BWV
79
How
different this is than the straight-forward setting
in the Bach cantata. BWV 79 It is interesting that
the line of text that begins the Cantata BWV 79 comes
from one of the most friendly and pastoral of all
the Psalms #84. For the line "God, the Lord,
is sun and shield" sets off in Bach a chorus
more spectacularly military than any other piece
in his output. This chorus reminds one of that great
Altdorfer painting of the armies of Saul. Row after
row, literally thousands of soldiers all in battle
formation, fighting for the forces of good. Reformation
Sunday had long been the most overtly militant of
Lutheran festivals and our cantata here is characteristic.
But this chorus is no mere noisy battle piece. It
is one of the most thrilling, stupendously energetic
works he ever wrote. It begins with two high horns
in fanfare over a very active tympani. Against these
fanfares the strings and winds play a grand marching
theme. As exciting as this, is it is only an introduction
to the dazzlingly active fugue subject. This is a
three voice fugue great detail and regularity. After
five statements of the theme, the horns and tympani
make a grand return in the dominant to lead us into
the chorus entrance. The orchestral introduction
is unusually long and detailed; it is particularly
distinctive to have a fugue of this complexity and
detail before the entrance of the chorus. The chorus
entrance itself is grand and rhetorical. It is quite
some time before it enters in the fugue. The texture
is further thickened by the introduction of the fugue
theme passed through all of the instruments but not
used fugally. By the time the chorus actually begins
its fugal treatment of the theme, the tune is so
familiar that Bach immediately introduces it in stretto.
The stretti are both at the bar and the half bar,
so that the effect is of a gradually winding coil.
The pitch of excitement is unmistakeable, not only
because of the stretti but the shear bravura of dense
sung counterpoint moving along at this pace. The
reentrance of the thunderous horns on top of this
amazing texture at is a tour de force, even for Bach.
One of the most remarkable things about this chorus
also is Bach's ability to mix simple block-like rhetoric
with the most complex counterpoint. After writing
something his overwhelmingly grand, there is an inherant
problem of what to do next. Bach follows his grandest
chorus with a slim reed of a piece, a lovely little
pastoral aria of simplicity and lack of pretension.
Because the opening line of text is almost exactly
identical to the opening of the chorus, it is clear
that Bach is saying, "see, I can look at this
text in a completely different way." The aria
is for alto with oboe obbligato. The third movement
is unique in all of Bach's works. He synthesizes
the fanfares from the opening chorus and makes them
the accompaniment with just horns tympani and continuo
to a harmonization of the chorale "Nun danket
alle Gott." Although because they are alone
and so exposed, these are probably the most demanding
horn parts in all of Bach, there is a sense here
is of a thinning out, and clarity. The fugue theme,
which was the animating force in the first movement,
is completely absent. The effect of this movement
is of thanksgiving after a battle. The following
secco recitative for bass and duet for bass and soprano,
with all of the violins obbligato, is unusual. The
two singers in the duet almost never sing contrapuntally.
There is a sense of two small people against the
forces of evil. The obbligato for the violins is
slim, almost sketchy in sound. While there is something
distinctive and appealing about the piece, there
is also a sense that it doesn't occupy enough space
after the two monumental chorus pieces. The horns
and tympani return in the simple chorale, a setting
of "Wach auf mein Herz und singe."
©Craig
Smith
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