BWV
91
Bach
Cantata BWV 91 was written for Christmas morning
in Bach's second year in Leipzig. The Luther tune "Gelobet
seist du, Jesu Christ" is brilliantly set for
horns, tympani, three oboes, and strings with the
sopranos singing the melody in long tones as the
rest of the chorus rushes by with brilliant scale
passages. In Bach's day Christmas was not as oppressively
cheery as it is today. After this brilliant opening
chorus the work looks inward in a most remarkable
and profound way. The soprano sings the chorale tune
with interesting and sometimes rather dark editorial
comments. The great striding tenor aria with three
obbligato oboes is an uncanny portrait of both the
huge orbit and the tiny cradle of the Christ child.
The bass recitative goes through remarkable chromatic
wanderings in its portrayal of the vale of tears.
The soprano-alto duet with unison strings is probably
the greatest thing in the cantata. The insistent
and stumbling string figuration is a moving portrayal
of Christ's humility and transforms itself into something
radiant and glorious in the middle section. This
is one of those miraculous Bach pieces that is so
much greater than it looks on the page. The horns
reenter for a great final statement of the chorale.
©Craig
Smith
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