BWV
39
Very
much tied into the same concepts is Bach cantata
BWV 39. Here the plea for generosity in feeding the
hungry is emphasized rather than the search for personal
salvation, which is perhaps the dominant motive of
the parable of Dives and Lazarus. Like many of the
cantatas from Bach's third Leipzig cycle, the huge
opening chorus dominates the work. The short notes
from the recorders, oboes and strings can either
be read to represent the breaking of the bread or,
more compellingly, the teardrops of the hungry. In
any case the orchestra is a stunning brackdrop for
what is at the beginning a deeply felt and emotional
fugue and later on an energetic call to arms. The
lovely alto aria with violin and oboe obbligati is
an inward and stunningly pure vision of the touching
words. The stern, preachy bass aria is a splash of
cold water - Bach at his most severe and Lutheran.
The sweet soprano aria with recorder breaks that
mood and ends the work with a touching child-like
sweetness.
©Craig
Smith
|