BWV
51
Bach Cantata BWV 51 is something of
an anomaly. Only boy sopranos were allowed to sing
in the Thomaskirche
services in Leipzig. The work is too virtuosic for
any child singer. One must assume that the cantata
was written for some private function in which a
female soprano, perhaps Anna Magdalena Bach, sang.
The work opens with a bravura aria for soprano trumpet
and strings. The soprano and trumpet duetting is
of the most brilliant sort, challenging both singer
and instrumentalist to the utmost. The very quiet
recitative with strings is a complete contrast to
the noisy opening. It sets up the beautiful and inward
aria with cello. organ and soprano. Here the gorgeous
cantalena and plastic phrasing demand a different
kind of virtuosity from the singer. Two solo violins
swing into a jaunty and irresistible duet that accompanies
the singer in her performance of a verse from the
chorale "Nun lob, mein Seel." This leads
directly into the brilliant Alleluia that ends the
cantata.
©Craig
Smith
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