BWV
8
Cantata BWV 8 - Most of
the chorales set in the 2nd Jahrgang are familiar ones.
They are for the most part tunes that are still in the
Lutheran hymnal today. More importantly they are works
that were already old and established in the repertoire
when Bach set them. Of a completely different order
is the song set in the Cantata for the 16th Sunday after
Trinity, "Liebster Gott, wann werd’ ich sterben?”
It was written in the late 1600’s and thus was
relatively new. Apparently already a favorite with the
congregation, its theology is sentimental, very different
than the bedrock Lutheranism that we have come to expect
in these cantatas. Certainly Bach’s treatment
is fundamentally different than we have seen in the
earlier pieces. We have grown to expect the minutest
examination of the melodic and verbal content of these
melodies. Here the tune is used in almost an impressionist
manner. Although the middle verses seem to be influential
in the recitative and aria movements, they are not treated
with any thing like the reverence of some of the earlier
chorale verses. What we have in Cantata BWV 8 is a ravishingly
beautiful tone poem that has as its jumping-off point
a rather free version of some verses of a recent popular
song.
The opening chorus has always astounded
even those who think they know a lot of Bach. Spitta
described it as having the sound of a "church-yard
full of flowers in the springtime." It is an apt
comparison, because though the text is directly about
death, the sound of the piece is warm, friendly, and
leisurely. The Gospel reading for the Sixteenth Sunday
after Trinity is the story of the raising of the son
of the widow at Nain. It is one of the few readings
after Trinity that is not associated with a pithy parable.
All four of the cantatas for this day are permeated
with bell-sounds and the affect of all of them is remarkably
similar.
It our cantata here has a unique texture.
Plucked violins and violas play slow broken arpeggio
patterns over isolated arco bell tones in the bass.
Two oboes d’amore weave sinuous patterns above;
sometimes imitative, sometimes in thirds and sixths.
On top of all of this the flute plays two types of
figures: one, a repeated note pattern of 24 notes,
the number of times the church bell in Leipzig rang
to announce the death of a parishioner. The flute also
at times goes into a wonderfully lazy arpeggio figure
that brings on the final cadence before the chorus
entries. As is usual, the sopranos in the chorus sing
in long notes, but here the melody is ornamented and
softened by passing tones. The fact that the chorale
is made to fit into an easy-going 12/8 meter gives
it an even more refreshing "popular" cast.
The opening tutti and the interludes are quite lengthy,
giving the orchestral sections an even more prominent
role in the musical argument. Although unusually complicated,
the texture has a kind of miraculous clarity that is
positively hypnotic.
The bell tones continue in the bass
of the tenor aria #2. Not only do the instruments remain
pizzicato, but also the rhythmic pattern is set up
in the first bar and repeated in virtually every bar
throughout the piece. The oboe and the tenor weave
an arching and very detailed duet over this bass. The
whole mood is of a mildly melancholy yearning. The
accompanied alto recitative brings forth a bit of the
terror of death, but it is just a transition to the
amazingly jolly bass aria with flute and strings. Like
the opening chorus this aria is in 12/8 time, but the
calm flowing character of the opening has been replaced
by a real jig tempo. The aria is in a very sophisticated
da capo form. One should notice how the melodic contour
of the last line of the A section is completed and
answered by the opening of the B section.
As is so often the case, the voice
of the child soprano has the last word with a wonderful
piping recitative. The final chorale has none of the
severity of most of the four-voice chorale settings
that we have seen at the end of the 2nd Jahrgang cantatas.
It is a bravely marching thing, with the sopranos leading
the way. It is interesting that the melody of this
chorale is never sung in an unadulterated manner in
this cantata.
©Craig
Smith
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