Was willst du dich betrüben, BWV 107
composed the church cantata Was willst du dich betrüben, 107 in Leipzig for the seventh Sunday after Trinity and first performed on 23 July 1724. The chorale cantata is based on Johann Heermann's hymn in seven stanzas "".
Bach structured the cantata, the seventh work in his chorale cantata cycle, in seven movements: two framing choral movements, a recitative and an unusual sequence of four bipartite arias. He scored the work for three vocal soloists, a four-part choir, and a Baroque chamber ensemble of a horn to reinforce the hymn tune in the outer movements, two transverse flutes, two oboes d'amore, strings and continuo. It is the only known work from his chorale cantata cycle that kept the original words unchanged.
History and words
Bach composed the chorale cantata in Leipzig for the Seventh Sunday after Trinity. The prescribed readings for the Sunday are from the Epistle to the Romans, "I speak in human terms because of your human limitations... the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life", and from the Gospel of Mark, the feeding of the 4000.The cantata is based on Johann Heermann's hymn in seven stanzas, "", which is focused on trust in God, even when facing adversaries including the devil. Trust in God is also a theme of the Gospel. Unusually for a chorale cantata of the second cycle, the text is not changed in the middle movements, but kept per omnes versus. The middle movements are, however, composed as a recitative and four arias. The treatment was decidedly old-fashioned in Bach's time. He had used it once much earlier in Christ lag in Todes Banden, BWV 4, and then again later, as in Gelobet sei der Herr, mein Gott, BWV 129, though it was not repeated during the second cycle. John Eliot Gardiner assumes that Bach imposed this restriction on himself, as he had done with the restriction to place the cantus firmus in soprano, alto, tenor and bass in the first four cantatas of the cycle. Gardiner comments on the "seventeenth-century design" of composing the unchanged chorale text, compared to settings of Stölzel, Telemann and Graupner:
The chorales in Heermann's 1630 publication Devoti musica cordis, which also included "", the first chorale in Bach's St Matthew Passion, have been described as "the first in which the correct and elegant versification of Opitz was applied to religious subjects, … distinguished by great depth and tenderness of feeling, by an intense love of the Saviour, and earnest but not self-conscious humility".
Bach first performed the cantata, the seventh extant cantata of his second annual cycle, on 23 July 1724.
Music
Scoring and structure
Bach structured the cantata in seven movements, beginning with a chorale fantasia and ending in a closing chorale, as usual in his chorale cantatas, but with an unusual sequence of only one recitative and four arias, setting the poetic hymn stanzas. He scored it for three vocal soloists, tenor , a four-part choir, and a Baroque chamber ensemble of corno da caccia to support the chorale tune in the outer movements, two flauti traversi, two oboes d'amore, two violins, two violas and basso continuo.In the following table of the movements, the scoring follows the Neue Bach-Ausgabe, the keys are given for the Weimar version. The time signature is provided using the symbol for common time.
Movements
1
The opening chorus, "", is a chorale fantasia, with the vocal part embedded in an independent concerto of the instruments. The cantus firmus on the melody of "" is in long notes, partly embellished, in the soprano and horn; the lower voices are mostly set in homophony. The lines of the chorale are not rendered separately, but accenting the bar form of the text, 1 and 2 are combined, 3 and 4 are combined, 5 is single and 6 to 8 are combined. The scoring is relatively rich in woodwinds.2
The only recitative, "", is accompanied by the oboes d'amore, shows an extended melisma on the word "" and culminates in an arioso in the final line, with a melisma on . The following four stanzas are composed as arias, not as the typical da capo arias, but mostly in two parts. Bach achieves variation by changing voice type, key and time signature. He also varies the mode, alternating major and minor keys, expresses different affekts, and he successfully "blurs" the bar form of the stanzas.3
The first aria, "", depicts a "hunting scene" for bass and strings. Bach plays on the double meaning of the German word "", which in the text has the sense "achieve by great exertion", but he expresses the word's literal meaning by an "outrageous hunting call trill" of the bass. This aria and those following are not da capo arias, but follow the bar form of the poem as bipartite structures.4
The second aria, "", for tenor and continuo begins with strong words on Satan as an enemy: "". Gardiner calls the music "a vivid pen-portrait of Satan and his wiles, delivered with typically Lutheran relish". The rhythm alternates between 6/8 and 3/4 one measure to the next, but the change is irregular and unpredictable. The bass line is "extravagantly animated and angular. Albert Schweitzer likens it to the contortions of a huge dragon".5
The third aria, "", for soprano and the two oboes d'amore begins with an embellished version of the chorale tune, and the last line quotes the tune exactly on the words "".6
The fourth aria, "", is scored for tenor, the flutes in unison and muted violin. The melodic style is significantly different from the chorale melody, being song-like.7
The closing chorale, "", is set in four parts for the voices, but embedded in a rich orchestral siciliano concerto. The lines of the chorale are grouped as in the first stanza, again highlighting line 5, "" as a miniature doxology.\header
\markup
\layout
global =
soprano = \relative c'
alto = \relative c'
tenor = \relative c'
bass = \relative c'
\score