Christ unser Herr zum Jordan kam, BWV 7

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Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Infobox Bach composition Script error: No such module "Lang". (Christ our Lord came to the Jordan), BWVScript error: No such module "String".7, is one of several church cantatas which Johann Sebastian Bach composed for the Feast of St. John the Baptist. He wrote it in Leipzig and led its first performance on 24 June 1724.

It is the third cantata Bach composed for his chorale cantata cycle, the second cantata cycle he started after being appointed Thomaskantor in 1723. The cantata is based on the seven stanzas of Martin Luther's hymn "Template:Langr", about baptism. The first and last stanza of the chorale were used for the outer movements of the cantata, while an unknown librettist paraphrased the inner stanzas of the hymn into the text for the five other movements. The first movement, a chorale fantasia, is followed by a succession of arias alternating with recitatives, leading to a four-part closing chorale.

The cantata is scored for three vocal soloists (alto, tenor and bass), a four-part choir, two oboes d'amore, two solo violins, strings and continuo.

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History and words

Bach composed Script error: No such module "Lang". for St. John's Day, 24 June 1724, in Leipzig, as the third cantata of his second annual cycle, the chorale cantata cycle, which had begun about two weeks earlier on the first Sunday after Trinity. The cycle was devoted to Lutheran hymns, in the format of his chorale cantatas rendered by retaining their text of the first and last stanza, while a contemporary poet reworded the inner stanzas.[1]

The prescribed readings for the feast of the birth of John the Baptist were from the Book of Isaiah, "the voice of a preacher in the desert" (Isaiah 40:1–5), and from the Gospel of Luke, the birth of John the Baptist and the Template:Langr of Zechariah (Luke 1:57–80).Template:Sfn[1] Martin Luther's hymn "Template:Langr" (To Jordan came our Lord the Christ) is associated with the feast.[2] Its topic, differing from that of the readings, is baptism, which is treated based on biblical accounts, starting from Christ's baptism by John the Baptist in the river Jordan.[3] The hymn tune is "Template:Langr", Zahn No. 7246.[4]

Bach used the text of the first stanza of Luther's hymn for the first movement of his cantata, with its chorale melody sung as Script error: No such module "Lang".. The final movement of the cantata is a four-part chorale setting of the seventh stanza, on the hymn tune. The five arias and recitatives between these choral movements are settings of text paraphrased from the hymn's other stanzas.Template:Sfn[5]

Bach led the first performance on 24 June 1724.Template:Sfn

Music

Scoring and structure

Bach structured the cantata in seven movements and scored it for three vocal soloists (alto (A), tenor (T) and bass (B)), a four-part choir (SATB), two oboes d'amore (Oa), two solo violins (Vs, the second one only introduced in a later performance), two violins (Vl), viola (Va) and basso continuo (Bc).Template:Sfn[1]

In the following table of the movements, the scoring and keys and time signatures are taken from Alfred Dürr, using the symbol for common time (4/4).[1] The instruments are shown separately for winds and strings, while the continuo, playing throughout, is not shown.

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Movements

The seven-movement cantata begins with a chorale fantasia and ends, after a sequence of alternating arias and recitatives, with a closing chorale as a four-part setting. Bach increased the number of accompanying instruments for the arias, from only continuo in the second movement, over two solo violins in the central movement of the cantata, to two oboes d'amore and strings in the sixth movement.[1]

1

File:"Christ unser Herr zum Jordan kam" Druck 1577.png
The hymn in a print of 1577

In the opening chorus, "Template:Langr" (Christ our Lord came to the Jordan),Template:Sfn[3] the tenor has the melody[6] as a cantus firmus, while the other voices sing free counterpoint.Template:Sfn In the first cantata of the chorale cantata cycle, Script error: No such module "Lang"., Bach had given the cantus firmus of the chorale tune to the soprano, and in the second, Script error: No such module "Lang"., to the alto.

The opening chorus resembles an Italian violin concerto,Template:Sfn although in the context of a single movement rather than the three-movement format favoured by composers such as Vivaldi. Bach had studied Italian composers from 1714 onwards, when working in Weimar. He went on to assimilate the Italian style into his own compositions (the violin concerto in A minor, BWV 1041 is another example). Alfred Dürr compares the vocal sections of the chorus, all with the solo violin, to the solo sections of a violin concerto, as opposed to the tutti sections with the orchestra.[1] The musicologist Julian Mincham likened the "solo violin's persistent, rocking, wave-like idea" to the waves of the Jordan River.Template:Sfn Klaus Hofmann notes that the movement combines the old style of motet writing with the new type of solo concerto, and observes that "the main violin solo episodes ... are at first linked to the choral entries, but gradually assume larger proportions and greater independence as the movement progresses".Template:Sfn John Eliot Gardiner sees a French influence in the movement, interpreting it as a French overture, "replete with grandiloquent baroque gestures to suggest both the processional entrance of Jesus and the powerful flooding of the River Jordan".Template:Sfn

2

The first aria, "Template:Langr" (Mark and hear, you humans),Template:Sfn is accompanied by the continuo alone. Mincham observes that a characteristic fast motif of five notes, repeated abundantly in the cello, always flows downward, while Bach usually also inverses motifs, such as in his Inventions. Mincham concludes that it represents the "pouring of the baptismal waters".Template:Sfn

3

The following recitative is given to the tenor as an Template:Langr: "Template:Langr" (This God has clearly provided with words),Template:Sfn narrating the biblical command to baptise.[1]

4

The central aria is sung by the tenor, accompanied by two violins, marked "solo" in a later performance, "Template:Langr" (The Father's voice can be heard).Template:Sfn Gardiner notes that the music "describes, through its pair of soaring violins, the circling flight of the Holy Spirit as a dove".Template:Sfn Hofmann notes the character of the movement as a gigue, and several appearances of the number 3 as a symbol of the Trinity: it is a trio for voice and two violins, "in triple time – and markedly so: not only is the time signature 3/4, but also the crotchets are each divided into triplets", and in a form of three solo sections as "all variants of a single model that is presented in the opening and concluding ritornellos". Hofmann concludes: "The sequence that this creates – three different forms of the same musical substance – is evidently to be understood as a symbol of the Holy Trinity."Template:Sfn

5

A recitative for bass, the Template:Langr (voice of Christ), "Template:Langr" (As Jesus there, after His passion),Template:Sfn speaks of Jesus after his passion and resurrection. It is accompanied by the strings, similar to the words of Jesus in Bach's St Matthew Passion.[1]

6

The last aria is sung by the alto with rich accompaniment: "Template:Langr" (People, believe this grace now).Template:Sfn The two oboes d'amore double the first violin when human beings are requested to accept the grace of God to not "perish in the pit of hell".Template:Sfn

7

The closing chorale is the final stanza of the hymn, with the instruments playing colla parte: "Template:Langr" (The eye sees only water),Template:Sfn a summary of Luther's teaching about baptism.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Editions

In 1851, about a century before the cantata was assigned its BWV number, it was published as No. 7 in the first volume of the Bach-Gesellschaft-Ausgabe.[7] The editor was Moritz Hauptmann. In the New Bach Edition the cantata was included in Series I, Volume 29, Kantaten zum Johannisfest (Cantatas for St. John's Day) along with BWV 30 and BWV 167.[8] Calmus and Breitkopf & Härtel published performance scores.[9] The Breitkopf score translates the cantata's title as Lord Christ of old to Jordan came.[10]

Recordings

A list of recordings is provided on the Bach Cantatas Website.Template:Sfn Ensembles playing period instruments in historically informed performance are shown with green background.

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References

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  1. a b c d e f g h Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. Martin Luther. "XXXIV.: Christ, unser Herr, zum Jordan kam. To Jordan came our Lord the Christ." translated by R. Massie (amended) in The Hymns of Martin Luther: Set to their Original Melodies edited by Leonard Woolsey Bacon assisted by Nathan H. Allen. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1884.
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  4. Alfred Dürr, Yoshitake Kobayashi (eds.), Kirsten Beißwenger. Bach Werke Verzeichnis: Kleine Ausgabe, nach der von Wolfgang Schmieder vorgelegten 2. Ausgabe. Preface in English and German. Wiesbaden: Breitkopf & Härtel, 1998. Template:ISBN - Template:ISBN, p. 473
  5. Clemens Romijn. Liner notes for BWV7 Christ unser Herr zum Jordan kam. Brilliant Classics, 2000. (2014 reissue: J.S. BACH COMPLETE EDITION. "Liner notes" p. 23)
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  7. Forkel, Johann Nikolaus, translated by Charles Sanford Terry (1920). Johann Sebastian Bach: His Life, Art, and Work. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Howe; London: Constable, p. 226
  8. New Bach Edition, Series I: Cantatas, Vol. 29: Kantaten zum Johannisfest edited by Frieder Rempp. Bärenreiter, 1983
  9. Michael Rosewall. Directory of Choral-orchestral Music. Taylor & Francis, 2007. Template:ISBN, p. 17
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Cited sources

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External links

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