BWV
81
BWV
81 The familiar story of Jesus stilling the waves
is placed in between two of the most mysterious stories
in Matthew. First is the peculiar exhortation by
Jesus to the man who wants to bury his dead father.
Jesus says to him: "Let the dead bury their
dead." After our story Jesus and the disciples
run two men infested with devils. They induce a herd
of pigs to jump over a cliff and destroy themselves.
Some of the oddness of these two tales informs Bach's
setting of the stilling of the waves. Instead of
opening with the tempest, Bach's first aria for alto
invokes a kind of otherworldly calm with gently swaying
recorders doubling the muted strings. The cantata
then moves on to one of the most ferocious of all
of Bach's storm scenes. Here the rolling waves of
the strings are punctuated by the hysterical coloratura
of the tenor. The austere bass aria scolding the
disciples for their lack of faith is followed by
the controlled fury of the two oboes d'amore and
strings while the bass stills the waves. Only a short
perfunctory recitative follows leading into a magical
harmonization of the great chorale, "Jesu meine
Freude."
©Craig
Smith
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