BWV
147
Cantata 147 has an interesting history.
With his great Weimar librettist Salomo Franck, Bach
wrote three ambitious cantatas for the 2nd and 3rd
Sundays of Advent. When Bach moved to Leipzig, these
works could not be revived because these Sundays were
penitential and had no music. Bach expanded each of
these works with recitatives to make them suitable
for other Sundays where there was music required. Our
cantata shows its Advent roots but was expanded with
recitatives to make it suitable for the Assumption
of the Virgin. Musically the work is remarkable consistent,
but the difference in style between Franck’s
wonderful pithy words for the arias and the rather
more expansive style of the recitatives is problematic.
That said, there is no doubt that Bach was working
at his highest level for both parts of the piece.
The cantata opens with a wonderful and brilliant chorus
for trumpet, oboes, and strings. The dazzling high
trumpet writing is equaled by the brilliant string
figurations and energetic oboes. The chorus, like everything
in the cantata, is pitched very high and thus matches
the brilliance of the orchestra. The tenor recitative
establishes the expansiveness of the recitative writing
with a lush and beautiful string accompaniment. Everything
in the lovely melancholy alto aria is used to illustrate
the word “shame.” Both the arching, sad
line of the oboe d’amore and the supplicating
half steps of the alto perfectly reflect the words.
The bass recitative renews the energy of the opening
chorus. Almost all of Bach’s Advent pieces have
at least one movement with “walking” music
to illustrate the “make straight a highway” reference
In Isaiah. In the soprano aria, an expressive and jaunty
violin lays its line over a walking bass. The high,
silvery soprano adds to the magic of the texture. The
familiar chorale setting that ends both halves of the
cantata was added by Bach in the Leipzig version. It
is justly famous and absolutely characteristic of his
best chorale fantasia manner.
The motto “Hilf, Jesu, hilf” becomes the
three-note motto for the tenor aria that opens up the
second half of the cantata. Cello roulades not only
add a note of desperation to the line, but also become
the sense of richness and calm that appears later in
the text. The mystery and magic that is summoned in
the lengthy alto recitative is created by the dark,
exotic sound of the two English Horns playing their
sighing accompanying figures. The bass aria brings
back not only the trumpet, but also the marvelous energy
of the opening chorus.
©Craig
Smith
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