BWV
57
Bach Cantata BWV 57 is an unusual
work. Written in his third year in Leipzig, the work
is nominally for the second day of Christmas. It has
virtually nothing of either the Christmas story or
spirit about it. It is much more suited to the sobriety
of the Lenten period. The work is one of several that
are in the form of dialogue between Christ and the
Soul. In this work the anxious soul is given comfort
by Christ who is here more military and spiritual leader.
The opening, dense aria for strings
and winds presents Christ at his most imposing and,
in a way, forbidding. The long phrases are sinuous
and in some ways tortured. The soul answers in a pathetic
recitative followed by a stupendous guilt-ridden aria
of extraordinary chromatic intensity scored for string
orchestra. Christ returns as military commander with
a dazzling aria of full of bravura string writing and
long and difficult vocal melismas. The soul’s
final answer is a bouncy aria with solo violin that
projects not only relief but a genuine religious fervor.
This superb cantata ends with a harmonization of “Lobe
den Herrn,” perhaps the only unequivocally happy
thing in the cantata.
©Craig Smith
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