BWV
14
Bach
Cantata BWV 14 is one of his headiest and most learned
works. The opening chorus is a contrapuntal marvel
with each subject in all of the chorale phrases presented
simultaneously with its inversion. For all of its
dense counterpoint, the work shows the composer,
here in the 1730s, experimenting with some of the
new galant techniques. The actual chorale melody
appears in the horn and the oboes. The soprano aria
is of a brilliant cast. It's two main ideas, a fanfare
like horn tune, followed by an exuberant upward scale,
are so unusual in their combination that the work
is somewhat hard to follow. What is obvious is the
relish with which Bach sets this militaristic text.
The tenor recitative is tortured and flailing. The
great bass aria with two obbligato oboes is dense
in the way that the opening chorus is dense but spitting
an extraordinary and intense energy. The final chorale
is characteristic of Bach's more detailed chorale
settings of the 1730s.
©Craig
Smith
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