Abstract
Frederick II of Prussia’s complex personality has interested
generations of scholars. He was a ruler, general and a philosopher, a
power-hungry, ruthless politician and an enlightened aesthete. Music was
both a passion and a means of representation for Frederick, who built
the famous opera house Staatsoper Unter den Linden and maintained a
court orchestra that included C.P.E. Bach (one of J.S. Bach’s sons).
Frederick had been interested in music from a young age and learned to
play the flute despite his father’s attempts to forbid what he saw as an
“effeminate” occupation. In 1741, one year after he ascended the
Prussian throne, Frederick II appointed the flute virtuoso and
instrument builder Johann Joachim Quantz as his teacher and court
composer. Quantz, who had taught the king to play the flute before he
came to the throne, also instructed him in composition. Frederick
composed some 120 solo sonatas as well as several concertos, symphonies,
and arias. Some of these works were performed for the king’s guests at
Frederick’s palace in Potsdam, Sanssouci.
This sonata for flute and
harpsichord dates from 1747. J.S. Bach had visited his son in Potsdam
that year and it is thought that this composition was influenced by
Frederick’s encounter with the elder Bach.