BWV
76
BWV
76 begins with a brilliant chorus with trumpet, oboes
and strings, based on the opening sentences of Psalm
19. The dazzling fugue, first sung by the soloists
then taken up by the chorus, is based upon the chorale "Dies
sind die heilige zehn Gebot," a chorale designated
for the Sunday that this cantata was written for
but never otherwise heard in the cantata. After a
long and expressive recitative for tenor and strings,
the soprano sings a sweet and childlike aria with
solo violin. The announcement of God's voice is not
grand but as if in the mind of a child. The bass
then exhorts the people to foreswear their evil ways,
first in a recitative then in a brilliant aria with
trumpet and strings. The alto recitative ushers in
the mysterious and haunting elaborated setting of
the chorale "Es woll uns Gott genädig sein." The
second part of the cantata introduces obbligato instruments
that have up to this time not been heard in the cantata.
A sinfonia based on an earlier organ Trio Sonata
is scored for oboe d'amore and viola da gamba. After
a paranoid and brutal tenor aria with continuo, these
obbligato instruments return to accompany the heavenly
alto aria, certainly one of the most extraordinary
and haunting of all of Bach's alto arias. The mysterious
chorale setting from the first part is repeated to
end the cantata.
©Craig
Smith
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