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O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 60

O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort (O eternity, you word of thunder),[1] BWV 60, is a church cantata for the 24th Sunday after Trinity composed by Johann Sebastian Bach. It was first performed in Leipzig on 7 November 1723, and is part of Bach's first cantata cycle. It is one of Bach's dialogue cantatas: its topic, fear of death and hope of salvation, plays out mainly through a conversation between two allegorical figures, Fear (sung by an alto voice) and Hope (sung by a tenor).

O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort
BWV 60
by Johann Sebastian Bach
Beginning of the closing chorale, "Es ist genug"
Occasion24th Sunday after Trinity
Bible text
  • Genesis 49:18
  • Revelation 14:13
Chorale
Performed7 November 1723 (1723-11-07): Leipzig
Movements6
Vocal
Instrumental
  • horn
  • 2 oboes d'amore
  • 2 violins
  • viola
  • continuo

There are five movements. The orchestral accompaniment is assigned to a Baroque instrumental ensemble of horn, two oboes d'amore, strings and continuo. The first four movements are duets. The opening movement is a chorale fantasia containing a stanza from Johann Rist's "O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort" and a biblical quotation from the Book of Genesis. The second and third movements are respectively a recitative and an aria.

The fourth movement is a dialogue between Fear and Christ (vox Christi, sung by a bass), who quotes "Selig sind die Toten" from the Book of Revelation. The cantata closes with a four-part setting of Franz Joachim Burmeister's chorale "Es ist genug". Its melody begins with an unusual whole-tone sequence which inspired Alban Berg in the 20th century to incorporate Bach's setting in his Violin Concerto.

History and words edit

Bach wrote the cantata for the 24th Sunday after Trinity in his first year as Thomaskantor and music director of Leipzig's main churches.[2] During Bach's tenure, the same two readings were prescribed for the Sunday every year: the epistle reading, Colossians 1:9–14, was a prayer from the Epistle to the Colossians for the congregation there, and the Gospel reading was the raising of Jairus' daughter as told in the Gospel of Matthew (Matthew 9:18–26). The unknown librettist[3] of the cantata saw the Gospel story as foreshadowing the resurrection of Jesus. Throughout the cantata, two allegorical figures, Furcht (Fear) and Hoffnung (Hope), engage in a dialogue.[4]

The cantata opens and closes with hymn stanzas, beginning with the first stanza of Johann Rist's 1642 hymn "O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort",[3][5][6] expressing fear, and ending with the last stanza of Franz Joachim Burmeister's 1662 hymn "Es ist genug".[3][7] Two biblical quotations are juxtaposed in the first and fourth movements. The first movement, "Herr, ich warte auf dein Heil" (Genesis 49:18),[3] spoken by Jacob on his deathbed, expresses hope against the fear conveyed in the chorale.[8] In the fourth movement, Selig sind die Toten (Blessed are the dead, Revelation 14:13)[3] is the answer to the preceding recitative of Fear.[2]

Bach led the first performance of the cantata with the Thomanerchor on 7 November 1723.[2][3] A year later, Bach composed a chorale cantata on the complete chorale, O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 20, for the first Sunday after Trinity as part of his chorale cantata cycle, while BWV 60 is part of his first cantata cycle.[4] A repeat performance of the earlier cantata took place sometime after 1735, by a continuo part from that time.[3]

Structure and scoring edit

In O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, solo voices perform all movements but the closing chorale. Bach had composed a similarly structured cantata three weeks before, entitled Ich glaube, lieber Herr, hilf meinem Unglauben, BWV 109, which also featured a dialogue between Fear and Hope, given to one singer. In O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, he assigned Fear to the alto and Hope to the tenor, and has them sing three movements in dialogue. In movement 4, Fear is answered instead by the bass, the vox Christi (voice of Christ), with "Selig sind die Toten".[8][9]

Bach structured the cantata in five movements: four duets of alternating arias and recitatives, concluding with a four-part chorale. He scored the work for three vocal soloists (alto (A), tenor (T) and bass (B)), a four-part choir only in the closing chorale, and a Baroque instrumental ensemble: horn (Co) to support the chorale tunes, two oboes d'amore (Oa), two violins (Vl), viola (Va), and basso continuo (Bc).[2][3] The title page of the original parts bears a title which Bach wrote himself: "Dominica 24 / post Trinit. / Dialogus Zwischen Furcht u. Hoffnung. / Furcht. O Ewigkeit, du DonnerWort. / Hoffnung. Herr, ich warte auf dein Heÿl. / á / 4 Voci. / 2 Hautb: d’Amour. / 2 Violini / Viola / e / Continuo / di / Joh.Sebast:Bach" (Sunday 24 / after Trinity. / Dialogue Between Fear and Hope / Fear. O Eternity, you Word of Thunder. / Hope. Lord, I wait for Your Salvation. / for / 4 voices / 2 oboes d'amore. / 2 violins / viola / and / continuo / by / Joh.Sebast:Bach).[4] A horn, to support the chorale melodies, was requested only later under the word Viola, possibly in the 19th century.[4] The duration of the work has been stated as 20 minutes.[2]

Movements edit

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

Movements of O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 60
No. Title Text Type Vocal Winds Strings Key Time
1
  • O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort
  • Herr, ich warte auf dein Heil
  • Rist
  • Genesis
Chorale fantasia A T Co 2Oa 2Vl Va D major  
2
  • O schwerer Gang zum letzten Kampf und Streite!
  • Mein Beistand ist schon da
anon. Recitative A T  
3
  • Mein letztes Lager will mich schrecken
  • Mich wird des Heilands Hand bedecken
anon. Aria (Duetto) A T Oa Vl solo B minor 3
4
4
  • Der Tod bleibt doch der menschlichen Natur verhaßt
  • Selig sind die Toten
  • anon.
  • Revelation
Recitative & chorale A B  
5 Es ist genug Burmeister Chorale SATB Co 2Oa 2Vl Va A major  

1 edit

 
Johann Rist, the author of the hymn

The first duet is a chorale fantasia with added biblical text.[4][10] The chorale, the first stanza of Rist's hymn "O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort" (O eternity, you word of thunder),[1] is sung by the alto (Fear), reinforced by the horn. The strings and the continuo play a motif in tremolo throughout the movement which is derived from the second half of the first line of the chorale, and anticipates the beginning of the different closing chorale.[2] John Eliot Gardiner connects the tremolo to Monteverdi's agitated style (stile concitato).[8] The two oboes play a "lamenting" duet.[2] From the second Stollen of the chorale, the tenor as Hope responds with Jacob's words, "Herr, ich warte auf dein Heil" (Lord, I await your salvation).[2] In his book The Creative Development of Johann Sebastian Bach, Richard D. P. Jones describes the movement as "one of Bach's most imaginative conceptions, vivid in its portrayal of conflicting states of the soul".[11]

2 edit

The second duet is a secco recitative. Fear begins "O schwerer Gang zum letzten Kampf und Streite!" (O difficult way to the final battle and struggle!),[1] while Hope confirms "Mein Beistand ist schon da" (My Protector is already there).[1] The music is intensified to an arioso twice: Fear sings the word martert (tortures) as a chromatic melisma to short chords in the continuo, and Hope stresses in a long melisma the last word ertragen (borne).[2]

3 edit

The third, central duet is dramatic and therefore not in da capo form but closer to a motet, unified by the instrumental ritornellos.[2] Three different sections are developed in a similar way: Fear begins, "Mein letztes Lager will mich schrecken" (My final bier terrifies me),[1] Hope answers, "Mich wird des Heilands Hand bedecken" (My Savior's hand will cover me),[1] both argue, and Hope has the last word. The instrument parts are included in the dialogue: the solo violin (with Hope) plays scales while the oboes d'amore and the continuo (with Fear) play dotted rhythms.[2]

4 edit

The last duet is no longer between Fear and Hope. Fear begins "Der Tod bleibt doch der menschlichen Natur verhaßt" (But death remains hateful to human nature)[1] in secco recitative, but three times the bass as the vox Christi quotes the consoling words from Revelation "Selig sind die Toten" (Blessed are the dead)[1] as an arioso, each time expanded, following the scheme a ab abc.[2] The American musicologist Eric Chafe analyses that the quotes of the vox Christi are intensified each time by lengthening the quoted text: first "Selig sind die Toten", the second time "Selig sind die Toten, die in dem Herrn sterben" (... who die in the Lord), finally "Selig sind die Toten, die in dem Herrn sterben von nun an." (... from now on).[12] Dürr notes: "The fascination of these ariosos lies in their memorable and eloquent melodic line which presents the text in heightened speech."[2]

5 edit

 
"Es ist genug", closing chorale

The closing chorale is "Es ist genug" (It is enough).[1] Dürr notes that the melody is by Johann Rudolph Ahle, a predecessor of Bach as organist in Mühlhausen.[13] The melody begins with an unusual sequence of four notes progressing by steps of major seconds (whole tones), together spanning the interval of a tritone, also called "diabolus in musica".[13][14] During Ahle's time, it was an extreme musical figure, suitable to depict "the soul's crossing over from life into death".[13] Dürr notes further that a similar scale of four notes occurs in Rist's hymn on the word Donnerwort in the first movement, but with the normal half-tone step to the last note.[13] He writes:

... Bach's setting itself, whose harmonization and loosening-up into polyphony allows the text to become, as it were, transparent—something that not even Bach always achieved.[13]

Chafe concludes a thorough analysis of the cantata and the chorale with the summary that "in developing and intensifying traditional, even archaic, ways of understanding music ... Bach carried them far into the future, opening up questions for the analysis, interpretation, and composition of music that are very much with us and are probably timeless".[8][15]

Alban Berg used Bach's chorale setting in his Violin Concerto.[13][16][17]

Publication edit

The original parts of the cantata have survived. After 1800, they belonged to Count Voss-Buch. They were acquired by the Königliche Bibliothek zu Berlin (Royal Library in Berlin), probably in 1851. The cantata was first published in 1863 as part of the first complete edition of Bach's works, the Bach-Gesellschaft Ausgabe. The editor was Wilhelm Rust.[4]

The parts are now held by the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin, Preußischer Kulturbesitz, shelf number Mus. Ms. Bach St 74.[4][3] The cantata was published in the New Bach Edition in 1968, edited by Alfred Dürr. Carus-Verlag produced a new critical edition in 1998, edited by Ulrich Leisinger.[4]

Recordings edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Dellal, Pamela. "BWV 60 – O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort". Emmanuel Music. Retrieved 21 August 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Dürr & Jones 2005, pp. 628–634.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort BWV 60; BC A 161 / Sacred cantata (24th Sunday after Trinity)". Bach Digital. 9 March 2017. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Leisinger, Ulrich (1998). "O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort / Eternity, O awesome word / BWV 60" (PDF). Carus. p. 4. Retrieved 12 May 2010.
  5. ^ "O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort / Text and Translation of Chorale". Bach Cantatas Website. 2003. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  6. ^ "Chorale Melodies used in Bach's Vocal Works / O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort". Bach Cantatas Website. 2005. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  7. ^ "Es ist genug / Text and Translation of Chorale". Bach Cantatas Website. 2005. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  8. ^ a b c d e Gardiner, John Eliot (2010). Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) / Cantatas Nos 52, 55, 60, 89, 115, 139, 140 & 163 (Media notes). Soli Deo Gloria (at Hyperion Records website). Retrieved 28 October 2018.
  9. ^ Leonard, James (2010). "O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 60". Allmusic. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  10. ^ Jones 2013, p. 173.
  11. ^ Jones 2013, p. 127.
  12. ^ Chafe 2000, pp. 123–124.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Dürr & Jones 2005, p. 634.
  14. ^ "Chorale Melodies used in Bach's Vocal Works / Es ist genung, so nimm, Herr, meinen Geist". Bach Cantatas Website. 2005. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  15. ^ Chafe 2000, p. 235.
  16. ^ Pople 1991.
  17. ^ Whittaker 1959.
  18. ^ Archiv Produktion – 198 331 discogs
  19. ^ Bach – Kantatenwerk · Complete Cantatas / BWV 57-60 / 15 discogs
  20. ^ Johann Sebastian Bach, Gächinger Kantorei Stuttgart, Bach-Collegium Stuttgart*, Helmuth Rilling – Die Bach Kantate BWV 58-66 discogs
  21. ^ Bach – Ton Koopman, The Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra And Choir – Complete Cantatas – Volume 8 discogs
  22. ^ Johann Sebastian Bach, Bach Collegium Japan, Masaaki Suzuki – Cantatas 15 discogs
  23. ^ Bach – Gardiner – Cantatas Vol. 12: Tooting / Winchester discogs

References edit

  • Chafe, Eric (2000). Analyzing Bach Cantatas. Oxford University Press. pp. 220–235. Retrieved 5 September 2018.
  • Dürr, Alfred; Jones, Richard D. P. (2005), The Cantatas of J. S. Bach: With Their Librettos in German-English Parallel Text, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-816707-5
  • 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 978-0-19-150384-9.
  • Pople, Anthony (1991), Berg: Violin Concerto, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-39976-9
  • Whittaker, William Gillies (1959), The Cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach: sacred and secular, Volume I, Oxford University Press

External links edit

  • O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 60: performance by the Netherlands Bach Society (video and background information)
  • O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 60: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
  • BWV 60 O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort English translation at J. S. Bach: Texts of the Complete Vocal Works with English Translation and Commentary by Z. Philip Ambrose (University of Vermont)
  • Chapter 26 BWV 60 O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort / Oh, eternity, word of thunder at The Cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach: A listener and student guide by Julian Mincham (2010, revised 2012, 2014, 2017, and 2020)
  • BWV 60.5 at www.bach-chorales.com (Luke Dahn 2017)

ewigkeit, donnerwort, this, article, about, bach, 1723, cantata, 1724, chorale, cantata, with, same, title, ewigkeit, donnerwort, ewigkeit, donnerwort, eternity, word, thunder, church, cantata, 24th, sunday, after, trinity, composed, johann, sebastian, bach, f. This article is about Bach s 1723 cantata For the 1724 chorale cantata with the same title see O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort BWV 20 O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort O eternity you word of thunder 1 BWV 60 is a church cantata for the 24th Sunday after Trinity composed by Johann Sebastian Bach It was first performed in Leipzig on 7 November 1723 and is part of Bach s first cantata cycle It is one of Bach s dialogue cantatas its topic fear of death and hope of salvation plays out mainly through a conversation between two allegorical figures Fear sung by an alto voice and Hope sung by a tenor O Ewigkeit du DonnerwortBWV 60Church cantata Dialogue cantata by Johann Sebastian BachBeginning of the closing chorale Es ist genug Occasion24th Sunday after TrinityBible textGenesis 49 18 Revelation 14 13Chorale O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort by Johann Rist Es ist genug by Franz Joachim BurmeisterPerformed7 November 1723 1723 11 07 LeipzigMovements6Vocalalto tenor and bass SATB choirInstrumentalhorn2 oboes d amore2 violinsviolacontinuo There are five movements The orchestral accompaniment is assigned to a Baroque instrumental ensemble of horn two oboes d amore strings and continuo The first four movements are duets The opening movement is a chorale fantasia containing a stanza from Johann Rist s O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort and a biblical quotation from the Book of Genesis The second and third movements are respectively a recitative and an aria The fourth movement is a dialogue between Fear and Christ vox Christi sung by a bass who quotes Selig sind die Toten from the Book of Revelation The cantata closes with a four part setting of Franz Joachim Burmeister s chorale Es ist genug Its melody begins with an unusual whole tone sequence which inspired Alban Berg in the 20th century to incorporate Bach s setting in his Violin Concerto Contents 1 History and words 2 Structure and scoring 2 1 Movements 2 1 1 1 2 1 2 2 2 1 3 3 2 1 4 4 2 1 5 5 3 Publication 4 Recordings 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory and words editBach wrote the cantata for the 24th Sunday after Trinity in his first year as Thomaskantor and music director of Leipzig s main churches 2 During Bach s tenure the same two readings were prescribed for the Sunday every year the epistle reading Colossians 1 9 14 was a prayer from the Epistle to the Colossians for the congregation there and the Gospel reading was the raising of Jairus daughter as told in the Gospel of Matthew Matthew 9 18 26 The unknown librettist 3 of the cantata saw the Gospel story as foreshadowing the resurrection of Jesus Throughout the cantata two allegorical figures Furcht Fear and Hoffnung Hope engage in a dialogue 4 The cantata opens and closes with hymn stanzas beginning with the first stanza of Johann Rist s 1642 hymn O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort 3 5 6 expressing fear and ending with the last stanza of Franz Joachim Burmeister s 1662 hymn Es ist genug 3 7 Two biblical quotations are juxtaposed in the first and fourth movements The first movement Herr ich warte auf dein Heil Genesis 49 18 3 spoken by Jacob on his deathbed expresses hope against the fear conveyed in the chorale 8 In the fourth movement Selig sind die Toten Blessed are the dead Revelation 14 13 3 is the answer to the preceding recitative of Fear 2 Bach led the first performance of the cantata with the Thomanerchor on 7 November 1723 2 3 A year later Bach composed a chorale cantata on the complete chorale O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort BWV 20 for the first Sunday after Trinity as part of his chorale cantata cycle while BWV 60 is part of his first cantata cycle 4 A repeat performance of the earlier cantata took place sometime after 1735 by a continuo part from that time 3 Structure and scoring editIn O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort solo voices perform all movements but the closing chorale Bach had composed a similarly structured cantata three weeks before entitled Ich glaube lieber Herr hilf meinem Unglauben BWV 109 which also featured a dialogue between Fear and Hope given to one singer In O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort he assigned Fear to the alto and Hope to the tenor and has them sing three movements in dialogue In movement 4 Fear is answered instead by the bass the vox Christi voice of Christ with Selig sind die Toten 8 9 Bach structured the cantata in five movements four duets of alternating arias and recitatives concluding with a four part chorale He scored the work for three vocal soloists alto A tenor T and bass B a four part choir only in the closing chorale and a Baroque instrumental ensemble horn Co to support the chorale tunes two oboes d amore Oa two violins Vl viola Va and basso continuo Bc 2 3 The title page of the original parts bears a title which Bach wrote himself Dominica 24 post Trinit Dialogus Zwischen Furcht u Hoffnung Furcht O Ewigkeit du DonnerWort Hoffnung Herr ich warte auf dein Heyl a 4 Voci 2 Hautb d Amour 2 Violini Viola e Continuo di Joh Sebast Bach Sunday 24 after Trinity Dialogue Between Fear and Hope Fear O Eternity you Word of Thunder Hope Lord I wait for Your Salvation for 4 voices 2 oboes d amore 2 violins viola and continuo by Joh Sebast Bach 4 A horn to support the chorale melodies was requested only later under the word Viola possibly in the 19th century 4 The duration of the work has been stated as 20 minutes 2 Movements edit In the following table of the movements scoring keys and time signatures are taken from the book by Bach scholar Alfred Durr using the symbol for common time 44 2 The instruments are shown separately for winds and strings while the continuo playing throughout is not shown Movements of O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort BWV 60 No Title Text Type Vocal Winds Strings Key Time 1 O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort Herr ich warte auf dein Heil Rist Genesis Chorale fantasia A T Co 2Oa 2Vl Va D major nbsp 2 O schwerer Gang zum letzten Kampf und Streite Mein Beistand ist schon da anon Recitative A T nbsp 3 Mein letztes Lager will mich schrecken Mich wird des Heilands Hand bedecken anon Aria Duetto A T Oa Vl solo B minor 34 4 Der Tod bleibt doch der menschlichen Natur verhasst Selig sind die Toten anon Revelation Recitative amp chorale A B nbsp 5 Es ist genug Burmeister Chorale SATB Co 2Oa 2Vl Va A major nbsp 1 edit nbsp Johann Rist the author of the hymn The first duet is a chorale fantasia with added biblical text 4 10 The chorale the first stanza of Rist s hymn O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort O eternity you word of thunder 1 is sung by the alto Fear reinforced by the horn The strings and the continuo play a motif in tremolo throughout the movement which is derived from the second half of the first line of the chorale and anticipates the beginning of the different closing chorale 2 John Eliot Gardiner connects the tremolo to Monteverdi s agitated style stile concitato 8 The two oboes play a lamenting duet 2 From the second Stollen of the chorale the tenor as Hope responds with Jacob s words Herr ich warte auf dein Heil Lord I await your salvation 2 In his book The Creative Development of Johann Sebastian Bach Richard D P Jones describes the movement as one of Bach s most imaginative conceptions vivid in its portrayal of conflicting states of the soul 11 2 edit The second duet is a secco recitative Fear begins O schwerer Gang zum letzten Kampf und Streite O difficult way to the final battle and struggle 1 while Hope confirms Mein Beistand ist schon da My Protector is already there 1 The music is intensified to an arioso twice Fear sings the word martert tortures as a chromatic melisma to short chords in the continuo and Hope stresses in a long melisma the last word ertragen borne 2 3 edit The third central duet is dramatic and therefore not in da capo form but closer to a motet unified by the instrumental ritornellos 2 Three different sections are developed in a similar way Fear begins Mein letztes Lager will mich schrecken My final bier terrifies me 1 Hope answers Mich wird des Heilands Hand bedecken My Savior s hand will cover me 1 both argue and Hope has the last word The instrument parts are included in the dialogue the solo violin with Hope plays scales while the oboes d amore and the continuo with Fear play dotted rhythms 2 4 edit The last duet is no longer between Fear and Hope Fear begins Der Tod bleibt doch der menschlichen Natur verhasst But death remains hateful to human nature 1 in secco recitative but three times the bass as the vox Christi quotes the consoling words from Revelation Selig sind die Toten Blessed are the dead 1 as an arioso each time expanded following the scheme a ab abc 2 The American musicologist Eric Chafe analyses that the quotes of the vox Christi are intensified each time by lengthening the quoted text first Selig sind die Toten the second time Selig sind die Toten die in dem Herrn sterben who die in the Lord finally Selig sind die Toten die in dem Herrn sterben von nun an from now on 12 Durr notes The fascination of these ariosos lies in their memorable and eloquent melodic line which presents the text in heightened speech 2 5 edit nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Es ist genug closing choraleThe closing chorale is Es ist genug It is enough 1 Durr notes that the melody is by Johann Rudolph Ahle a predecessor of Bach as organist in Muhlhausen 13 The melody begins with an unusual sequence of four notes progressing by steps of major seconds whole tones together spanning the interval of a tritone also called diabolus in musica 13 14 During Ahle s time it was an extreme musical figure suitable to depict the soul s crossing over from life into death 13 Durr notes further that a similar scale of four notes occurs in Rist s hymn on the word Donnerwort in the first movement but with the normal half tone step to the last note 13 He writes Bach s setting itself whose harmonization and loosening up into polyphony allows the text to become as it were transparent something that not even Bach always achieved 13 Chafe concludes a thorough analysis of the cantata and the chorale with the summary that in developing and intensifying traditional even archaic ways of understanding music Bach carried them far into the future opening up questions for the analysis interpretation and composition of music that are very much with us and are probably timeless 8 15 Alban Berg used Bach s chorale setting in his Violin Concerto 13 16 17 Publication editThe original parts of the cantata have survived After 1800 they belonged to Count Voss Buch They were acquired by the Konigliche Bibliothek zu Berlin Royal Library in Berlin probably in 1851 The cantata was first published in 1863 as part of the first complete edition of Bach s works the Bach Gesellschaft Ausgabe The editor was Wilhelm Rust 4 The parts are now held by the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin Preussischer Kulturbesitz shelf number Mus Ms Bach St 74 4 3 The cantata was published in the New Bach Edition in 1968 edited by Alfred Durr Carus Verlag produced a new critical edition in 1998 edited by Ulrich Leisinger 4 Recordings editBach Cantatas Vol 5 Sundays after Trinity II Karl Richter Munchener Bach Chor Munchener Bach Orchester Hertha Topper Ernst Haefliger Kieth Engen Archiv Produktion 1964 18 J S Bach Das Kantatenwerk Sacred Cantatas Vol 3 Nikolaus Harnoncourt Tolzer Knabenchor Concentus Musicus Wien Paul Esswood Kurt Equiluz Ruud van der Meer nl Teldec 1976 19 Die Bach Kantate Vol 59 Helmuth Rilling Gachinger Kantorei Bach Collegium Stuttgart Helen Watts Adalbert Kraus Philippe Huttenlocher Hanssler 1982 recorded 1977 1978 20 J S Bach Complete Cantatas Vol 8 Ton Koopman Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra amp Choir Bogna Bartosz Jorg Durmuller Klaus Mertens Antoine Marchand 1999 recorded 1998 21 J S Bach Cantatas Vol 15 Solo Cantatas Masaaki Suzuki Bach Collegium Japan Robin Blaze Gerd Turk Peter Kooy BIS 2001 recorded 2000 22 Bach Cantatas Vol 12 John Eliot Gardiner Monteverdi Choir English Baroque Soloists Robin Tyson James Gilchrist Peter Harvey Soli Deo Gloria 2010 recorded November 2000 8 23 Notes edit a b c d e f g h i Dellal Pamela BWV 60 O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort Emmanuel Music Retrieved 21 August 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Durr amp Jones 2005 pp 628 634 a b c d e f g h i O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort BWV 60 BC A 161 Sacred cantata 24th Sunday after Trinity Bach Digital 9 March 2017 Retrieved 11 May 2018 a b c d e f g h Leisinger Ulrich 1998 O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort Eternity O awesome word BWV 60 PDF Carus p 4 Retrieved 12 May 2010 O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort Text and Translation of Chorale Bach Cantatas Website 2003 Retrieved 5 November 2010 Chorale Melodies used in Bach s Vocal Works O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort Bach Cantatas Website 2005 Retrieved 5 November 2010 Es ist genug Text and Translation of Chorale Bach Cantatas Website 2005 Retrieved 5 November 2010 a b c d e Gardiner John Eliot 2010 Johann Sebastian Bach 1685 1750 Cantatas Nos 52 55 60 89 115 139 140 amp 163 Media notes Soli Deo Gloria at Hyperion Records website Retrieved 28 October 2018 Leonard James 2010 O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort BWV 60 Allmusic Retrieved 5 November 2010 Jones 2013 p 173 Jones 2013 p 127 Chafe 2000 pp 123 124 a b c d e f Durr amp Jones 2005 p 634 Chorale Melodies used in Bach s Vocal Works Es ist genung so nimm Herr meinen Geist Bach Cantatas Website 2005 Retrieved 5 November 2010 Chafe 2000 p 235 Pople 1991 Whittaker 1959 Archiv Produktion 198 331 discogs Bach Kantatenwerk Complete Cantatas BWV 57 60 15 discogs Johann Sebastian Bach Gachinger Kantorei Stuttgart Bach Collegium Stuttgart Helmuth Rilling Die Bach Kantate BWV 58 66 discogs Bach Ton Koopman The Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra And Choir Complete Cantatas Volume 8 discogs Johann Sebastian Bach Bach Collegium Japan Masaaki Suzuki Cantatas 15 discogs Bach Gardiner Cantatas Vol 12 Tooting Winchester discogsReferences editChafe Eric 2000 Analyzing Bach Cantatas Oxford University Press pp 220 235 Retrieved 5 September 2018 Durr Alfred Jones Richard D P 2005 The Cantatas of J S Bach With Their Librettos in German English Parallel Text Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 816707 5 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 0 19 150384 9 Pople Anthony 1991 Berg Violin Concerto Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 39976 9 Whittaker William Gillies 1959 The Cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach sacred and secular Volume I Oxford University PressExternal links editO Ewigkeit du Donnerwort BWV 60 performance by the Netherlands Bach Society video and background information O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort BWV 60 Scores at the International Music Score Library Project BWV 60 O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort English translation at J S Bach Texts of the Complete Vocal Works with English Translation and Commentary by Z Philip Ambrose University of Vermont Chapter 26 BWV 60 O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort Oh eternity word of thunder at The Cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach A listener and student guide by Julian Mincham 2010 revised 2012 2014 2017 and 2020 BWV 60 5 at www wbr bach chorales wbr com Luke Dahn 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort BWV 60 amp oldid 1184003969, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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