BWV
12
Bach Cantata BWV 12 is his first setting
of a Salomo Franck text. Franck was the greatest librettist
that Bach ever worked with, and this cantata has a
marvelous sense of discovery about it. It opens with
a poignant sinfonia for oboe and strings, setting the
mood and character for the moving opening chorus. The
extreme expressivity of the choral parts is counteracted
by the rigor of the chaconne bass. Thirty years after
the composition of this cantata Bach remembered this
chorus and arranged it as the Crucifixus in the Mass
in B Minor.
The only recitative in this cantata
is not free verse but a quote from the bible reading
for Jublilate Sunday. It is set for alto and strings.
The great aria that follows for oboe and alto solo
is Bach’s first extended oboe solo and thus the
beginning of a remarkable body of work. The text for
the bass aria uses the metaphor of “following” to
color the whole structure. The two solo violins dutifully
follow both the bass and each other. The tenor aria,
a mournful and expressive plaint, is accompanied by
the chorale melody, “Jesu meine Freude” on
the oboe. “Was Gott tut, daß ist wohlgetan” ends
the cantata in a harmonization with the oboe above
the sopranos providing a fifth voice.
©Craig
Smith
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