
Achievements and Distinctions
Yo Tomita (b.1961) is a scholar known internationally for his work on the manuscript sources of the works of Johann Sebastian Bach (esp. the Well-Tempered Clavier II), the Bach Bibliography and musicological font, Bach.
He graduated from the Musashino Academia Musicae in Tokyo specializing in piano and completed an MMus in performance at Leeds University and thereafter PhD in musicology. He initially joined the staff at Queen's in March 1995 as Research Fellow. He was reappointed as Lecturer in 2000, promoted to Reader in 2001 and to Professor in 2007.
Since 2000, he has served as member of the organising committee of the Biennial International Conference on Baroque Music, and will chair the 14th Conference in July 2010 to be held in Queen's. In 2005, he joined the editorial board of the Journal of Musicological Research. In 2006 he became the trustee member of the Bach Network UK.
Research Interests
Bach Studies (in particular the Well-Tempered Clavier II ), manuscript studies, the pedagogical aspects of piano education, text-critical analysis using Artificial Intelligence techniques, and the development of computer software and tools for musicology.
Current Work
The WTC II is widely regarded as one of the most important works in western music. Many composers of later generations were influenced by this work. The accounts of Beethoven and Mozart are well-documented; both studied this work from a manuscript copy, as it was in this form that it was circulated before its publication at the beginning of the 19th century. Despite its exceptional popularity, we are still unable to establish fully the final text intended by the composer, let alone the texts that were available to the pupils of subsequent generations. This makes it very difficult to conduct an accurate assessment of its influence it had on the musicians.
Having published the critical edition of the work from G. Henle (April 2007), Professor Tomita is currently working on the following projects:
Selected Publications
Click here for a longer list of publication and conference papers
Research Grants
Arts and Humanities Research Board (2000-2001): £770 for "Recent rediscovery of sources of J S Bach’s canons and Credo from the B-Minor Mass and their significance and roles in the musical life in the late eighteenth century England"
Arts and Humanities Research Council (2002-2003): £5000 for "The sources of the Well-Tempered Clavier, Book II"
Arts and Humanities Research Council (2006-2008): £15,957 for "Bach's Well-Tempered Clavier, Book II -- Composition, Revision and Reception"
Future Research
A collaborative project "Nineteenth-Century Bach Reception" Study Group in Bach Network UK to compile a list of resources consisting of manuscript copies, printed editions, concert programmes, advertisements and reviews that provide a new foundation for further research. The group will also provide opportunities to discuss their individual projects both online and at BNUK meetings.
A joint project with Professor Robin Leaver on the Choralbuch of Bach's last pupil, Johann Christian Kittel, with special emphasis on tracing the methods of Bach's teaching using chorales.
Research Students
Elise Crean, Ian Mills, Alison Dunlop, Tanja Kovacevic, Jennifer Kleeman