De Nederlandse Bachvereniging was officially founded on 13 September 1921.
Johan Schoonderbeek was one of the founding members and the first conductor. He had already conducted the
St Matthew Passion with the Koninklijke Oratorium Vereniging Excelsior (Royal Oratorio Society Excelsior) in
The Hague. The Netherlands Bach Society first performed the
St Matthew Passion on Good Friday, 14 April 1922. After Schoonderbeek's death in 1927,
Evert Cornelis, conductor of the Utrechts Symfonie Orkest, took over and was the first to conduct the complete work. He died in 1931. In contrast
Willem Mengelberg conducted a shortened version of the
St Matthew Passion regularly on
Palm Sunday in the
Concertgebouw, taking a romantic approach with choirs of 450 singers. Nevertheless the performances in Naarden and Amsterdam were initially similar, because orchestra players of the
Concertgebouworkest and soloists were the same.
Charles de Wolff succeeded Van der Horst in 1965. During this period the Concertgebouw tradition was continued by
Eugen Jochum. The
historically informed performance, initiated by
Nikolaus Harnoncourt among others, won friends within the Netherlands Bach Society, who pursued performances with smaller ensembles on period instruments. Therefore De Wolff left the Bach Society in 1983, to work with the
Bachkoor Holland. From 1983 until 2018,
Jos van Veldhoven was the artistic director and conductor.
Shunsuke Sato became artistic director in June 2018 and resigned from the position in June 2023. == Program ==