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Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe, BWV 22
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Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe (English: Jesus gathered the twelve to Himself),[1] BWV 22, is a church cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach composed for Quinquagesima, the last Sunday before Lent. Bach composed it as an audition piece for the position of Thomaskantor in Leipzig and first performed it there on 7 February 1723.[2]
Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe
BWV 22
Church cantata by J. S. Bach
manuscript of the beginning
First page of the manuscript, bearing the title "Concerto Dominica Estomihi" (Concert for the Sunday before Lent), the scoring and the note "Das ist das Probe-Stück für Leipzig" (This is the test piece for Leipzig)
English
Jesus gathered the twelve to Himself
Related
performed with BWV 23
Occasion
Quinquagesima
Bible text
Luke 18:31,34
Chorale
"Herr Christ, der einig Gotts Sohn"
by Elisabeth Cruciger
Performed
7 February 1723: Leipzig
Movements
5
Vocal
solo: alto, tenor and bass
SATB choir
Instrumental
oboe2 violinsviolacontinuo
The work, which is in five movements, begins with a scene from the Gospel reading in which Jesus predicts his suffering in Jerusalem. The unknown poet of the cantata text took the scene as a starting point for a sequence of aria, recitative, and aria, in which the contemporary Christian takes the place of the disciples, who do not understand what Jesus is telling them about the events soon to unfold, but follow him nevertheless. The closing chorale is a stanza from Elisabeth Cruciger's hymn "Herr Christ, der einig Gotts Sohn". The music is scored for three vocal soloists, a four-part choir, oboe, strings and continuo. The work shows that Bach had mastered the composition of a dramatic scene, an expressive aria with obbligato oboe, a recitative with strings, an exuberant dance, and a chorale in the style of his predecessor in the position as Thomaskantor, Johann Kuhnau. Bach directed the first performance of the cantata during a church service, together with another audition piece, Du wahrer Gott und Davids Sohn, BWV 23. He performed the cantata again on the last Sunday before Lent a year later, after he had taken up office.
The cantata shows elements which became standards for Bach's Leipzig cantatas and even the Passions, including a "frame of biblical text and chorale around the operatic forms of aria and recitative", "the fugal setting of biblical words"[3] and "the biblical narrative ... as a dramatic scena".[4]
HistoryEdit
Background, Mühlhausen, Weimar and KöthenEdit
As far as we know, the earliest cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach were performed in Mühlhausen from 1706 to 1708. He was employed as an organist there, but he occasionally composed cantatas, mostly for special occasions. The cantatas were based mainly on biblical texts and hymns, such as Aus der Tiefen rufe ich, Herr, zu dir, BWV 131 (a psalm setting), and the Easter chorale cantata Christ lag in Todes Banden, BWV 4.[5]
Wilhelm Ernst, Duke of Saxe-Weimar
Bach was next appointed organist and chamber musician in Weimar on 25 June 1708 at the court of the co-reigning dukes in Saxe-Weimar, Wilhelm Ernst and his nephew Ernst August.[6] He initially concentrated on the organ, composing major works for the instrument,[6] including the Orgelbüchlein, the Toccata and Fugue in D minor, BWV 565, and the Prelude and Fugue in E major, BWV 566. He was promoted to Konzertmeister on 2 March 1714, an honour that entailed performing a church cantata monthly in the Schlosskirche.[7] The first cantatas he composed in the new position were Himmelskönig, sei willkommen, BWV 182, for Palm Sunday,[8] Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen, BWV 12 for Jubilate Sunday,[9] and Erschallet, ihr Lieder, BWV 172, for Pentecost. Mostly inspired by texts by the court poet, Salomo Franck, they contain recitatives and arias.[10] When Johann Samuel Drese, the Kapellmeister (director of music), died in 1716, Bach hoped in vain to become his successor. Bach looked for a better position and found it as Kapellmeister at the court of Leopold, Prince of Anhalt-Köthen. However, the duke in Weimar did not dismiss him and arrested him for disobedience. He was released on 2 December 1717.[11]
In Köthen, Bach found an employer who was an enthusiastic musician himself.[11] The court was Calvinist, therefore Bach's work from this period was mostly secular, including the orchestral suites, the cello suites, the sonatas and partitas for solo violin, and the Brandenburg Concertos.[11][12] He composed secular cantatas for the court for occasions such as New Year's Day and the prince's birthday, including Die Zeit, die Tag und Jahre macht, BWV 134a. He later parodied some of them as church cantatas without major changes, for example Ein Herz, das seinen Jesum lebend weiß, BWV 134.[13]
Audition in LeipzigEdit
Bach composed this cantata as part of his application for the position of Thomaskantor in Leipzig,[14] the official title being Cantor et Director Musices[15] (Cantor and Director of Music). As cantor, he was responsible for the music at four Lutheran churches,[16] the main churches Thomaskirche (St. Thomas) and the Nikolaikirche (St. Nicholas),[17] but also the Neue Kirche (New Church) and the Peterskirche (St. Peter).[18] As director of music, the Thomaskantor was Leipzig's "senior musician", responsible for the music on official occasions such as town council elections and homages.[16] Functions related to the university took place at the Paulinerkirche.[17] The position became vacant when Johann Kuhnau died on 5 June 1722. Bach was interested, mentioning as one reason that he saw more possibilities for future academic studies of his sons in Leipzig: "... but this post was described to me in such favorable terms that finally (particularly since my sons seemed inclined to [university] studies) I cast my lot, in the name of the Lord, and made my journey to Leipzig, took my examination, and then made the change of position."[19]
Thomaskirche,
1885
Nikolaikirche, ca. 1850
Neue Kirche,
1749
Peterskirche, before 1886
Paulinerkirche,
1749
Telemann, the town council's first choice
By August 1722, the town council had already chosen Georg Philipp Telemann as Kuhnau's successor, but he declined in November. In a council meeting on 23 November, seven candidates were evaluated, but no agreement was reached on whether to prefer a candidate for academic teaching abilities or musical performance. The first council document with Bach named as a candidate dates from 21 December, together with Christoph Graupner. Of all candidates, Bach was the only one without a university education.[20]
The decision to invite Bach was made by the council on 15 January 1723. The council seemed to have preferred Bach and Graupner because they were invited to show two cantatas each, while other candidates were requested to show only one. Two candidates even had to present their work in the same service. Graupner's performance took place on the last Sunday after Epiphany, 17 January 1723. Two days before the event, the town council agreed to offer him the position.[21]
Christoph Wolff assumes that Bach received an invitation for the audition together with the texts, probably prescribed to the candidates and drawn from a printed collection, only weeks before the date.[22] In Köthen Bach composed two cantatas on two different themes from the prescribed Gospel for the Sunday, Du wahrer Gott und Davids Sohn, BWV 23, on the topic of healing the blind near Jericho,[17] and Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe, about Jesus announcing his suffering which his disciples do not understand.[23]
Bach had to travel to Leipzig early because he was not familiar with the location and the performers. Wolff assumes that Bach was in Leipzig already on 2 February for the Marian feast of Purification when candidate Georg Balthasar Schott presented his audition piece at the Nikolaikirche.[22] Bach brought the scores and some parts, but additional parts had to be copied in Leipzig by students of the Thomasschule. Bach led the first performance of the two audition cantatas on 7 February 1723 as part of a church service at the Thomaskirche,[24] this cantata before the sermon, and Du wahrer Gott und Davids Sohn after the sermon.[14] The score of BWV 22 bears the note "This is the Leipzig audition piece" (Das ist das Probe-Stück für Leipzig).[25]
Wolff notes that Bach employed the three lower voices in BWV 22 and the upper three voices in BWV 23, and presents a list of the different compositional techniques Bach employed in the two audition cantatas; they displayed "a broad and highly integrated spectrum of ... vocal art".[26]
Cantata/Movement
Style
BWV 22/1B
Concerted choral fugue with solo exposition
BWV 23/3
Concerted choral movement
BWV 22/5
Hymn setting
BWV 22/3
Secco recitative
BWV 23/2
Recitative with instrumental cantus firmus
BWV 22/1A
Dialogue
BWV 22/2
Aria in trio setting
BWV 23/1
Duet in a five-part setting
BWV 22/4
Aria with full string accompaniment
BWV 23/4
Chorale fantasia
A press review reads: "On Sunday last in the morning the Hon. Capellmeister of Cöthen, Mr. Bach, gave here his test at the church of St. Thomas's for the hitherto vacant cantorate, the music of the same having been amply praised on that occasion by all knowledgeable persons ..."[24]
Bach left Leipzig without hope for the position because it had been offered to Graupner, but then Graupner was not dismissed by his employer, Ernst-Ludwig of Hesse-Darmstadt.[24] After a meeting on 9 April 1723, with incomplete documentation containing "... since the best could not be obtained, a mediocre one would have to be accepted ..." Bach received an offer to sign a preliminary contract.[27]
Assuming the positionEdit
Bach assumed the position of Thomaskantor on 30 May 1723, the first Sunday after Trinity, performing two ambitious cantatas in fourteen movements each: Die Elenden sollen essen, BWV 75, followed by Die Himmel erzählen die Ehre Gottes, BWV 76. They form the beginning of his attempt to create several annual cycles of cantatas for the occasions of the liturgical year.
He performed Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe again on 20 February 1724, as a printed libretto shows, and probably did so again in later years.[25]
CompositionEdit
Occasion and wordsEdit
Bach composed his cantata in 1723 for the Sunday Estomihi (Quinquagesima), the last Sunday before Lent. In Leipzig, tempus clausum was observed during Lent, therefore it was the last Sunday with a cantata performance before a celebration of the Annunciation, Palm Sunday and the vespers service on Good Friday and Easter.[28] The prescribed readings for the Sunday were taken from the First Epistle to the Corinthians, "praise of love" (1 Corinthians 13:1–13), and from the Gospel of Luke, healing the blind near Jericho (Luke 18:31–43). The Gospel also contains the announcement by Jesus of his future suffering in Jerusalem, and that the disciples do not understand what he is saying.
The cantata text is the usual combination of Bible quotation, free contemporary poetry and as closing chorale a stanza from a hymn as an affirmation. An unknown poet chose from the Gospel verses 31 and 34 as the text for movement 1, and wrote a sequence of aria, recitative and aria for the following movements. His poetic text places the Christian in general, including the listener at Bach's time or any time, in the situation of the disciples: he is pictured as wanting to follow Jesus even in suffering, although he does not comprehend.[17] The poetry ends on a prayer for "denial of the flesh". The closing chorale is stanza 5 of Elisabeth Cruciger's "Herr Christ, der einig Gotts Sohn",[29] intensifying the prayer,[30] on a melody from the Lochamer-Liederbuch.[31]
Stylistic comparisons with other works by Bach suggest that the same poet wrote the texts for both audition cantatas and also for the two first cantatas which Bach performed when taking up his office.[32] The poetry for the second aria has an unusually long first section, which Bach handled elegantly by repeating only part of it in the da capo.[33]
Structure and scoringEdit
Bach structured the cantata in five movements, and scored it for three vocal soloists (an alto (A), tenor (T) and bass (B)), a four-part choir (SATB), and for a Baroque orchestra of an oboe (Ob), two violins (Vl), viola (Va) and basso continuo.[34] The duration is given as c. 20 minutes.[17]
In the following table of movements, the scoring, divided in voices, winds and strings, follows the Neue Bach-Ausgabe. The continuo group is not listed, because it plays throughout. The keys and time signatures are taken from Alfred Dürr. The symbol is used to denote common time (4/4).
Movements of Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe, BWV 22
No.
Title
Text
Type
Vocal
Winds
Strings
Key
Time
1
Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe
Bible
Arioso
T B SATB
Ob
2Vl Va
G minor
2
Mein Jesu, ziehe mich nach dir
anon.
Aria
A
Ob
C minor
9/8
3
Mein Jesu, ziehe mich, so werd ich laufen
anon.
Recitative
B
2Vl Va
E-flat major − B-flat major
4
Mein alles in allem, mein ewiges Gut
anon.
Aria
T
2Vl Va
B-flat major
3/8
5
Ertöt uns durch dein Güte
Cruziger
Chorale
SATB
Ob
2Vl Va
B-flat major
MovementsEdit
1Edit
The text of the first movement, "Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe" (Jesus gathered the Twelve to Himself) is a quotation of two verses from the prescribed Gospel for the Sunday (Luke 18:31–43). The movement is a scene with different actors, narrated by the Evangelist (tenor), in which Jesus (bass, as the vox Christi or voice of Christ) and his disciples (the chorus) interact. An "ever-ascending" instrumental ritornello "evokes the image of the road of suffering embodied by going up to Jerusalem".[23] The Evangelist begins the narration (Luke 18:31). Jesus announces his future suffering in Jerusalem, "Sehet, wir gehn hinauf gen Jerusalem" ("Behold, we go up to Jerusalem").[1] He sings, while the ritornello is played several times.[17] After another repeat of the ritornello as an interlude, a choral fugue illustrates the reaction of the disciples, following verse 34 from the Gospel (Luke 18:34): "Sie aber vernahmen der keines}" ("However they understood nothing").[1][17][25] The voices are first accompanied only by the continuo, then doubled by the other instruments. Bach marks the voices in the autograph score as "concertists" for the first section and "ripienists" when the instruments come in.[25]
Page of the manuscript showing the end of movement 1 and the beginning of the following aria
The movement is concluded by an instrumental postlude.[30] The musicologist Julian Mincham notes that the fugue deviates from the "traditional alternating of tonic and dominant entries ... as a rather abstruse indication of the lack of clarity and expectation amongst the disciples, Bach is hinting at this in musical terms by having each voice enter on a different note, B-flat, F, C and G and briefly touching upon various related keys. The music is, as always, lucid and focussed but the departure from traditional fugal procedure sends a fleeting message to those who appreciate the subtleties of the musical processes".[35]
The musicologist Richard D. P. Jones points out that "the biblical narrative is set as a dramatic scena worthy of the Bach Passions" and that the "vivid drama of that movement has no real counterpart in Bach's Cycle I cantatas."[4]
2Edit
In the first aria, "Mein Jesu, ziehe mich nach dir" ("My Jesus, draw me after You"),[1] the alto voice is accompanied by an obbligato oboe, which expressively intensifies the text.[30]
Johann Mattheson, music theorist, 1746
An aria is, according to Johann Mattheson in Der vollkommene Capellmeister (Part II, chapter 13, paragraph 10), "correctly described as a well-composed song, which has its own particular key and meter, is usually divided into two parts, and concisely expresses a great affection. Occasionally it closes with a repetition of the first part, occasionally without it."[36]
In this aria, an individual believer requests Jesus to make him follow, even without comprehending where and why. Mincham observes a mood or affekt of "deep involvement and pensive commitment", with the oboe creating "an aura of suffering and a sense of struggling and reaching upwards in search of something indefinable in a way that only music can suggest."[35]
3Edit
The recitative "Mein Jesu, ziehe mich, so werd ich laufen" ("My Jesus, draw me, then I will run")[1] is not a simple secco recitative, but is accompanied by the strings and leans towards an arioso, especially near the end.[30] It is the first movement in a major mode, and illustrates in rapid runs the motion and the running mentioned.[35]
4Edit
The second aria, "Mein alles in allem, mein ewiges Gut" ("My all in all, my eternal good"),[1] again with strings, is a dance-like movement in free da capo form, A B A'. The unusually long text, of four lines for the A section and two for the B section, results in Bach's solution to repeat the end of the first line (my eternal good) after all text of A, and then after the middle section B repeat only the first line as A', thus ending A and A' the same way.[33] In this modified repeat, the voice holds a long note on the word Friede ("peace"), after which the same theme appears in the orchestra and again in the continuo.[30] The musicologist Tadashi Isoyama notes the passepied character of the music, reminiscent of secular Köthen cantatas.[23] Mincham describes: "Bach's expression of the joy of union with Christ can often seem quite worldly and uninhibited", and summarises: "The 3/8 time signature, symmetrical phrasing and rapid string skirls combine to create a sense of a dance of abandonment."[35]
5Edit
The hymn printed in the Erfurt Enchiridion, 1524
The closing chorale is "Ertöt uns durch dein Güte" ("Kill us through your goodness"[1] or "Us mortify through kindness"[37]), the fifth stanza of Elisabeth Cruciger's "Herr Christ, der einig Gotts Sohn".[29] Its melody is based on one from Wolflein Lochamer's Lochamer-Liederbuch, printed in Nürnberg around 1455. It first appears as a sacred tune in Johann Walter's Wittenberg hymnal Eyn geystlich Gesangk Buchleyn (1524).[31]
The usual four-part setting of the voices is brightened by continuous runs of the oboe and violin I.[35] Isoyama thinks that Bach may have intentionally imitated the style of his predecessor Johann Kuhnau in the "elegantly flowing obbligato for oboe and first violin".[38] John Eliot Gardiner describes the movement's bass line as a "walking bass as a symbol of the disciples' journey to fulfilment."[39] Mincham comments that Bach "chose to maintain the established mood of buoyancy and optimism with a chorale arrangement of almost unparalleled energy and gaiety" and concludes:
It would seem that Bach had not yet reached a conclusion, if indeed he ever did, as to the most appropriate way of utilising the chorales in his cantatas. Certainly the quiet, closing moments of reflection and introspection became the norm, particularly in the second cycle. But the chorale could, as here, act as a focus of bounding energy and positivity.[35]
ReceptionEdit
John Eliot Gardiner, 2007, who conducted the Bach Cantata Pilgrimage in 2000
Jones summarises: "The audition cantatas ... show Bach feeling his way towards a compromise between the progressive, opera-influenced and the conservative, ecclesiastical styles."[3] He acknowledges the standard BWV 22 sets for later church cantatas:
"... [It] places an ecclesiastical frame of biblical text and chorale around the operatic forms of aria and recitative, a frame that would become a standard in the cantatas of [C]ycle I. Moreover, the impressive opening movement incorporates two modes of treatment that would recur regularly during Cycle I and beyond: the fugal setting of biblical words and the use as [recte of] the bass voice as vox Christi, as in traditional Passion settings."[3]
Isoyama points out: "BWV 22 incorporates dance rhythms, and is written with a modern elegance."[23] Mincham interprets Bach's approach in both audition works as "a fair example of the range of music which is suitable for worship and from which others might learn", explaining the "sheer range of forms and musical expression in these two cantatas".[35] Gardiner, who conducted the Bach Cantata Pilgrimage with the Monteverdi Choir and wrote a diary on the project, comments on the disciples' reaction ("and they understood none of these things, neither knew they the things which were spoken"):
"One could read into this an ironic prophecy of the way Bach's new Leipzig audience would react to his creative outpourings over the next twenty-six years – in the absence, that is, of any tangible or proven signs of appreciation: neither wild enthusiasm, deep understanding nor overt dissatisfaction".[40]
RecordingsEdit
The entries of the following table follow the selection on the Bach Cantatas Website.[41] Ensembles playing period instruments in historically informed performance are marked by green background.
Recordings of Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe
Title
Conductor / Choir / Orchestra
Soloists
Label
Year
Orch. type
The RIAS Bach Cantatas Project (1949–1952)
Karl Ristenpart
RIAS Kammerchor
RIAS-Kammerorchester
Lotte Wolf-Matthäus
Helmut Krebs
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
Audite
1950
J. S. Bach: Das Kantatenwerk – Sacred Cantatas Vol. 2
Gustav Leonhardt
Tölzer Knabenchor
Choir of King's College
Leonhardt-Consort
soloist of the Tölzer Knabenchor
Paul Esswood
Kurt Equiluz
Max van Egmond
Teldec
1973
Period
Die Bach Kantate Vol. 28
Helmuth Rilling
Gächinger Kantorei
Bach-Collegium Stuttgart
Helen Watts
Adalbert Kraus
Wolfgang Schöne
Hänssler
1977
J. S. Bach: Complete Cantatas Vol. 3
Ton Koopman
Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir
Elisabeth von Magnus
Paul Agnew
Klaus Mertens
Antoine Marchand
1995
Period
J. S. Bach: Cantatas Vol. 8 – Leipzig Cantatas
Masaaki Suzuki
Bach Collegium Japan
Yoshikazu Mera
Gerd Türk
Peter Kooy
BIS
1998
Period
Bach Edition Vol. 5 – Cantatas Vol. 2
Pieter Jan Leusink
Holland Boys Choir
Netherlands Bach Collegium
Sytse Buwalda
Nico van der Meel
Bas Ramselaar
Brilliant Classics
1999
Period
Bach Cantatas Vol. 21: Cambridge/Walpole St Peter
John Eliot Gardiner
Monteverdi Choir
Choir of Clare
Choir of Trinity College
English Baroque Soloists
Claudia Schubert
James Oxley
Peter Harvey
Soli Deo Gloria
2000
Period
J. S. Bach: Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe, Kantate BWV 22
Georg Christoph Biller
Thomanerchor
Gewandhausorchester
Boy soloist of the Thomanerchor
Martin Petzold
Wolf Matthias Friedrich
MDR Figaro
2005
J. S. Bach: Jesus, deine Passion
Philippe Herreweghe
Collegium Vocale Gent
Matthew White
Jan Kobow
Peter Kooy
Harmonia Mundi France
2007
Period
Bach Cantatas From Mühlhausen, Weimar & Leipzig
James Bates
Carolina Baroque
Teresa Radomski
Lee Morgan
Richard Heard
Doug Crawley
Carolina Baroque
2008
Period
J. S. Bach: Kantate BWV 22 "Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe"
Rudolf Lutz
Chor der J. S. Bach-Stiftung
Orchester der J. S. Bach-Stiftung
Markus Forster
Johannes Kaleschke
Ekkehard Abele
Gallus Media
2010
Period
Thomanerchor Leipzig - Das Kirchenjahr mit Bach, Vol. 4: Passion · Passiontide - Kantaten
Georg Christoph Biller
Thomanerchor
Gewandhausorchester
Paul Bernewitz
Stefan Kahle
Patrick Grahl
Matthias Weichert
Rondeau Production
2011
ArrangementEdit
In the 1930s Harriet Cohen's piano arrangement of the cantata's closing chorale was published by Oxford University Press under the title "Sanctify us by the goodness". It was in the repertoire of, for example, Alicia de Larrocha.[42]
Arrangement
Edit
In the 1930s Harriet Cohen's piano arrangement of the cantata's closing chorale was published by Oxford University Press under the title "Sanctify us by the goodness". It was in the repertoire of, for example, Alicia de Larrocha.[42]
References
Edit
Dellal 2012.
"Luke 9:1-25". 7 February 2023.
Jones 2013, p. 214.
Jones 2013, p. 122.
Arnold 2009, p. 37.
Koster 2011.
Wolff 2002, p. 147.
Wolff 2002, p. 156.
Dürr 1971, p. 262.
Dürr 1971, p. 29.
Randel 1996, p. 38.
Loewe 2014, p. 54–55.
Jones 2013, p. 213.
Wolff 1998, p. 19.
Wolff 2002, p. 237.
Wolff 1991, p. 30.
Dürr 1971, p. 219.
Wolff 2002, pp. 251–252.
Wolff 2002, p. 221.
Wolff 2002, p. 218–221.
Wolff 1991, p. 121.
Wolff 1991, p. 120.
Isoyama 1998, p. 4.
Wolff 1991, p. 128.
Wolff 1998, p. 20.
Wolff 1991, p. 135.
Wolff 2002, p. 223.
Boulder 2014.
Browne & Oron 2009.
Dürr 1971, p. 220.
Browne & Oron 2008.
Wolff 1991, p. 130.
Crist 1989, p. 44.
Bischof 2012.
Mincham 2010.
Crist 1989, p. 36.
Ambrose 2012.
Isoyama 1998, p. 5.
Gardiner 2006, p. 15.
Gardiner 2006, pp. 14–15.
Oron 2014.
"Cantata BWV 22 - Discography Part 2: Recordings of Individual Movements". www.bach-cantatas.com.
Bibliography
Edit
Scores
Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe, BWV 22: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
"Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe BWV 22; BC A 48 / Sacred cantata (Estomihi)". Bach Digital. 1992. Retrieved 30 May 2014.
Books
Arnold, Jochen (2009). Von Gott poetisch-musikalisch reden: Gottes verborgenes und offenbares Handeln in Bachs Kantaten (in German). Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. ISBN 978-3647571249.
Dürr, Alfred (1971). Die Kantaten von Johann Sebastian Bach (in German). Vol. 1. Bärenreiter-Verlag. OCLC 523584.
Crist, Stephen A. (1989). Franklin, Don O. (ed.). Aria forms in the Cantatas from Bach' first Leipzig Jahrgang in Bach Studies. Vol. 1. CUP Archive. ISBN 978-0521341059.
Jones, Richard D. P. (2013). The Creative Development of Johann Sebastian Bach, Volume II: 1717–1750: Music to Delight the Spirit. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199696284.
Loewe, Arnold (2014). Johann Sebastian Bach's St John Passion (BWV 245): A Theological Commentary. Brill. ISBN 978-9004272361.
Randel, Don Michael (1996). The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Harvard University Press. p. 38. ISBN 978-0674372993.
Wolff, Christoph (1991). Bach: Essays on His Life and Music. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674059269.
Wolff, Christoph (2002). Johann Sebastian Bach: The Learned Musician. W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0393322569.
Online sources
Several databases provide additional information on each cantata, such as history, scoring, sources for text and music, translations to various languages, discography, discussion and musical analysis.
The complete recordings of Bach's cantatas are accompanied by liner notes from musicians and musicologists: Gardiner commented on his Bach Cantata Pilgrimage, Klaus Hofmann and Tadashi Isoyama wrote for Masaaki Suzuki, and Wolff for Ton Koopman.
Ambrose, Z. Philip (2012). "BWV 22 Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe". University of Vermont. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
Bischof, Walter F. (2012). "BWV 22 Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe". University of Alberta. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
Browne, Francis; Oron, Aryeh (2008). "Chorale Melodies used in Bach's Vocal Works / Herr Christ, der einge Gottessohn". Bach Cantatas Website. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
Browne, Francis; Oron, Aryeh (2009). "Herr Christ, der einge Gottessohn / Text and Translation of Chorale". Bach Cantatas Website. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
Dellal, Pamela (2012). "BWV 22 – "Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe"". Emmanuel Music. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
Gardiner, John Eliot (2006). Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750) / Cantatas Nos 1, 22, 23, 54, 127, 159 & 182 (Media notes). Soli Deo Gloria (at Hyperion Records website). Retrieved 1 March 2019.
Isoyama, Tadashi (1998). "BWV 22: Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe (Jesus called to Himself the Twelve)" (PDF). Bach Cantatas Website. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
Koster, Jan (2011). "Weimar 1708–1717". let.rug.nl. Retrieved 16 December 2011.
Mincham, Julian (2010). "Chapter 44 BWV 22 Jesu nahm zu sich die Zwölfe / Jesus took the twelve to Him". jsbachcantatas.com. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
Oron, Aryeh (2014). "Cantata BWV 22 Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe". Bach Cantatas Website. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
Wolff, Christoph (1998). "From konzertmeister to thomaskantor: Bach's cantata production 1713–1723" (PDF). Bach Cantatas Website. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
McCue, Edward (ed.). "The Liturgical Calendar at Leipzig". Boulder Bach Festival. Archived from the original on 5 February 2015. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
External links
Edit
Wikimedia Commons has media related to BWV 22.
Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe, BWV 22: performance by the Netherlands Bach Society (video and background information)
Luke Dahn: BWV 22.5 bach-chorales.com
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Reverse of Monotron's printed circuit board (PCB)
Reverse of Monotron's printed circuit board (PCB)
... that a heavily modified Monotron synthesizer (PCB pictured) was nicknamed "FrankenSynth" by music resource site Ask.Audio?
... that the 1834 Philadelphia race riot began at a carousel before spreading to other parts of the city?
... that the May Queen dress worn by Florence Pugh in the film Midsommar was made of 10,000 silk flowers and reportedly sold for US$65,000 at auction?
... that William J. McGee said that the 2022 Southwest Airlines flight delays were the result of "appearing to regulate rather than actually regulating"?
... that the contest of the 1830 Liverpool by-election was considered to be "in great measure a personal one"?
... that Berta Berkovich, who was skilled in sewing, managed to survive Auschwitz in a fashion salon established by the wife of the concentration camp commandant?
... that the 1931 Valentine earthquake was the strongest earthquake in recorded history to hit Texas?
... that Kangal can be a hazard to cyclists in Turkey?
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In the news
Rescuers in winter jackets, two of them in firefighter uniforms, standing in front and on top of the rubble of a collapsed commercial centre.
Earthquake damage in Diyarbakır
An earthquake (damage pictured) strikes Turkey and Syria, killing more than 5,000 people and injuring nearly 24,000 others.
Former Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf dies at the age of 79.
A Chinese balloon suspected of surveillance and espionage is shot down after overflying Canada and the United States.
Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF) makes its closest approach to the Earth.
A suicide bombing in a mosque in Peshawar, Pakistan, kills 100 people and injures more than 220 others.
Ongoing: Peruvian protestsRussian invasion of Ukraine
Recent deaths: Jürgen FlimmSherif IsmailCharles SilversteinC. LalithaBarrett StrongDavid Durenberger
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On this day
February 7
Happisburgh footprints
Happisburgh footprints
1813 – Napoleonic Wars: Two evenly matched French and British frigates fought for four hours at the Îles de Los off the Guinean coast, resulting in a stalemate.
1900 – A Chinese immigrant in San Francisco fell ill with the bubonic plague in the first epidemic of the disease in the continental United States.
1943 – World War II: Japan successfully withdrew its troops from Guadalcanal.
2014 – Researchers announced the discovery of the Happisburgh footprints (pictured) in Norfolk, England, the oldest known hominid footprints outside Africa at more than 800,000 years old.
Azar Bigdeli (b. 1722)Eddie Izzard (b. 1962)Juwan Howard (b. 1973)
More anniversaries: February 6February 7February 8
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Today's featured picture
Suffren
Suffren was a predreadnought battleship built for the French Navy and completed in 1902. The ship was assigned to the Mediterranean Squadron for most of her career and often served as a flagship. She twice collided with French ships and twice had propeller shafts break before the start of World War I in 1914. Suffren was assigned to the naval operations off the Dardanelles, participating in a series of attacks on Ottoman fortifications. She was moderately damaged on 18 March 1915 and was sent to Toulon for repairs. She returned to provide gunfire support for the Allied forces during the Gallipoli campaign. Suffren provided covering fire as the Allies withdrew from the peninsula and accidentally sank one of the evacuation ships. She was then assigned to the squadron tasked to prevent Greek interference with Allied operations on the Salonica Front. While en route to Lorient for a refit, Suffren was torpedoed off Lisbon by a German submarine on 26 November 1916 and sunk with all hands. This photograph shows Suffren off Toulon in October 1911.
Photograph credit: Agence Rol; restored by Adam Cuerden
Another day got missed.