Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder, BWV 135

  • SATB choir
  • solo: alto, tenor and bass
Instrumental
  • cornett
  • trombone
  • 2 oboes
  • 2 violins
  • viola
  • continuo

Johann Sebastian Bach composed the church cantata Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder (Ah Lord, poor sinner that I am),[1] BWV 135 in Leipzig for the third Sunday after Trinity and first performed it on 25 June 1724. It is the fourth chorale cantata from his second annual cycle, and is based on the hymn by Cyriakus Schneegass.

In the format of Bach's chorale cantata cycle, the words of the hymn are retained unchanged only in the outer movements, while an unknown contemporary librettist paraphrased the inner stanzas for recitatives and arias. Bach structured the cantata in six movements, setting the chorale tune in a chorale fantasia in the opening movement, and in a four-part setting in the closing movement. The two choral movements frame alternating recitatives and arias of three vocal soloists. Bach also used a four-part choir, and a Baroque instrumental ensemble of cornett, trombone, two oboes, strings and continuo. He set the first movement as a polyphonic chorale fantasia, the bass sings the cantus firmus.

History and words

Bach took office as Thomaskantor, music director in Leipzig, end of May 1723. It was part of his duties to supply music for the Sundays and feast days of the liturgical year at four churches of the town, and he decided to compose new cantatas for these occasions. He began with a cantata for the first Sunday after Trinity in 1723, performed on 30 May, and wrote a series of church cantatas until Trinity of the next year, which became known as his first cantata cycle. The following year, he composed new cantatas for the occasions of the liturgical year, each based on one Lutheran chorale, an effort which became known later as his chorale cantata cycle. He wrote Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder as the fourth cantata of this cycle, which he began two weeks earlier with O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 20.[2]

Bach composed the cantata for the Third Sunday after Trinity as the fourth cantata of his second annual cycle, and first performed it on 25 June 1724,[3] one day after Christ unser Herr zum Jordan kam, BWV 7, on St. John's Day.[4]

The prescribed readings for the Sunday were from the First Epistle of Peter, "Cast thy burden upon the Lord" (1 Peter 5:6–11), and from the Gospel of Luke, the parable of the Lost Sheep and the parable of the Lost Coin (Luke 15:1–10). The cantata is based entirely on the chorale "Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder" (1597) by Cyriakus Schneegass, a paraphrase on Psalm 6 in six stanzas.[4][5] The connection to the readings is rather marginal: the Lord's comforting (movement 3) and destruction of the enemies (movement 5) refer to the epistle, while the theme of the hymn, the joy about a repenting sinner, connects to the gospel. The unknown librettist retained the first and last stanza unchanged. He paraphrased the other four stanzas to four movements, for alternating recitatives and arias.[4]

Music

Structure and scoring

Bach structured the cantata in six movements. The first and last are set for choir as a chorale fantasia and a closing chorale. They frame alternating recitatives and arias with the text arranged by the librettist. Bach scored the work for three vocal soloists (alto (A), tenor (T) and bass (B)), a four-part choir, and a Baroque instrumental ensemble: cornett (Ct) to reinforce the soprano chorale tune in the last movement, trombone (Tb) to reinforce the bass chorale tune in the first movement, two oboes (Ob), two violins (Vl), viola (Va), and basso continuo (Bc).[3][6] The duration of the cantata has been stated as 17 minutes.[7]

In the following table of the movements, the scoring follows the Neue Bach-Ausgabe. The keys and time signatures are taken from the book by Bach scholar Alfred Dürr, using the symbols for common time (4/4) and alla breve (2/2).[8] The instruments are shown separately for winds and strings, while the continuo, playing throughout, is not shown.

Movements of Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder
No. Title Text Type Vocal Winds Strings Key Time
1 Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder Schneegass Chorale fantasia SATB Tb 2Ob 2Vl Va A minor 3/4
2 Ach heile mich, du Arzt der Seelen anon. Recitative T common time
3 Tröste mir, Jesu, meine Gemüte anon. Aria T 2Ob C major 3/4
4 Ich bin von Seufzen müde anon. Recitative A common time
5 Weicht, all ihr Übeltäter anon. Aria B 2Vl Va A minor cut time
6 Ehr sei ins Himmels Throne Schneegass Chorale SATB Ct 2Ob 2Vl Va E minor common time

Structure

The opening chorus is a chorale fantasia as in the previous chorale cantatas. Bach had started the first one of his second cycle with the cantus firmus of the chorale tune in the soprano, in this fourth work the bass has the honour.[4] According to the Bach scholar Christoph Wolff, the first four cantatas of the cycle form a group, distinctively different in their chorale fantasias. After a French Overture (O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 20), a motet (Ach Gott, vom Himmel sieh darein, BWV 2) and an Italian concerto (Christ unser Herr zum Jordan kam, BWV 7), the movement is an "extraordinary filigree of vocal and instrumental counterpoint" of the chorale melody.[9] All parts, even the instruments, take part in the polyphonic setting of the tune.[10] Bach used the melody, originally a love song, later for the first chorale of his Christmas Oratorio, "Wie soll ich dich empfangen", and several times in his St Matthew Passion, most prominently "O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden". All eight lines of the text are first treated instrumentally, then vocally. The instrumental anticipation is a trio without continuo of oboe I and II against the strings, which play in unison the cantus firmus.[4] In stark contrast to this high texture, the four-part vocal setting is dominated by the cantus firmus in the bass, reinforced by the trombone and the continuo.[11] The strings play colla parte with the other voices. On the words "daß ich mag ewig leben" (that I may live forever) the cantus firmus is broadened to three times as slow.[4]

In the tenor recitative, "rushes of notes" illustrate the images of the repentant sinner's "tears, which, like rapid rivers, roll down my cheeks. My soul is anxious and fearful with terror". It is concluded by an original line from the chorale, "Ah, Lord, why so long?".[1] In the tenor aria, accompanied by the two oboes, the "collapse in death" is pictured by falling sevenths, "silent in death" by long silences. The alto recitative opens with an original line of the chorale, "I am weary of sobbing",[1] expressed in a variation of the first line of the tune. The bass aria is a vigorous call, "Hence, all you evildoers".[1] The strings play a forceful two-bar phrase, repeated twice at lower pitches, at which point it soars upwards and becomes increasingly dispersive in nature. In Bach's Obituary, written by Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach and Agricola and published in 1754 mention is made of his distinctive melodies which are described as "strange" and "like no others". This is a good example; scrupulously shaped and crafted, ranging over nearly three octaves and carried forward through jagged shapes whilst radiating an unprecedented vigour and all the time reflecting the imagery of the text.[9] The cantata closes with a four-part chorale, the soprano reinforced by the cornett.[12][13]

Recordings

Recordings of Bach's cantatas began in the first half of the 20th century. Series of recordings, often for broadcasting, were made from 1950. Nikolaus Harnoncourt and Gustav Leonhardt were the first to begin recording the complete cantatas in a 20-year collaboration using period instruments, boys' choirs and boy soloists. Helmuth Rilling completed a recording of the sacred cantatas and oratorios on Bach's 300th birthday, 21 March 1985. Other projects to record all sacred cantatas in historically informed performance were completed by Ton Koopman, John Eliot Gardiner, Pieter Jan Leusink[14] and Masaaki Suzuki.[15] Sigiswald Kuijken began to record a cycle of cantatas for the Complete Liturgical Year with an OVPP choir and historic instruments, the ensemble La Petite Bande.[16][17]

In the following table, green background indicates an ensemble playing period instruments in historically informed performance. The year is of the recording, then of a release if different. The listing is taken from the selection on the Bach-Cantatas website.[18]

Recordings of Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder
Title Conductor / Choir / Orchestra Soloists Label Year Orch. type
J. S. Bach: Cantatas BWV 29 & BWV 135 Wolfgang Gönnenwein
Süddeutscher Madrigalchor
Deutsche Bachsolisten
Cantate 1963 (1963)
Bach Cantatas Vol. 3 – Ascension Day, Whitsun, Trinity Karl Richter
Münchener Bach-Chor
Münchener Bach-Orchester
Archiv Produktion 1975 (1975)
Die Bach Kantate Vol. 48 Helmuth Rilling
Gächinger Kantorei
Bach-Collegium Stuttgart
Hänssler 1979 (1979)
J. S. Bach: Das Kantatenwerk – Sacred Cantatas Vol. 7 Gustav Leonhardt
Leonhardt-Consort
Teldec 1983 (1983) Period
Bach Edition Vol. 2 – Cantatas Vol. 11 Pieter Jan Leusink
Holland Boys Choir
Netherlands Bach Collegium
Brilliant Classics 1999 (1999) Period
J. S. Bach: Complete Cantatas Vol. 12 Ton Koopman
Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir
Antoine Marchand 2000 (2000) Period
Bach Cantatas Vol. 2: Paris/Zürich John Eliot Gardiner
Monteverdi Choir
English Baroque Soloists
Soli Deo Gloria 2000 (2000) Period
J.S. Bach: Cantatas Vol. 29 – Cantatas from Leipzig 1724 Masaaki Suzuki
Bach Collegium Japan
BIS 2004 (2004) Period
J. S. Bach: Cantatas for the Complete Liturgical Year Vol. 2: "Wer nur den lieben Gott lässt walten" – Cantatas BWV 177 · 93 · 135 Sigiswald Kuijken
La Petite Bande
Accent 2005 (2005) Period

References

Cited sources

  • "Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder BWV 135; BC A 100 / Chorale cantata (3rd Sunday after Trinity)]". Bach Digital. 2017. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  • Braatz, Thomas; Oron, Aryeh (2005). "Chorale Melodies used in Bach's Vocal Works / Befiehl du deine Wege". Bach Cantatas Website. Retrieved 23 June 2012.
  • Browne, Francis (2006). "Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder / Text and Translation of Chorale". Bach Cantatas Website. Retrieved 4 July 2011.
  • Dahn, Luke (2024). "BWV 135.6". bach-chorales.com. Retrieved 15 June 2024.
  • Dellal, Pamela (2014). "BWV 135 – "Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder"". Emmanuel Music. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
  • Dürr, Alfred; Jones, Richard D. P. (2006). The Cantatas of J. S. Bach: With Their Librettos in German-English Parallel Text. Oxford University Press. pp. 412–415. ISBN 978-0-19-929776-4.
  • Gardiner, John Eliot (2010). Bach: Cantatas Nos 2, 10, 21, 76 & 135 (Cantatas Vol 2) (Media notes). Soli Deo Gloria (at Hyperion Records website). Retrieved 11 August 2018.
  • Ibbitson, John (8 November 2013). "A Bach cantata two decades in the making". The Globe and Mail.
  • McElhearn, Kirk (2001). "Johann Sebastian BACH (1685–1750) / Cantatas Vol. 29: Cantatas from Leipzig, 1724". musicweb-international.com. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  • Mincham, Julian (2010). "Chapter 5 BWV 135 Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder / O Lord, in Your anger". jsbachcantatas.com. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
  • Oron, Aryeh (2014). "Cantata BWV 135 Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder". Bach Cantatas Website. Retrieved 23 June 2015.
  • Wilson, Brian (2013). "Johann Sebastian BACH (1685–1750) / Cantatas for the complete Liturgical Year, Volume 15". musicweb-international.com. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  • "Bach: Cantatas For The Complete Liturgical Year Vol 7 / Kuijken, La Petite Bande, Et Al". arkivmusic.com. 2017. Retrieved 30 June 2017.

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