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1 CD -
Teldec 8.42663 XH (c) 1989
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2 LP's -
Telefunken 6.35470 EK (p) 1980 |
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NIKOLAUS HARNONCOURT - 25 Years
on TELDEC |
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Johann Sebastian
Bach (1685-1750) |
Die 6 Motetten,
BWV 225-230 |
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Singet
dem Herrn ein neues Lied, BWV
225 |
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12' 43" |
A1 |
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Der
Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf,
BWV 226 |
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7' 40" |
B1 |
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Komm, Jesu, komm, BWV 229 |
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7' 48" |
B2 |
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Jesu,
meine Freude, BWV 227 |
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20' 01" |
C1 |
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Fürchte
dich nicht, ich bin bei dir,
BWV 228 |
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8' 02" |
D1 |
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Lobet
den Herren, alle Heiden, BWV
230 |
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5' 44" |
D2 |
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BACHCHOR
STOCKHOLM / Anders Öhrwall, Leitung |
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CONCENTUS MUSICUS
WIEN (mit Originainstrumenten) |
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- Jürg Schaeftlein,
David Reichenberg, Oboen,
Oboen d'amore
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- Paul Hailperin, Oboe
da caccia |
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- Milan Turković, Fagott |
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- Alice Harnoncourt,
Walter Pfeiffer, Peter
Schoberwalter, Anita Mitterer,
Wilhelm Mergl, Violinen |
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- Kurt Theiner,
Josef de Sordi, Violen |
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- Nikolaus
Harnoncourt, Violoncello |
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- Eduard Hruza, Violone |
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- Herbert Tachezi, Orgel |
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Nikolaus
HARNONCOURT, Leitung |
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Luogo
e data di registrazione |
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St.
John, Stockholm (Svezia) - 29
novembre / 1 dicembre 1979 |
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Registrazione:
live / studio |
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studio |
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Producer
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Heinrich
Weritz |
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Edizione CD |
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TELDEC
- 8.42663 XH (242 881-2) - (1 CD -
durata 61' 59") - (c) 1989 - DDD |
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Originale LP
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TELEFUNKEN
- 6.35470 EK - (2 LP's - durata
28' 05" & 33' 42") - (p) 1980
- Digitale |
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Note |
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One of Bach's duries
as Cantor of St.
Thomas's in Leipzig
was to provide music
for the services
in St.
Thomas's and St. Nicholas's Sundays
and holy days. In addition, he
and the choristers of St.
Thomas's had to sing
at funerals. According to
the Leipzig school regulations
of 1723, pupils and staff were
expected to assemble in
from of the house of the
deceased a quarter of an hour
before the commencement
of the memorial service,
and to start singing
immediately. The selection of
the hymns and motets for
funerals was in the hands of the
Cantor. In most cases Bach
would, in accordance with
tradition, have chosen settings
from the "Florilegium portense",
a printed collection of
rnotets. If, however,
specific biblical texts were
requested, and he was
commissioned by the bereaved
family, he had both to compose
and to rehearse a new motet in a
comparatively short time. Five
of the six extant motets by Bach
were commissioned: "Der
Geist hilft unser Schwachheit
auf" ("Likewise the Spirit
also helpeth our infirmities");
"Jesu meine Freude" ("Jesu, my
joy"); "Fürchte dich nicht":
("Fear not"); "Komm, Jesu,
komm" ("Come,
jesu, come"); and "Lobet den
Herrn, alle Heiden".("Praise the
Lord, all ye nations"). The
scope and scoring of these works
reflected the fees that he
received for them. Only the
psalm motet "Singet dem
Herrn ein neues Lied" ("Sing
unto the Lord a new song")
appears to have been written for
a different occasion.
In composing new funeral motets
Bach reverted to a type of music
which flourished in the middle
of the 17th century (Schein,
Schütz), although a number of
cantors in Thuringia and Saxony
still employed it in the 18th
century. A feature of
the "Cantor's motet" of the
period was the division into a
four-part movement for the
biblical text and a contrapuntal
movement containing the chorale
tune, usually in the soprano
line, of varying degrees of
elaboration. The stylistic
contrast between the bible
quotation and the chorale text,
in other words, between the
message and the exegesis, is
also the basis of Bach’s motets;
but he far surpasses the
small-scale form of his
contemporaries, By combining all
manner of compositional
techniques (strict counterpoint,
free treatment of the chorales,
instrumental concerto etc.) for
the purpose of representing by
musical means both message and
exegesis, he achieved an overall
concept of both music and
content unequalled in the more
recent history of the motet.
The motet in three movements for
double choir "Singet dem
Herrn ein neues Lied" (BWV
225), written no earlier than
1726, is of the same genus as
the funeral motets, but was
probably intended for the New
Year. The first movement, a song
of thanksgiving based on Psalm
149, vv.1-3, consists of a
section in free style followed
by a fugue, constituing a motet
within the work as a
whole. In the free section
("Singet dem Herrn") the two
choirs conduct a dialogue: the
second choir starts off by
exhorting, with monosyllabic
exclamations, the first choir to
sing; the first choir
accedes to this request with a
kind of melismatic rejoicing
These exhortatioris continue
into the opening of the fugue
subject, "Die Kinder
Zion" ("Let the children of
Zion"), sung by the first choir.
The second movement is also cast
in the form of a dialogue; the
chorale "Wie sich ein
Vater erbarmet" ("As a
father is merciful") sung by the
second choir, is interrupted by
the interpolations of the first
choir set to the
words "Gott, nimm dich
ferner unser an" ("Oh
Lord, continue to care for
us"). The third movement,
based on Psalm 150,
v..2 "Lobet den
Herrn" ("Praise the Lord")
leads to a fugue in which the
two choirs combine into four
parts to sing the Lord's praises
("Alles was Odem hat" ["Let
everything that hath breath"]).
According to Bach's autograph,
the motet "Der Geist hilft
unset Schwachheit auf" (BWV
226), again for double choir,
was performed in the University
Church of St. Paul’s
(Paulinerkirche) on 20th October
1729, for the funeral
of Johann Heinrich Ernesti,
the Rector of St. Thomas's
School. Like BWV 225, it
consists of three selfcontained
movements. The opening movement,
a setting of vv.26 and 27 of
Romans 8, is constructed like a
medieval "Bar": the
first "Stollen", made up of
two parts ("Der Geist hilft
unser Schwachheit auf" and "denn
wir wissen nicht, was wir beten
sollen" ["for we know not what
we should pray for"]) is
followed by another Stollen
which is a reworking of the
previous one, and finally by
an "Abgesang", a fugue on
the words "Sondern
der Geist" ("But the Spirit
itself"). The second movement is
a four-part double fugue, the
two subjects of which (lst
subject "Der aber die
Herzen forschet" ["And he that
searcheth the hearts"], 2nd
subject "Denn et
vertritt die Heiligen"
["Because he maketh intercession
for the saints"]) are
organically linked at the end.
The motet closes with a simple
figured chorale on the words of
the third stanza of the Whitsun
hymn "Komm, heiligcr
Geist".
The five-part motet "Jesu, meine
Freude" (BWV 227) was probably
sung for the first time on 18th
july 1723, only a few weeks
after Bach had taken up his
appointment as Cantor of St.
Thomas's, on the occasion of the
funeral of the widow of a head
postmaster. The work differs
primarily from the motets for
double choir in respect of its
formal structure. Bach combined
the verses of Romans 8, on which
the funeral sermon was based,
with the words of a well-known
hymn by Johann Franck,
"Jesu, meine Freude", by
alternating the chorale stanzas
with biblical texts. The key
statement of the third biblical
quotation "But ye are not in
the flesh, but in the
spirit" is placed in the very
centre of the motet, and becomes
a focal point around which the
other movements ate grouped. As
will be seen from me diagram
below, this aymmetrical
arrangement
can not only be
accurately executed, but can
also be appreciated
without difficulty by the
listener, beause the flrst two
movements are repeated
at the end in reverse
order.
(1) Chorale stanza:
"Jesu, meine
Freude"; (4-part
cantional setting)
(2) Biblical text, Romans
8, v. l: "Es ist nun
nichts"; (5-part chorus)
(3) Chorale
stanza: "Unter deinem
Schirmem"; (5-part
chorale, florid setting
(4) Biblical text, Romans
8, v.2: "Denn das
Gesetz"; (3-part setting
in the manner of a Trio
Sonata)
(5) Chorale
stanza: "Trotz dem alten
Drachen"; (5-part
adaptation of the
chorale)
(6) Biblical text, Romans 8,
v.9; "Ihr aber seid nicht
fleischlich, sondern
gerstlich"; (5-part double
fugue)
(7) Chorale stanza: "Weg
mit allen
Schätzen"; (4-part chorale,
florid setting)
(8) Biblical tcxt,
Romans 8, v.10: "So
aber Chistus in uns ist";
(3-patr
setting in the
manner of a Trio Sonara)
(9) Chorale stanza: "Gute
Nacht, o Wesen";
(4-part adaptation
of the chorale with the
cantus firmus
in the Alto)
(10) Biblical text,
Romans 8, v.ll: "So nun
der Geist";
(5-part chorus, as in No.
2)
(11) Chorale
stanza: "Weicht, ihr
Trauergeister" with final line
"Jesu, meine Freude" (4-part
cantional setting, as in No.
1)
In this
piece the extent to which the
musical style is determined by
the underlying text is far
greater than in the other
motets. The word painting (e. g.
the rests after "nichts" in the
second movement, the semiquaver
run [tirata] at "tobe", or
the contrary motion [antitheton]
of "tobe, Welt, und
springe" and "in gar sich'
rer Ruh" in the fifth movement)
reveal Bach as a
profound "musicus poeticus"
who was attempting, in
accordance with the old approach
to music, to move, entertain and
instmct his audience (movere,
delectare, docere).
Probably the motet "Fürchte
dich nicht" (BWV 228) was
composed shortly
before "Singet dem Herrn";
both works are for double choir,
and the form of the first
movement of BWV 225, i. e. a
section in free style followed
by a fugue, strongly resembles
that of BWV 228. This motet
consists of two parts of roughly
equal length based on verses
from Isaiah, which constituted
the text of the funeral sermon
preached in January 1726
for the late wife of a prominent
Leipzig citizen, Stadthauptmann
Winckler. The first section is
written as a "variatio per
choros", in other words
antiphonally ("Fear not, for I
am with thee", Isaiah 41, v.10);
the second section is a
three-part fugue on the
subject "Denn ich habe dich
erlöset" ("For I have redeemed
thee") with a regular
countersubject on "Ich habe
dich bei deinem Namen gerugen"
("I have called thee by thy
name"); both taken from Isaiah
45, v.1, with chorale quotations
from stanzas 11 and 12 of Paul
Gerhardt’s hymn "Warum
sollt ich mich denn grämen?". At
the very end Bach summarized the
content and theology of the
affirmation "Fear not", and
in doing so, wrote his own name
B A C H (in German B
stands for B flat, H for B
natural), albeit transposed, in
the bass line.
The motet for double
choir "Komm,]esu, komm"
(BWV 229) dates from between
1723 and 1754. It is based
on two stanzas of a funeral hymn
originally written by Paul
Thymich of Leipzig on the
occasion of the death of a
Rector of St. Thomas's. Bach
took account of the syntax and
content of the first stanza by
writing it in "Bar" form:
the madrigal-like first part
corresponds to the
first "Stollen" (A), the
fugato second part ("ich sehne
mich nach deinem Frieder
["I long for thy peace"])
to the second "Stollen"
(A’), and the third part, which
resembles a concertante minuet,
("Komm, komm, ich will mich dir
ergeben" ["Come, come, I will
yield myself to thee"] to
the "Abgesang" (B). In
complete contrast to this
large-scale first stanza, the
second, "Drum schliess ich
mich in deine Hände" ("So I give
myself into thy hands") is a
simple four-part chorale without
cantus firmus.
"Lobet den Herrn, alle
Heiden" (BWV 230) occupies
a special position among Bach's
motets. There is some doubt as
to its authenticity, not only on
account of its late appearance -
it was published for the first
time in 1821, allegedly from a
lost autograph of Bach - but
also because of some stylistic
features. It has only four
parts; there is an obbligato
organ accompaniment; it is
written in one movement, without
any chorale text or tunes;
sequences abound, etc. The motet
is in three sections, though not
obviously so, section 1 ("Lobet
den Herrn, alle Heiden") being
based on the first verse, and
sections 2
and 3 ("Denn seine
Gnade und Wahrheit
walter über uns" ["For his
merciful kindness is great
toward us"]
and "Alleluiah") on the
second verse of Psalm 117. It is
not out of the question that
this work was written by a
composer of Bach’s circle, the
more so since the style of the
Allelujah fugue bears some
uncharacteristic features
including subject with an
unusual compass.
In view of the exceptional scope
and difficulty of performing
these motets, the question
arises of what resources Bach
had at his disposal for these
funeral works. It must be borne
in mind that the number
of choristers at St.
Thomas's, who had to master
them musically and vocally, was
comparatively small. In
his "statement on the
requirements of a well-appointed
church musical
establishment" written in
1730, Bach declared
that "any musical choir...
requires at least 3 Trebles, 3
male Altos, 5 Tenors and as
manyBasses, so that if someone
is indisposed at least a double
motet can be sung. "This can
only mean that the various
parts, especially of the motets
for double choir, were normally
performed by solo singers. Only
on ideal occasions (and how
often did they occur?) could
each part be sung by two
singers. In order to improve the
sound of the choir, which was
homogenous but weak, Bach
strengthened the vocal bass line
with an instrumental thorough
bass, as was the current
practice. lf the performance was
given in a church, as was the
case with "Der Geist hilft
unser Schwachheit auf" for
Rector Ernesti's memorial
service in the University
Church, each vocal part was
doubled by an instrument. This
practice of playing "colla
parte" is confirmed by
a "Historie der
Kirchen-Ceremonien in
Sachsen" (History of Church
Ceremonial in Saxony) dated
1732, which stated that for
funeral and memorial services
the Cantor was to perform
funeral music, particularly if
the deceased were noble or
important, with instruments
playing softly now and then. As
the present recording of
Nikolaus Harnoncourr’s proves so
conclusively, a performance of
Bach’s motets which takes
account of these historic
guidelines can exploit these
possibilities to the full.
Hans
Joachim Marx
(Translation:
Lindsay Craig)
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