BWV
151
The
Cantata BWV 151 seems like a treasureable miniature.
While it is of a typical length, it has no opening
chorus and has a kind of intimacy that makes it the
most personal of Bach's Christmas cantatas. The rocking
lullaby for soprano with fulte and strings that opens
the cantata is one of Bach's most goreous works.
The gently swaying strings and the elaborate glittery
flute part is the closest Bach gets to South German
rococo architecture. One can almost see the putti
and gold sunbursts of the many churches from this
era in Bavaria and Austria. The voice part lies right
in the range of both the first violins and solo flute.
Together the three create an angelic floating texture
of childlike beauty. After the stopped-time quality
of the first section, the dazzling quickness of the
B section is even more striking. The gavotte character
is spiced with dazzling triplet roulades from both
the flute and soprano.
The
bass recitative begins rejoicing in the birth of
Jesus but soon becomes a contemplation on the lowliness
of Jesus' status. This theme permeates the rest fo
the cantata. The alto aria that follows, with solo
violin and all the upper strings in unison, expands
on this idea. The unusual texture begins with the
strings and solo violin playing a complex chromatic
melody over a narching bass line. When the singer
enters, the solo violin breaks loose and becomes
inextricably, even obsessively, intertwined with
the voice part. There is a density and seriousness
about the aria that surprises, even when looking
at the text. The middle section of the aria lightens
up somewhat, but the melancholy chromaticism of the
opening keeps insinuating itself into the texture.
The
brief happy tenor recitative and the lovely, glowing
setting of "Lobt Gott, ihr Christen, alle gleich" that
end the cantata don't quite dispel the gloom and
unease created by the remarkable alto aria. ©Craig
Smith
|
 |
|