BWV
30
Bach
Cantata BWV 30 has an unusual history. It began life
as a secular cantata in honor of a Leipzig town official.
It would seem that Bach had in mind from its conception
that it would be converted into a cantata. Few of
Bach's parody works fit as naturally and well in
both of their sets of words. The work begins with
an animated and lively chorus. A bass recitative
leads us into the dazzling and brilliant aria with
strings. The roulades shared by both the strings
and the singer are so natural seeming that their
difficulty isn't apparent. The high point of the
cantata is the haunting and inward aria for alto
with flute and strings. The key word here is "grace".
Indeed one can hardly think of another Bach aria
that so profoundly illustrates a state of grace.
The gentle dance rhythms are celestial and heavenly
in their inexorable progress. A setting of the chorale
Freu dich Sehr ends the first half of the cantata.
A bass recitative with oboes introduces the gallant
and pointed aria. Stylistically this is the one movement
that is typical of Bach's interest in the 1730s with
the gallant style. The big rolling arpeggios that
accompany the soprano aria not only illustrate the
running of the sinner but also the smoke rising from
the altars in the tents of Kedar . The opening chorus
is repeated at the end of this cantata instead of
a chorale.
©Craig
Smith
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