BWV
103
Bach
Cantata BWV 103 dates from Bach's second year in
Leipzig. As is true of so many cantatas from that
period, the work is heavily weighted to the remarkable
and profound opening chorus. The simultaneous weeping
and rejoicing that is the basis of the text is something
that music can do better than words. The mournful
chromatic lines of the chorus are punctuated by the
laughing, almost cackling, arpeggios of the piccolo.
Almost imperceptibly the harshness of the chromaticism
and the laughing arpeggios join forces to make, by
the end of the movement, a euphonious whole. The
gracious alto aria with flute softens much of the
harshness of the message of the opening chorus. The
triumphant tenor aria with obbligato trumpet announces
a sea change in the character of the cantata. The
final chorale harmonization of "Was mein Gott
will, dass g'scheh allzeit" announces a proper
benediction.
©Craig
Smith
|