BWV
161
The
Cantata BWV 161 is one of the great treasures of
Bach's Weimar years. There is perhaps no other Weimar
cantata that is more characteristic of the warmth
and openness that characterizes all of the music
from that period. Bach's great librettist from that
period, Salomo Franck, came up with a brilliant and
touching metaphor for the opening alto aria. Death
is represented as honey in the mouth of the lion;
the sweetness behind the terror. Flutes and voice
combine to characterize that sweetness with chormaticism
like thorns on a rose. The sopranos sing the passion
chorale to remind us of Jesus having gone on this
same journey. The tenor recitative that follows ends
with a ravishing arioso for cello and tenor without
organ. The "longing" of the tenor aria
is hypnotically produced by the unforgettable half-step
motive in the strings. The aria achieves a kind of
ecstatic melancholy unique in Bach. The extended
alto recitative develops that ecstasy with the addition
of plucked funeral bells in the strings. The childlike
chorus with its gorgeously warbling flutes and sweet
thirds and sixths is deceptively simple and sets
up the profound final chorale, a setting of the passion
chorale with flutes in unison floating hauntingly
above the texture.
©Craig
Smith
|
 |
|