BWV
55
One of the emotions which artists
of the baroque period were wont to portray with intense
realism is religious confession of sin. In realizing
the enormous guilt of sinful man in the expiatory death
of Christ, Schütz and Bach join issue in warmth
of expression with the greatest accuser of the human
heart – St. Augustine. One of the most powerful
compositions of this character was the Alto Rhapsody
by Heinrich Schütz entitled “Was hast du
verwirket, o du alter holdseligster Knab’ Jesu
Christi” from the Kleine Geistliche Konzerte of
1639. Others, including North German masters, followed
suit, but nothing of equal value was produced until
the advent of Bach. His tenor cantata “Ich armer
Mensch,” written about 1731/32 for the 22nd Sunday
after Trinity, intensifies the pathos of Schütz
to a confession of sin amounting almost to spiritual
self-torture. Hardly ever – not even in Wagner’s Parsifal – has
the nullity of human nature and its need for redemption
been expressed so passionately and so acutely as here,
with no glimmer of hope or comfort till the end.
The poem of the unknown author formed
a strong frame upon which Bach could work. The two
arias and recitatives evoke powerful pictures which
are enhanced and strengthened by the music. The instrumentation
in itself is singular: flute and oboe in close combination,
contrasting with the string orchestra in three parts.
The absence of the voila enables the unusually high
tenor part in the cantata to explore at will the whole
range of tone between the bass and second violin, the
full gamut in the complete work extending from E flat
to B flat. The first twelve bare of the prelude typify
melodic development, together with sobbing phrases
in the violins constitute the immediate atmosphere
of grief which pervades the whole; the consecutive
sixths in the two wind instruments denote tribulation
rather than despair. With he entry of the voice unbounded
hopelessness reigns supreme. This entry comes as a
surprise, as something new and unpremeditated, a wailing
heartfelt cry of the soul, echoed in the high register
by the oboe. Bach now gives expression to the further
self-accusations of the tenor in a wonderfully constructed
six-part movement, in parallel and contrary motion,
which later, together with the employment of single
parts, in cantabile or detached phrases, lead to an
unequalled intensity of passion.
For Bach, self-persecution was ever
synonymous with self-questioning; hence arises the
main, vocal, thematic material of the movement. The
appearance before God is announced in a diatonic measured
theme, which is immediately resolved into lamenting,
and a few bars later into whining, chromatic, figures,
which in their scantiness of accompaniment, exhibit
a tragic picture of utter helplessness. In the middle
of the movement the righteous and unrighteous are deftly
symbolized by those invisible yet clearly defined means
which Bach employed during the course of his creative
activity with at most scientific clarity of spirit.
But this middle section is by no means independent,
for it is constantly interrupted by the cry “I
pitiful man, I slave of sin”. The last two, also
unaccompanied, condense and unite all previous expression,
and conclude a composition which makes the highest
intellectual and technical demands upon the singer.
There was, at that time, no poet who,
on seeing a Bach aria complete before him, was capable
of following it up with anything on an equally poetic
level. It would have required the trenchant speech
of the psalmist to give adequate answer, instead of
which, however, there follows in the recitative only
a weak imitation of Psalm 139. but Bach’s imagination,
still aglow with the design of the aria, was able to
invest this with extraordinary energy and bold gradations
of light and shade.
The cry for mercy follows the confession
of sin. The spiritual condition undergoes but little
change; the feeling of unworthiness and the consciousness
of slavery in sin remain unaltered. Though the music
(now only in three part harmony) is more even, and
flowing in motion, it is no less strong in expression.
In it there is something of the repentant spirit which
permeates the “Erbarme dich” of the Matthew
Passion, and which is recalled by the wailing and imploring
figures of the solo instrument. But in contrast to
the pure B minor key of the latter, Bach begins here
in the key of D minor veiled by E flat. The fact that
the section as a whole is of shorter duration, and
grants longer pauses to the singer, was determined
by the foregoing music. In the accompanied final recitative
the poet and composer elucidate the meaning of the
soul’s state once more, but unfortunately without
achieving complete unity pf purpose at the end. The
concluding chorale is founded on the 4th verse of Joh.
Rist’s “Werde munter, mein Gemüte.”
– Prof. Dr. Arnold Schering,
Berlin 1930
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