BWV
48
Since no music was
performed during Lent in Bach’s church we are
performing works written for the Sundays after Trinity,
which occur in the summertime. The Nineteenth Sunday
after Trinity combines an exhortation by Paul to the
Romans to live better, more truthful lives with the
story of Jesus’ cure of the paralyzed man and
consequent rebuff from the church fathers for blasphemy.
The bitter darkness of both of these readings permeates
this astonishing, profound piece.
Bach opens his cantata, not with the First Testament
quote as is normal for cantatas from his first Leipzig
cycle, but rather with a line from Paul’s letter
to the Romans. The hopelessness of the text set in
a ritualized manner is juxtaposed to the chorale theme
played in tight canon between the oboes and the trumpet.
While Bach’s manner later in Leipzig was dominated
by his desire to highlight and make clear the chorale,
here the tune is hidden and operates almost purely
on a subconscious level.
The alto recitative exhibits unbearable pain only relieved
by the harmonization of the verse from the chorale “Ach
Gott und Herr.” The extraordinary chromaticism
of the first few lines move into a shocking turn at
the words “so journey ahead.” This is the
true turning point of the cantata. Both arias that
follow, the lonely alto aria with oboe and the tenor
aria with strings, represent a positive direction but
nevertheless retain the defeated, sorrowful demeanor
of the opening. This is a profoundly great cantata
with virtually no contrast and no powerful denouement.
©Craig
Smith
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