house as an apprentice. There he finds a warm welcome from Bach’s large and variously talented family, and, when domestic tragedy strikes, Runcie has us follow the course of the extraordin­ary creation of Bach’s masterpiec­e.

Writing about music and its creation is inordinate­ly difficult, though clearly tempting. I suppose most of the great composers have attracted novelists as well as biographer­s, though novelists may have had more success with fictional composers, Thomas Mann’s Doktor

Faustus being one such novel which springs to mind. It’s a masterpiec­e about an imaginary masterpiec­e, but how much more difficult, I suppose, to recreate in words music already recognised as a masterpiec­e, and admit the reader to share in the drama of its compositio­n.

Runcie triumphant­ly brings this off. Bach’s aim was to make the marriage of music and St Matthew’s biblical text “as shocking and unpredicta­ble as grief itself ”. Runcie finds the words to make this ring true. “We listen to music as survivors,” Bach says.

The novel has other delights. Chief among them is Runcie’s evocation of Leipzig itself and its Pietistic Lutheran culture. By the beginning of the 18th century the city capital of Saxony had, like much of Germany, at last recovered from the devastatio­n of the Thirty Years War (161848) which reduced the population by at least a third and was the most destructiv­e European war until the horrors of the 20th century. Runcie enables us to understand a society in which religion and music were handmaiden­s. Despite the harshness of the choir school from which Stefan understand­ably tries to run away, there is a pervasive decency and kindness to the Lutheran culture. The Bach household, as presented by Runcie, is delightful, the great composer himself, though sometimes volatile, is also a man of great kindness, generosity and humour. The domestic life

of the Bachs recalled George Herbert’s hymn with the lines : “Who sweeps a room as for Thy sake / Makes that and the action fine.”

One supposes that this novel has been long maturing in Runcie’s imaginatio­n. Certainly it gives that impression of being a wine that has developed body and an intense flavour in a dark cellar, its riches revealed now the cork has been drawn. The portrait of Bach himself is masterly: quicktempe­red but kind and deserving of the love that his family has for him,

a love that continues likewise to mature in Stefan’s memory after the composer’s death. You don’t have to be well versed in music to respond to it, any more than you have to subscribe to the Pietistic faith – though no doubt it helps if you are and do.

This is a delightful novel, also one which reveals a Germany foreign or, I would think, unknown to most of us. It is a novel which deserves to last and will surely do so. It is surely Runcie’s masterwork, a novel written with love and understand­ing.

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 ?? PICTURE: JILLIAN EDELSTEIN. ?? SCALED UP: Runcie’s new novel is a world away from Grantchest­er.
PICTURE: JILLIAN EDELSTEIN. SCALED UP: Runcie’s new novel is a world away from Grantchest­er.

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