BWV
115
Bach
Cantata BWV 115 has a very unusual shape. Two gigantic
slow arias follow a brief, very quick choral scherzo.
The opening movement has some of the fastest music
in all of Bach. Certainly the operative word here
is "Geist," meaning "spirit." The
flute, oboe d'amore and unison strings dance around
the chorale tune like vapors. In between the running
scales and octave leaps is a surprising amount of
chromatic writing that gives the movement an evanescent
and elusive quality. After this mysterious groundless
movement the heavy alto aria with its long oppressive
pedal points in the bass seems earthbound, even imprisoned.
The oboe d'amore at first doubles the first violins
but finally breaks free to sings its arching mournful
melody. The quick middle section is over so fast
that one wonders if it ever existed. After a brief
bass recitative, the great soprano aria is a gossamer
web of sound. The flute and piccolo cello weave their
transparent lines over which the soprano sings her
poignant text. Much is made by Bach of the similarity
between the word "Bete" (praying) and the
word "bitte" (pleading). This is one of
Bach's greatest and most profound arias. A four-voice
harmonization of the opening chorale ends the work.
©Craig
Smith
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