BWV
41
Ironically
Bach probably did not know a note of Schütz'
music but no doubt knew much of Schein because Schein
worked his whole adult career at Thomaskirche in
Leipzig and all of his works were still in the library
when Bach was there exactly one hundred years later.
Bach's new Year's Cantata BWV 41 begins with one
of his largest scale chorale settings. The tune "Jesu,
nun sei gepreiset" is a huge chorale melody
in four sections. Bach sets it with grandeur, an
orchestra of three trumpets, timpani, three oboes
and strings. In addition he writes a solo for his
favorite Leipzig string instrument, the violincello
piccolo. After the blazing opening section of the
first chorus it is interesting to find the inward
quieter section still accompanied by trumpets; the
quick homophonic section that follows leads directly
into a recapitulation of the opening material. The
jiglike soprano aria with three oboes gives the impression
of being a palindrome even though it is not one.
This perfectly illustrates the 'beginning is the
ending' quality of the text. Up to this point this
brilliant piece may seem a little superficial. The
profound tenor aria with piccolo cello obbligato
takes the piece deeper than one would have thought
possible. The huge leaps of the five-string cello
create a gossamer web that the expressive voice line
floats over like a memory. The bass recitative includes
a litany response from the chorus. The four-voice
chorale harmonization is punctuated with motives
from the opening chorus.
©Craig
Smith |