BWV
45
The warning against false prophets
elicits from the anonymous text writer of BWV 45 words
of such orthodoxy that even the new Pope would be pleased.
We are used to Bach’s complete engagement and
profound identification with his texts. Our cantata
is a remarkable but significant exception. One must
quickly say that this cantata is neither a work of
insincerity or even lack of interest. Rather the music
of this very energetic and beautiful work seems to
lead an independent, but cogent life of its own.
The work opens with an unpromising quote from Micah.
Micah, one of the twelve minor prophets, is best known
as the predictor of the Messiah’s birth in Bethlehem.
He was probably a contemporary of Isaiah but has none
of the ringing brilliance of that astonishing figure.
The pro forma, rather characterless words bring forth
from Bach a fugal chorus of extraordinary energy and
grandeur. While the text setting is perfectly, even
scrupulously correct, the effect is that of a major
top-drawer Bach instrumental piece. The tenor aria
with its heavy first beat-oriented rhythm is a striking
and minor-key equivalent. One of the most impressive
things about this cantata is its superb sense of proportion
and balance; each movement is not only the perfect
length in itself, but the sum total of the cantata
has a complete and superb symmetry. The second part
of the cantata begins with a quotation from Matthew;
not the passage about false prophets that is the reading
for this cantata, but Christ’s ferocious words
to the hypocrites that are in the subsequent lines.
Once again the crackling energy of the string parts
and the bravura melismas of the bass are the most striking
things. The juxtaposition of the words from Micah and
Jesus’ fierceness is mysterious unless the texts
are read together as exhortations to a society that
has lost its energy and direction. Certainly the wonderful
but odd alto aria supports this thesis, for the jaunty
and high-profile flute theme is never taken up by the
singer. The voice line is almost subsidiary to the
dazzling trio sonata that is going on in the instruments.
A very rich and beautiful harmonization of “O
Gott, du frommer Gott” ends the cantata.
©Craig
Smith
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