Peter Williams (14 May 1937 – 20 March 2016) was an English musicologist, author, harpsichordist, organist, and professor.[1] Williams was considered one of the leading scholars on the organ and the life and works of Johann Sebastian Bach.
Peter Fredric Williams was born in Wolverhampton, England on 14 May 1937 to a Methodist family. He received a Bachelor of Arts (1958), Bachelor of Music (1959), Master of Arts (1962), and a PhD (1963) at St. John's College in Cambridge. Williams became a lecturer at the University of Edinburgh in 1962, eventually becoming a reader in 1972, then a professor ten years later, where he held the first chair in performance practice in the UK. He was made Distinguished Professor of Arts and Sciences at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina in 1985. Here, he was also chairman of the music department (1985–1988), university organist (1985–1990), and the director of the graduate center for performance practice studies (1990–1997). He was a professor at Cardiff University from 1996 to 2002, and served as chairman, subsequently President, of the British Institute of Organ Studies from 1996 to 2002. He was also a patron of the Cambridge Academy of Organ Studies, since its inception in 2004. Williams married in 1982, and had two sons, as well as a daughter and a son from a previous marriage.
Williams was a prolific writer in the venues of organ and harpsichord building and performance. He published his first major writing, "The European Organ, 1450–1850" in 1966, and "Figured Bass Accompaniment" in 1970. He published his defining work, the three-volume "The Organ Music of J.S. Bach" through Cambridge University Press in the 1980s, then revised and combined these in a one-volume second edition in 2003.[2] It was here where Williams suggested that the famous Toccata and Fugue in D minor, BWV 565 was probably not written for the organ, and possibly not by Bach. He further reiterated this statement in a 1981 article for the journal, Early Music.[3] He served as a general editor of 80 volumes of the Biblioteca Organologica series since 1966, and was a founding editor of The Organ Yearbook since 1969.[4]