Some music belongs in certain rooms. J.S. Bach’s St. John Passion belongs in Troy Savings Bank Music Hall the way stained glass belongs in a cathedral — it is not just appropriate, it is transformative. On April 12, 2026, the Berkshire Bach Society performs this monumental choral-orchestral work in one of the finest acoustic spaces in America, and if you have any feeling at all for Bach, this is the performance to prioritize.
About the St. John Passion
Bach composed the St. John Passion in 1724, and three centuries later, it remains one of the most powerful works in the Western musical canon. The piece tells the story of the Passion of Christ according to the Gospel of John through a combination of solo arias, recitatives, choruses, and chorales — weaving dramatic narrative, theological reflection, and pure musical architecture into a single unified work that runs roughly two hours.
This is not background music. The St. John Passion demands — and rewards — your full attention. The opening chorus alone, with its churning orchestral figures and urgent choral entries, is one of the most electrifying passages in all of Baroque music. The arias are intimate and searching. The choruses are by turns furious, mournful, and transcendent. Whether you approach it as sacred music, dramatic storytelling, or simply as one of the greatest compositional achievements in human history, the St. John Passion delivers. For those who want to study the work ahead of the performance, recordings are available on Amazon.
About the Berkshire Bach Society
The Berkshire Bach Society has built a devoted following for their historically informed performances of Bach’s major works. Their approach respects period practice while keeping the music alive and immediate — this is not museum Bach, it is living, breathing Bach. Bringing the St. John Passion to Troy Music Hall is a statement of intent: this is a major work that deserves a major room.
Venue Info
Troy Savings Bank Music Hall was built in 1875, decades before recorded music existed, and its acoustics were designed — perhaps by accident, perhaps by genius — to do exactly what Bach’s music requires. The hall’s natural reverb adds warmth and depth to choral voices without blurring the intricate counterpoint that makes Bach’s writing so remarkable. At roughly 1,250 seats, the room is large enough for the St. John Passion‘s full forces to breathe but intimate enough that every vocal line reaches you with clarity. Downtown Troy’s dining scene offers excellent pre-concert options along River Street, and parking is available in nearby lots.
Tickets
Tickets are available through Troy Music Hall. Bach’s St. John Passion, performed by specialists, in a room that acousticians have studied for 150 years — this is as close to a perfect concert experience as you are likely to find in upstate New York. Do not let it pass you by.