| January
26, 2003
Motet:
Schütz' setting of Psalm 130 is for two 4 voice
choruses. As befits the somber text, they are both pitched
very low. The solemn, almost catatonic, chords that open this
impressive work give way to subtle but very specific text
painting.
Cantata:
BWV 111 The story of the Centurion who has faith that Jesus
will cure his servant brings forth from Bach in Cantata BWV
111 first a meditation on steadfast faith and finally martyrdom.
The Cantata begins with a bracing and energetic chorale fantasia
on the melody "Was mein Gott will, das g'scheh' allzeit."
This chorale has an interesting and important history. Beginning
as an elegant chanson by de Sermissy, it is prominent in both
the Lutheran and the Catholic liturgies. There is a Lassus
mass bassed upon the tune, and many 17th Century German settings
including a marvelous extremely contrapuntal one in the appendix
of the Geistliche Chormusik of Heinrich Schütz. The melody
is in Bar form but interestingly repeats the whole Stollen
(first half repeated section) as the last two phrases of the
Abgesang (second half). This complete recapitulation is of
course useful in large settings of the chorale. Bach uses
it to great advantage in both of his chorale fantasia versions.
Strangely there is no extent Bach organ chorale prelude based
on this melody. The melody has another distinctive feature.
Although it is solidly in the minor mode, the first phrase
is in the relative major. Bach turns this into a wonderful
moment in the chorus of BWV 111. The chorus entrance is in
A minor and he modulates to a brilliant and assertive C Major
at the cadence. Even by Bach's standards the energy of the
piece is remarkable. The opening motive, first in the oboes
then the strings, virtually explodes over a striding and purposeful
bass. The choral parts remain in quarters and eighths, never
going into the sixteenths that dominate the orchestral texture.
This is straight-ahead battle music absolutely riveting in
its strength and purpose.
The
bass aria continues the aggressive, straight-ahead kind of
writing. The declamation is unusual though. The phrase "Entsetze
dich mein Herze nicht" is always broken with a pause
after "entsetze" and a leap up to the word "nicht."
This could be construed as a peculiarity of the moment but
the words are declaimed in this fashion without exception.
The effect is not halting or stumbling as Bach would sometimes
set his text, but stubborn and considered. It is as if the
soul is considering every possibility. The line of chorale
is so subtly included into the texture that it can be easily
missed.The aria is in an extremely sophisticated, written-out
da capo form. The secco alto recitative introduces the first
signs that the theme of martyrdom will dominate the last half
of the cantata. Is there any piece in all of Bach like the
duet #4? The great striding melody with its volcanic eruptions
of arpeggios and the thunderous dotted bass line all give
the piece an heroic cast that is astonishing. Even the harmonic
turns that propel us through the middle section of the opening
section have a breadth that is overwhelming The choice of
alto and tenor as the solo voices once again brings out the
Janus-figure quality to the piece.The cadential heroic cries
over the wild arpeggios in the violins have to be heard to
be believed. Bach seems to know that he must calm down before
the end of this cantata so he gives the soprano recitative
added weight of two obbligato oboes. The arioso of the last
line with the calm oboe figuration is marvelous in its soothing
effect. As if to emphasize structural intricacy of the chorale,
Bach harmonizes the end of the Abgesang identically with the
Stollen.
©Craig
Smith
Translation
for this Cantata
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