Johann Sebastian Bach was born into a family of musicians. He was playing violin by a young age. Music was in his blood. He was orphaned at age 9 and his life took a turn in a new direction. His older brother, Johann Christoph Bach, took him in and taught him to play the organ. Bach was a marvelous soprano singer which led to him getting accepted into a school in Lüneburg. He met a local organist there, George Böhm, who greatly influenced his music. He received his first musical job in 1703, at the court of Duke Johann Ernst in Weimar He was a jack-of-all-trades which entitled being a violinist and feeling in as an organist from time to time. In Bach’s early career he changed jobs a lot. Bach’s style of music was complex and he tended to weave together different melodic lines. Later on in his life he won a job as organist at the court of the Duke Wilhelm Ernst in Weimar. There he wrote many church cantatas and some of his best compositions for the organ. For example, he wrote "Toccata and Fugue in D Minor" while working there. He also wrote the cantata "Herz