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Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben, BWV 8

Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben? (lit.'Dearest God, when will I die?'), BWV 8, is a church cantata for the 16th Sunday after Trinity by Johann Sebastian Bach. It is a chorale cantata, part of Bach's second cantata cycle. Bach performed it for the first time on 24 September 1724 in St. Nicholas Church in Leipzig. The cantata is scored for SATB singers, four wind instruments, strings and continuo.

Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben?
BWV 8
Chorale cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach
Obbligato transverse flute part
for the first performance of the cantata
Occasion16th Sunday after Trinity
Based on"Liebster Gott, wann werd ich sterben" (setting by Daniel Vetter)
Performed24 September 1724 (1724-09-24): Leipzig
Movements6
VocalSATB choir and soloists
Instrumental
St. Nicholas Church, Leipzig

The text of the cantata is a reflection on death, based on "Liebster Gott, wann werd ich sterben", a Lutheran hymn in five stanzas which Caspar Neumann wrote around 1690. Bach adapted Daniel Vetter's setting of this hymn, composed in the early 1690s and first printed in 1713, in the cantata's first and last movements. The opening movement is a chorale fantasia, an extensive instrumental piece, punctuated by the four-part choir, who sing line by line from the first stanza of Neumann's hymn. The last movement, the closing chorale, is a version of Vetter's 1713 four-part setting Liebster Gott, borrowed and reworked by Bach. The four other movements of the cantata, a succession of arias and recitatives, were composed by Bach for vocal and instrumental soloists. The anonymous libretto for these movements is an expanded paraphrase of the second to fourth stanzas of Neumann's hymn.

Bach revived the cantata in the 1730s, and, after transposing it from E major to D major, in the late 1740s. After Bach's death, the cantata was revived again in Leipzig, in the mid 1750s. The vocal parts of its closing chorale were published in the second half of the 18th century, in Birnstiel's and Breitkopf's collections of four-part chorales by Bach. The Bach Gesellschaft (BG) published the cantata in 1851, in the first volume of their collected edition of Bach's works. John Troutbeck's translation, When will God recall my spirit?, was published in a vocal score a few decades later. Both the E major and D major versions of the cantata were published in the New Bach Edition (NBE) in 1982.

Commentators have agreed in their praise for the cantata: William G. Whittaker wrote that, "Few cantatas are so wholly attractive and so individual as this lovely work"; Alfred Dürr has written that, "The opening chorus presents the listener with a sublime vision of the hour of death"; and Arnold Schering states that, "The opening movement of the cantata must be ranked as one of the most arresting tone-pictures ever penned by Bach." There have been many recordings of the cantata, starting with that by Karl Richter in 1959. In the 1970s there were "period instrument" recordings of all the cantatas by Helmuth Rilling and by Gustav LeonhardtNikolaus Harnoncourt. Later recordings include those by Joshua Rifkin, Philippe Herreweghe, Ton Koopman and John Eliot Gardiner.

Compositional history edit

 
The Raising of the Son of the Widow of Nain, L. Cranach II, Stadtkirche Wittenberg, c 1570
 
Caspar Neumann, writer of the hymn
 
Daniel Vetter, composer of the hymn
 
J. A. Silbermann, engraving c. 1720. Johann Scheibe's organ in St Paul's Church, Leipzig, rebuilt 1710–1716 under Vetter's supervision and evaluated by Bach in 1717.[1][2]
 
Engraving of St. Thomas School and St. Thomas Church in Leipzig, 1723

Background edit

All of Bach's cantatas for the Trinity XVI occasion meditate on death, a theme linked to the Gospel reading.[3][4] In Bach's day, a common interpretation of the Gospel reading was that it prefigured Christ resurrecting the faithful to eternal life, and in this sense the reading inspired a longing for death: an early death meant one would be sooner close to this desired resurrection.[5] Two cantatas for the Trinity XVI occasion, composed by Bach before BWV 8, take this approach on the theme of death:[6]

The second of these two cantatas was composed in Bach's first year as cantor at St. Thomas in Leipzig, as part of his first cantata cycle.[11] For the Sundays after Trinity of 1724, around a year after he had moved to Leipzig, Bach started his second cantata cycle.[12] The cantatas of this cycle, the chorale cantata cycle, are each based on a pre-existing Lutheran hymn and its chorale setting. O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 20, a chorale cantata from Bach's second cycle, was first presented in June 1724 and has a funereal theme comparable to that of a Trinity XVI cantata.[13][14] BWV 8, a meditation on a Christian's death, approaches the death theme differently from Bach's earlier Trinity XVI and BWV 10 cantatas: anxious questions about the hour of death dominate the first half of the BWV 8 cantata, while in its later movements such sorrows are dismissed with references to Christ and God's standfastness.[6][15][14]

Compared to the over 50 other chorale cantatas composed by Bach, most of which are based on hymns and chorale melodies that were at least half a century old when Bach adopted them, the BWV 8 cantata is based on relatively recent material, that is, by an author and a composer who lived into the 18th century.

Hymn and melody edit

Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben, BWV 8, is one of Bach's church cantatas for the 16th Sunday after Trinity (Trinity XVI).[16][17] The prescribed readings for the Sunday were from the Epistle to the Ephesians, praying for the strengthening of faith in the congregation of Ephesus (Ephesians 3:13–21), and from the Gospel of Luke, the raising from the dead of the young man from Nain (Luke 7:11–17).[18]

Caspar Neumann, a professor of Protestant theology and pastor from Breslau, wrote "Liebster Gott, wann werd ich sterben", a hymn in five stanzas of eight lines, around 1690.[19][3][20][21]

Daniel Vetter, a native of Breslau, set Neumann's hymn in the first half of the 1690s.[22] In 1695, this setting of the hymn was sung at the funeral of cantor Jakob Wilisius in Breslau.[23][24] In 1713, Vetter published a SATB setting of his hymn tune, Zahn No. 6634, as the concluding piece, Nos 91–92, of the second volume of his Musicalische Kirch- und Hauß-Ergötzlichkeit [scores] (lit.'Musical Refreshment for Church and Home').[25][22][23][26][27][28] The two volumes of that publication, totalling 221 four-part settings of Lutheran chorale melodies, were first printed in Leipzig.[27][29][30][31] Aimed at the pious Leipzig merchant class for "spiritual recreation" or "refreshment" through music, the simple four-part organ chorales were paired with spinet or clavichord broken-chord variations, in the style brisé, then in vogue. Like Bach's Orgelbüchlein composed during the same period, Vetter's collection starts with Nun komm der Heiden Heiland. It has one piece per page, except for the final chorale Liebster Gott of the 1713 volume which is annotated on two full pages with four separate staves for cantus, alto, tenor and figured bass:[32][33][27]

 
Vetter's chorale "Liebster Gott", as published in 1713

From Kirsten Beißwenger's 1992 dissertation on Bach's personal Library, Bachs Notenbibliothek (BNB),[34] it is surmised that the Bach family owned a copy of the second volume of Vetter's Musicalische Kirch- und Haus-Ergötzlichkeit.[35][36][37]

Vetter became organist at St. Nicholas Church in Leipzig in 1679, after succeeding his teacher Werner Fabricius.[38] Vetter's and Bach's paths crossed in 1717: since 1710, Vetter had been supervising the remodelling by Johann Scheibe [de] of the organ of St. Paul's Church in Leipzig; and in December 1717, in a famous report, Bach examined and evaluated the rebuilt instrument with a discussion of Vetter's and his reimbursement.[39][40][41] In January 1718, Vetter referred to Bach's appraisal of Scheibe's organ.[42] Vetter died in Leipzig in 1721.[43][44]

BWV 8.1 in E major edit

BWV 8.1, the first version of Bach's chorale cantata Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben, was first performed in St. Nicholas Church on 24 September 1724.[45][46][47] The sermon was preached by Salomon Deyling.[46][48] A volume of Texte zur Leipziger Kirchen-Music (lit.'Texts for Church Music in Leipzig') containing the librettos of all five chorale cantatas which Bach first performed in September 1724 is extant. The volume was printed by Immanuel Tietze, likely by the time the first of these five cantatas was performed:[49][50]

  1. Allein zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ, BWV 33, for Trinity XIII, first performed on Sunday 3 September 1724.[51]
  2. Jesu, der du meine Seele, BWV 78, for Trinity XIV, first performed on Sunday 10 September 1724.[52]
  3. Was Gott tut, das ist wohlgetan, BWV 99, for Trinity XV, first performed on Sunday 17 September 1724.[53]
  4. Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben, BWV 8.1, for Trinity XVI, first performed on Sunday 24 September 1724.[45]
  5. Herr Gott, dich loben alle wir, BWV 130.1, for St. Michael's Day, first performed on Friday 29 September 1724.[54]

The Trinity XVI cantata of Bach's third cantata cycle, Wer weiß, wie nahe mir mein Ende? BWV 27, was first performed on 6 October 1726.[55][56] BWV 8.1, in E major, was revived in the 1730s, with changes to the type of flute.[57][58]

BWV 8.2 in D major edit

Bach revived the cantata in the late 1740s, with the key transposed down a whole tone from E major to D major.[57][58] This version of the cantata, BWV 8.2,[59] is also extant, and was likely first performed in September 1747.[46] Some changes to the instrumentation were also implemented:[60] for example, in the first movement the two oboe d'amore parts are given to concertante violins,[61] and in the bass aria, an oboe d'amore plays colla parte with the first violins.[62]

Music and text edit

Text and translations edit

The first and last verses of Neumann's hymn correspond to the first and final movements of the cantata, both of them choral movements. The middle four movements were written by an anonymous librettist, but conformed fairly closely to the spirit of Neumann's other three verses.[63][46]

Novello published John Troutbeck's translation in the 1870s.[64][65] A translation by J. Michael Diack was published by Breitkopf & Härtel in 1931.[66] Jean Lunn's translation was published in 1981.[67] In 2020, Z. Philip Ambrose published a revised edition of his 1980s translation of the cantata's text.[68] Melvin P. Unger published an interlinear translation of the cantata in 1996.[69] Richard D. P. Jones's 2005 translation of Alfred Dürr's 1992 book on Bach's cantatas contains a translation of the cantata's libretto.[70] Pamela Dellal's translation of the libretto can be found on the Emmanuel Music website.[71]

Scoring edit

BWV 8.1 is scored for:[45][72]

For BWV 8.2:[59]

  • same vocal forces as BWV 8.1
  • taille
  • traverso (fl)
  • 2 oba
  • str as in BWV 8.1, with additionally two solo violins (vl)
  • bc

Movements edit

The cantata is in six movements:[75][76]

Movements of Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben, BWV 8
# Incipit Text Type Time BWV 8.1 BWV 8.2
Key Scoring Key Scoring
1 Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben? Neumann Chorus 12
8
E tutti D tutti
2 Was willst du dich, mein Geist, entsetzen after Neumann Aria 3
4
c T, oba, bc b T, vl, bc
3 Zwar fühlt mein schwaches Herz after Neumann Recitative   gA A, str, bc fG A, str, bc
4 Doch weichet, ihr tollen, vergeblichen Sorgen! after Neumann Aria 12
8
A B, fl, str, bc G B, fl, oba, str, bc
5 Behalte nur, o Welt, das Meine! after Neumann Recitative   fg S, bc ef S, bc
6 Herrscher über Tod und Leben Neumann Chorale   E tutti D tutti

1 edit

 
Opening movement of BWV 8, copyist C. F. Barth, c. 1755[77]
 
Second page of opening movement of BWV 8: first line and start of second line of vocal chorale

The opening chorale fantasia sets the first stanza of Neumann's hymn.[78] The opening chorus is a gapped chorale setting of Vetter's melody. The alto, tenor, and bass voices sing free counterpoint, while the sopranos sing the chorale unadorned.[22] Spitta described the sound of this movement as a "church-yard full of flowers in the springtime".[38] As Dürr comments, the chorus, with instrumental ensemble of high obbligato flute, two oboes d'amore and downward plucked arpeggios, presents "a sublime vision of the hour of death".[46][79][80]

Schering (1932) deems the opening movement of BWV 8 to be "one of the most arresting tone-pictures ever penned by Bach." Although in principle it could be described as a "choral movement", the two or two and a half bar choral passages are so brief and separated by themselves from the extensive instrumental music of the ritornellos, that "they recede as it were into the shadows". The primarily orchestral movement conjures up a poetic image of death, with a mood of prayerful contemplation by the Christian soul. This human spirit is captured without words by the two expressive oboes d'amore. As Schering writes: "Their constant sweet-sounding strains overflow in tenderly articulate, or light and gracefully swelling, figures, which, treated in dialogue form, constitute a stream of almost ceaseless melody". The mournful mood is reflected by the choice of E major as key signature. Schering then explains further poetic ideas involving the movement: metaphysical questions concerning fate, mortality and the hereafter. He describes the old church in Leipzig, with its five bells, the highest and most piercing of which was the death-knell. The staccato repetitive semiquavers of the transverse flute, played at the top of its register, portray pealing bells in Bach's musical iconography—unexpected and unsettling sounds for the listeners. The musical imagery for death is completed by hushed pizzicato triplet quavers in the strings accompanied by solemn beats in the basso continuo. Schering explains how Bach uses all possible musical resources in depicting the troubled soul: "interrupted cadences, chromaticism and diminished sevenths." With a careful balance between choir and delicately scored orchestra, "the whole movement will produce an extraordinarily powerful effect."[81]

Whittaker (1978) compares BWV 8 with the cantata O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 20, a chorale cantata Bach had composed slightly earlier, in June 1724. He notes that, although both cantatas have a similar funereal theme, the two have a quite different spirit. BWV 20 has biblical references to the Raising of Lazarus, and its tortured mood resonates with boiling cauldrons, devils and hell-fire as depicted in Early Netherlandish morality paintings by Hieronymous Bosch and his contemporaries. In contrast, the biblical references for BWV 8 are to the Raising of the son of the widow of Nain; instead of instilling fear, it presents a vision where a penitential sinner, despite their unworthiness, can be saved by God's mercy and be rewarded in heaven. Whittaker finds it unusual that Bach has produced two such differing approaches to death, as disparate as those of Berlioz and Franck.[14]

Having taken note of underlying biblical references, Whittaker explains the highly original musical conception for the first movement: "It is virtually a duet for two oboes d'amore, tender and mournful, an example of 'endless melody' long before Wagner coined the term." With about 70 bars in the movement, the mournful elegy seems "oblivious of space and time." The upper strings are accompanied by arpeggio triplet quaver motifs, only interrupted four times. The continuo only plays on the first and third of each beat throughout the movement, creating an unearthly quality. The obbligato transverse flute solo, playing at its highest register, is unique: the semiquavers repeated 24 times represent the quavering soul; while the arpeggiated semiquavers depict pealing bells. According to Whittaker, because the original chorale was not developed in any way, the movement should strictly be regarded as an extended chorale instead of a chorale fantasia. The cantus firmus of the chorale is quite different from those Bach normally used, more florid with more changes of note-lengths. It is not suitable for use as augmentation, Bach's habitual way of employing way the melody. It is sung one beat per note accompanied by the horn, sometimes with ornamentation; only once does the cantus firmus play for more than 3 bars; and except for once, when it is joined by the tenor, it starts alone on the upbeat. Although Whittaker comments on the changes to scoring for the different versions (with solo violins replacing the oboes d'amore, possibly because of technical breathing difficulties), he concludes: "it is wholly unlike any other expansion of a chorale. One may think of it as a solemn funeral which is watched by someone who is himself about to depart, and who, from time to time, breathes to himself this hymn."[82]

After outlining the technical difficulties involving performances of BWV 8 for the virtuosic obbligato flute solo passages in the opening movement, Anderson (2003) finds that the later version in D major might be easier to execute but loses the "iridescent tonal palette" of E major, the original key. Anderson writes of the first movement of the cantata: "The transcendentally beautiful opening chorus of Liebster Gott must rank among Bach's most poetic and alluring fantasias." Although Bach composed profoundly moving cantatas evoking the death-knell before hand (BWV 161, BWV 73, BWV 95) and afterwards (BWV 127, BWV 198), the first movement of BWV 8 is unique in the imaginative and tender way it summons up the haunting atmosphere of chiming death-knells. Two melodious oboes d'amore, the high-pitched transverse flute and pizzicato strings provide the extensive orchestral passages which are interspersed with each short vocal line of Vetter's chorale. The soprano cantus firmus is sung colla parte with the horn. When all these components are combined, Bach's music evokes a "melancholy but affirmative, and in no sense desolate, picture."[58]

2 edit

 
Aria for tenor and oboe d'amore: manuscript copied by C. F. Barth, c. 1755

The second movement in C sharp minor is a tenor aria, characterized by continued tones of the death knell in the pizzicato accompaniment of the continuo. The instrumental and vocal lines, with its detached quavers, ornamentation and imitative entries, are an eloquent duet between the oboe d'amore and the tenor.[22][46][79][58] For Schering (1932), the aria is a model of Bach's high regard for the text. Dealing again with Christian faith and human fear of death, the theme is now of terror: the musical motifs are angular and the mood anguished.[81]

Whittaker (1978) gives a detailed description of the musical structure of the tenor aria (not a da capo aria). In contrast to the first movement, where the chorus comment watchfully, the text and mood are more empassioned. The aria begins with a ritornello—an expressive oboe d'amore solo accompanied by detached pizzicato quavers for the continuo, representing the solemn funeral bells. The 1727 aria Erbarme dich, mein Gott ("Have mercy my God") for alto and violin from the St Matthew Passion is identical melodically, although the phrasing is slightly different. This musical motif is one that Bach often associates with "pity". The ritornello continues with a lengthy passage for semiquavers, where musical iconography again comes into play. As the tenor takes over the instrumental material, the oboe d'amore accompanies imitatively. The tenor is later heard with emphatic detached staccato crotchets as he sings schlägt ("strikes"), for the clock striking on the hour; and later still the oboe d'amore semiquavers are heard in parallel thirds with the tenor's soaring tausend ("thousand"). The extended second section begins with the words Mein Leib ("my body"): here the inversion of melody is heard twice with further parallel renditions of "thousand"; and long sustained notes for Ruh ("rest") accompany a restatement of the oboe d'amore melody. The second section concludes with the instrumental ritornello.[85]

3 edit

The third movement is an alto recitative, where the soloist sings of their fear of death.[79] With a string accompaniment, they sing of their questions of anxiety. Phrygian cadences, with the voice rising, are heard twice: this musical technique was how Bach liked to introduce a questioning tone.[86] Schering (1932) writes: "What mastery in the last four bars alone, forming a questioning close in the Phrygian mode!"[81] As described by Whittaker (1978), the soloist complains of "wordly suffering and loss." This beautiful setting is filled with emotion: the first violin "moves uneasily, as if the soul were trying to raise its load."[87]

4 edit

 
Obbligato transverse flute solo of the ritornello for the bass aria in BWV 8

Contrasting with the preceding recitative, the fourth movement is a joyous bass da capo aria in "jig tempo".[22][46][79] There is a complete change of mood: "It is a delightful gigue, a piece of unabashed dance music made to serve the purpose of the church." With all despondency quelled, the obbligato transverse flute starts its rhythmic solo in A major and 12/8 times. In Bach's sacred works, the flute was most often associated with death and mourning; but here it evokes joyous laughter; this kind of virtuosic writing, with brilliant rapid semiquaver passage work and extraordinary leaps, is reminiscent of the Brandenburg Concertos or Orchestral Suites (for example the last movements of the Third, Fifth or Sixth Brandenburg Concerto or the Badinerie from Suite No 2).[88][81][89][90]

Little & Jenne (2001) discuss Bach's gigue from the perspect of baroque dance music. A special kind of 12/8 gigue used by Bach was singled out, the Giga II, his "most complex, exploratory and challenging." They are characterised by their subdivided beats (e.g. triplets), normally with an upbeat; a joyous and intense mood; jigging rhythms; long phrases without break; and a dance-like lilt. Little and Jenne write that these were "the farthest from actual dancing or any choreographic associations at all ... more of an instrumental excursion than any other Baroque dance type except the allemande. It is easy to see why Bach was attracted to it, even though his German contemporaries were not." The bass aria falls into this category.[91][92]

The 16 bar ritornello for solo flute and strings has several striking characteristics: the "rollicking tune" in the first two bars; the "quirky responses" in quavers and semiquavers in bars three and four; the "leaping passages" which dart up and below in bar five and even more so in bar six; the "sustained note", a 'halo' announced by an ornamental triplet in the flute, while the first violins take up the boisterous tune in bars eight and nine; the "quaver triplet scales" in bar eleven; the "triplet arpeggios" cavorting upwards in bars twelve and thirteen; and three "repeating semiquaver motifs" in bar fifteen that prepare for the final cadence. The other parts of the ritornello involve rapid semiquaver passage work for the flute, often in sequences, as the strings gently accompany either with detached crotchets or long sustained notes.[88]

After the ritornello, the singing of the bass soloist begins with a section of 22 bars. There is an expository section for bass, flute and strings. The bass starts with its romping melody for two bars, accompanied by the 'halo' motif on the flute and a new sighing response in the strings: the flute responds with the last two bars of the ritornello; the bass then sings another two bars of the tune, with the flute and strings swapping their roles. After that bass and flute perform a duet, with the strings playing the samme accompanying role as in the ritornello (detached crotchets or long sustained notes). The new music for the bass singer combines rapid semiquaver runs and turns, detached quavers and long sustained notes; this material is matched to the earlier flute motifs. The flow is broken as the bass asks "Mich rufet mein Jesus, wer sollte nicht gehn?" in detached phrases, accompanied on the flute by triplet scales and three bars of high-pitched arpeggios. Accompanied only by the continuo, the bass then sings the same question to the tune of the triplet scale and arpeggio figures; without pause the flute and strings play a two and a half bar coda similar to the end of the ritornello.[88]

The music of the next 15 bars is sung to the second part of the text and corresponds to the middle da capo section. The bass here plays a more dominant role, starting off in a dance-like rhythm with several octave leaps. There are initially gently responses from flute and strings. Then, as the bass solo starts to sing the staccato crotchets "nichts", the flute commences a motto perpetuo accompaniment with the 'repeating semiquaver motifs' in sequence and sustained strings. With strings playing only detached crotchets, the bass solo begins a new long sequences of semiquaver figures on "verkläret" in parallel with the flute. With an octave leap, the bass sings a sustained Jesus. As the flute in a flourish takes up its original jig tune in the relative minor accompanied by short sighs in the strings, the bass sings "verkläret" with an octave leap and a one and a half bar note for the second syllable. With just the continuo, the bass finishes his phrase with herrlich vor Jesu zu stehn.[88]

The da capo section starts off with the 16 bar ritornello for flute and strings repeated without change. The final section lasts 24 bars, thus 22 bars for bass, flute and strings plus a two and a half bar coda for orchestra alone. The first six bars are identical to the corresponding solo bass section. At that point a half bar of two semiquaver scales is introduced in the orchestra, while the key modulates through D major to E major. Otherwise, with some adaptations, flute and strings play as before, but now off beat. For the bass solo almost all of the musical material is unaltered (a few semiquaver motifs become closer to those of the flute). The final solo bass phrase with continuo acquires an additional half bar for the last words "wer wollte ich gehn?" The movement concludes with a two and a half bar coda for flute and strings ending on an A major cadence.[88][89]

5 edit

The fifth movement is a short secco recitative for soprano and continuo.[86][79] The confident mood of the bass aria is maintained in the soprano line.[81] Whittaker (1978) paraphrases the last sentence of the text Und kann nicht sterben as 'and cannot die.' He notes that: "In spite of the happiness of the mood, Bach cannot resist falsifying the meaning of the sentence by painting 'die' with a melisma involving a diminished third."[93]

6 edit

 
Closing chorale of BWV 8, copyist C. F. Barth, c. 1755[77]

The chorus and orchestra unite in the final chorale.[46][79][94] Wolff notes that "the texturally transparent and rhythmically vibrant setting" of the closing chorale is informed by the treatment of the opening chorus.[95] Emil Platen and Christoph Wolff have observed that when Bach adapted or borrowed chorales from more recent composers such as Vopelius or Vetter, he composed in a more fashionable and melodic style.[95][96] According to the concluding sentence of Dürr & Jones (2006), there is a "brief secco recitative, after which all participants unite in the concluding chorale—borrowed from Daniel Vetter, albeit with radical alterations." According to Whittaker (1978), Bach's musical treatment of the closing chorale, closely modelled on Vetter's original from 1713, is "modernistic" and closer to songs from the Schemellis Gesangbuch.[78] Mostly the soprano voice leads with an upbeat, followed by the lower voices; and, for the concluding "Schanden" ("shame"), the harmony is forlorn. Whittaker writes: "the basses have a splendid phrase sinking from upper C to low E. The flute is instructed to double the melody ottava."[97] Arnold Schering summarises the last movement as follows: "After the mood thus established has been re-asserted by the soprano in a Recitative, there follows the final Chorale—this time arranged on a plan unusual with Bach. The crotchets of each line are separated into upbeat quavers, and in one or two voices are made to precede the others. Hence a certain liveliness is achieved, a happy counterpart to the spirit of joy attained in the bass aria."[98] As Anderson (2003) comments, a single crotchet bass note and a key change from A major to E major signal the beginning of the final chorale: contrary to Bach's usual method of composition, he did not produce an original harmonisation but adopted Vetter's as "a gesture of appreciation towards a predecessor whom Bach must have respected."[58]

Manuscripts and scores edit

Autograph manuscripts and copyists edit

 
Obbligato solo in the first oboe d'amore part at the beginning of J. S. Bach's cantata. Autograph manuscript, 1724
 
Obbligatio solo traverso part for opening movement of J. S. Bach's cantata, D major version. Autograph manuscript, 1747

Although first performed in 1724, Bach's original manuscript for the vocal and orchestral parts of BWV 8.1 did not remain in the archives of the St. Thomas Church: around 150 years later, the autograph manuscripts were acquired by the Royal Library of Belgium in Brussels. In fact, after Bach's death, the music publishing company of Johann Gottlob Immanuel Breitkopf, at the 1761 Michaelmas Fair in Leipzig, started to advertise their own catalogue of hand-copied and printed versions of sacred cantatas, at that stage uniquely for feast days. Apart from the two churches where Bach previously had duties, the St. Thomas Church and the St. Nicholas Church, the only church where concerts were regularly held was the Neukirche. With a second Breitkopf catalogue for 1770, interest in church music was even more in decline during the second half of the eighteenth century, possibly as a result of changing fashions, with demands for more performable and simpler repertoire. Breitkopf expressed regret that amateur musicians "are not used to playing from engraved and printing editions, but often prefer to play from more expensive handwritten copies." With his company failing, in 1796 Breitkopf sold his business concerns to Gottfried Christoph Härtel.[99][100]

Although the history of how Bach's autograph parts were transmitted to Brussels has become well known, the role as copyists of schoolboys at the Thomasschule has been harder to establish. Recently Maul (2018) has devoted a book to the topic. In 2003 Michael Maul and Peter Wollny settled a mystery about a previously unidentified copyist for BWV 8. He had been described by Göttingen musicologists Dürr and Kobayashi as the "Doles copyist" ("Schreiber der Doles-Partituren"), because of the association with C.F. Doles, Thomaskantor from 1756 until 1789.[101][102] Maul & Wollny (2003) discovered that the copyist was Carl Friedrich Barth, born in 1734, the son of a merchant from Glauchau. Barth became a chorister at the Thomasschule in 1746, where he was picked out by Bach for his skills in Latin to become music prefect. After leading performances at the Thomaskirche and Nikolaikirche, he enrolled at the University of Leipzig in 1757 to study philosophy and theology. In 1770 he was appointed as a Cantor in Borna, where he died in 1813.[77][103][104]

Although in 1803 Härtel stated that the Bach family had already received a large sum for purchasing Bach's inherited manuscripts, the statement required some degree of qualification. The rebranded company of Breitkopf & Härtel advertised its 1810 "Catalogue of Church Music that can be obtained in accurate and clean copies." Amongst the Bach cantatas listed were BWV 8 as well as Widerstehe doch der Sünde, BWV 54, BWV 80, BWV 97, BWV 117, BWV 118 and BWV 131. Härtel died in 1827, sending the publishing firm once more into financial disarray with "grim years under shakey management." This instability led to a great auction on 1 June 1836 to alleviate matters. Original manuscripts were offered to the "highest bidders"; although a few large libraries acquired copies, it is still possible that some manuscripts remain undiscovered elsewhere. At that auction the score of BWV 54, in the hand of Johann Gottfried Walther, and the autograph manuscript parts of BWV 8 were purchased by François-Joseph Fétis, the Belgian musicologist. Following Fétis' death in 1871, BWV 8 and BWV 54 were acquired in 1872 by the Bibliothèque Royale Albert 1er in Brussels.[105][100]

Carl Friedrich Barth, who had become a pupil of the St. Thomas School in Leipzig in 1746, was a copyist who worked for Bach and his successors Gottlob Harrer and Johann Friedrich Doles.[106] In the period between Harrer's demise (9 July 1755) and the start of Doles's tenure (January 1756) he was, together with Christian Friedrich Penzel, acting Thomascantor.[77] Around this period of Barth and Penzel's interim cantorate, Barth copied a number of cantatas by Bach: among these copies is an extant score of the E major version of BWV 8.[102][101][107][103][104] Doles revived the D major version of the cantata after 1756.[108]

Original performance parts of the D major version of the cantata survive.[59][3] These manuscripts, partially in Bach's handwriting, remained in Leipzig after the composer's death, where they are conserved by the Bach Archive since the second half of the 20th century.[109][3]

Chronology edit

Spitta thought, based on his research, that both the E major and D major versions of the cantata were composed in 1723 or 1724.[110] In 1957, Dürr published his research which found that the E major version was first performed of on 24 September 1724, and the D major version on a later date.[111] Yoshitake Kobayahshi determined the chronology for Bach's late compositions and performances, including the revival of BWV 8 in its D major version.[102] These researchers relied on scientific methods such as use of watermarks and handwriting, as well as working out possible copyists from that period.[77][112]

Score editions edit

The cantata was first published in 1851, when the BG included it as No. 8 in the first volume of their collected edition of Bach's works.[113] The BG score, in E major, mixes elements from the BWV 8.1 and 8.2 versions.[29][114] The edition was based on two manuscript copies of the E major version, and the original manuscript of the D major performance parts, which, at the time, were archived at the St. Thomas School.[61] A separate edition of both versions followed only in 1982, when they were included separately in the NBE's volume containing Bach's Trinity XVI and XVII cantatas, edited by Helmuth Osthoff and Rufus Hallmark.[29][115] In 2017, an updated version of Reinhold Kubik's 1981 edition of the BWV 8.1 version, supplemented with a foreword by Hans-Joachim Schulze, was issued in the Stuttgarter Bach-Ausgaben series.[116]

Closing chorale edit

 
 
 
Vetter's four-part setting (1713)
 
 
 
Bach's four-part setting

Bach's son Carl Philipp Emanuel published the vocal parts of the cantata's closing chorale (BWV 8/6) in the Birnstiel and Breitkopf editions of his father's four-part chorales:[26]

  • No. 47, p. 24, in Birnstiel's 1765 publication
  • No. 43, p. 24, in Breitkopf's 1784 publication

Comparing Vetter's four-part setting of his "Liebster Gott, wann werd ich sterben" melody (1713) to the last movement of Bach's cantata, Winterfeld wrote:[24]

After referring to Vetter's four-part setting, published in 1713, and to Winterfeld's comments about it, Spitta wrote:

Platen mentioned the closing chorale of BWV 8 in an article published in the 1975 edition of the Bach-Jahrbuch, describing the chorale movement as a reworked version of Vetter's 1713 four-part setting.[96] In 1991 and 1996, the musicologist Frieder Rempp published critical commentaries on the closing chorale for the New Bach Edition (NBE).[26] The closing chorale was listed as spurious in the 1998 edition of the Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis, prepared by the Göttingen musicologists Dürr and Kobayashi.[112] The closing chorale is listed as a spurious work in the third Anhang of the 1998 edition of the Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis: it is a reworked version of Vetter's 1713 four-part setting.[96][118][119] According to Dürr, translated by Jones, Bach adopted Vetter's four-part chorale setting "with radical alterations".[30][120] The Bach Digital website does not list the BWV 8/6 chorale among Vetter's compositions.[26][44]

Vetter's setting of Neumann's hymn is not homophonic: according to Philipp Spitta, "it is not strictly a chorale but a sacred aria".[38]

Reception edit

Eighteenth and nineteenth century edit

Jorgenson (1986), Jorgenson (1996) and Sposato (2018) have written in detail about changes in the musical life of Leipzig both during Bach's lifetime and its aftermath. The difficulties in finding students from the university available to perform as instrumentalists was already a problem while Johann Kuhnau was Thomaskantor, responsible for two main churches, the Nikolaikirche and the Thomaskirche, as well as the Neuekirche. With Bach replacing Kuhnau, arranging church performances became more orderly. Apart from secular concert music in the Café Zimmermann, there were public concerts advertised as "Concerts Spirituels" in the Gewandhaus and the open air. At the end of the eighteenth century, Protestant worship and liturgical music was reformed in Saxony, with hardly any use of Latin in the church. With the turn of the century Germany saw a "Bach renewal," in which Felix Mendelssohn and Robert Schumann were to play an important role. The musicians Franz Hauser and Moritz Hauptmann also became active in this movement. At one stage Hauser asked Mendelssohn whether he might wish to be successor as Thomaskantor; but, with Mendelssohn's prompting and encouragement, it was Hauptmann who assumed that post in 1842, albeit reluctantly. Aided by Hauser, whose personal collection of Bach manuscripts was one of the largest in Germany, Hauptmann, Schumann and his colleagues, Otto Jahn and Carl Becker, started the Bach-Gesellschaft in 1850; and soon after, in 1851, Hauptmann published the first volume of ten cantatas BWV 1–10 with Breitkopf & Härtel. Hauptmann and Hauser became directors of the conservatory in Leipzig and Munich respectively and the pair carried on a long correspondence, which has been documented in German and English. For cantatas, Hauptmann records that, although separate movements might be suitable for public performance, changes in nineteenth-century practices often made it hard to find suitable instrumentalists. Other musicians such as Johann Nepomuk Schelble, who had conducted a performance of BWV 8 in Frankfurt am Main, considered that eighteenth-century recitatives might no longer be suitable for the public, so could be cut. Carl von Winterfeld expressed doubts about whether Bach's larger sacred works "could find a lasting place in a newly united, newly invigorated and strength evangelical church of our day."[121][122][123]

According to 19th-century hymnologist Carl von Winterfeld, Bach felt more at ease with hymn tunes from a less distant past, such as Crüger's "Jesu, meine Freude" and "Schmücke dich, o liebe Seele", Drese's "Seelenbräutigam" [choralwiki] and Vetter's "Liebster Gott, wann werd ich sterben", than those by earlier generations of composers, when adopting these chorale melodies in his own compositions: the older melodies go against the grain of how music was experienced in his own time.[124][citation needed]

Moritz Hauptmann, who edited the cantata for the Bach Gesellschaft (BG) edition, reckons that the D major arrangement was made for ease of performance, E major being a more difficult key for wind instruments than D major, and virtuoso parts, such as the instrumental solos in the first movement, are easier to perform by violins than by oboes.[61][citation needed] According to Philipp Spitta, the D major version "greatly facilitates the labours of the oboe players".[110]

Critical appraisal edit

The cantata was praised by, among others, Philipp Spitta, Arnold Schering, William G. Whittaker and Alfred Dürr. Commentators have agreed in their praise for the cantata: According to Spitta, "The melodious and elaborate bass air and the two recitatives fully correspond in beauty to the other pieces";[125] Schering states that, "The opening movement of the cantata must be ranked as one of the most arresting tone-pictures ever penned by Bach"; Whittaker wrote that, "Few cantatas are so wholly attractive and so individual as this lovely work";[78] and Dürr, translated by Jones, has written that, "The opening chorus presents the listener with a sublime vision of the hour of death."[46]

The praise does however not extend to the D major arrangement. According to Hauptmann, the arrangement did not benefit the music: for instance, the solo violins, having naturally a less pronounced volume than oboes, have more difficulty to let their melodies be heard in the first movement.[61] Also in Jones's translation of Dürr the D major version of the cantata is qualified as having a "makeshift character".[29] This appears as a footnote in Dürr & Jones (2006): the editor Helmuth Osthoff prepared the D major version of the cantata for the Neue-Bach Ausgabe in 1982, prior to Dürr's German 1971 book on the cantatas.[126][127]

Recordings edit

 
Philippe Herreweghe and his Collegium Vocale Gent

Both E major and D major versions of the cantata have been recorded. The aria of the BWV 8.2 version was recorded by Ton Koopman with Klaus Mertens as bass soloist with the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra, and the chorus of that version by Koopman's pupil Masaaki Suzuki and the Bach Collegium Japan in addition to the full cantata in E major.[128] The Dutch website Muziekweb lists several recordings of the cantata:[128]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Butler 2016, p. 5.
  2. ^ Wolff & Zepf 2012, pp. 47–50, 83–86
  3. ^ a b c d Bach & Schulze 2017, p. 4.
  4. ^ Dürr & Jones 2006, p. 551.
  5. ^ Dürr & Jones 2006, p. 544.
  6. ^ a b Dürr & Jones 2006, pp. 551–552.
  7. ^ Dürr & Jones 2006, Komm, du süße Todesstunde, BWV 161, pp. 542–546.
  8. ^ Komm, du süße Todesstunde BWV 161 at Bach Digital.
  9. ^ Dürr & Jones 2006, Christus, der ist mein Leben, BWV 95, pp. 546–550.
  10. ^ Christus, der ist mein Leben BWV 95 at Bach Digital.
  11. ^ Dürr 1957, p. 61.
  12. ^ Dürr 1957, pp. 47–48.
  13. ^ O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort BWV 20 at Bach Digital.
  14. ^ a b c Whittaker 1978, p. 488.
  15. ^ Lee 2005, p. 127.
  16. ^ Bach & Schulze 2017, pp. 1, 4.
  17. ^ Dürr & Jones 2006.
  18. ^ Dürr & Jones 2006, p. 542.
  19. ^ Koch 2001
  20. ^ Neumann, Caspar at Bach Digital.
  21. ^ Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben BWV deest (NBA Serie III:2) at Bach Digital.
  22. ^ a b c d e Bach & Schulze 2017, p. 5.
  23. ^ a b Zahn 1891.
  24. ^ a b c Winterfeld 1847, p. 487.
  25. ^ Rose 2005.
  26. ^ a b c d Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben BWV 8/6 at Bach Digital.
  27. ^ a b c Winterfeld 1847, pp. 486–487.
  28. ^ Vetter 1713, No. 91.
  29. ^ a b c d Dürr & Jones 2006, p. 552.
  30. ^ a b Vetter 1713.
  31. ^ Vetter 1709.
  32. ^ Rose 2005, p. 39.
  33. ^ Rathey, Markus (2010). "Buxtehude and the Dance of Death: The Chorale Partita Auf meinem lieben Gott (BuxWV 179) and the Ars Moriendi in the Seventeenth Century". Early Music History. 29. Cambridge University Press: 161–188. doi:10.1017/S0261127910000124. JSTOR 40800911. S2CID 190683768.
  34. ^ Stauffer, George B. (1994). "Review of Johann Sebastian Bachs Notenbibliothek by Kirsten Beißwenger". Notes. 50. Music Library Association: 1388–1390. doi:10.2307/898311. JSTOR 898311.
  35. ^ Yearsley 2019, p. 219.
  36. ^ Leaver, Robin A. (2017b). Luther's Liturgical Music: Principles and Implications. Lutheran Quarterly Books. Fortress Press. p. 286. ISBN 9781506427164.
  37. ^ Beißwenger 1992.
  38. ^ a b c d Spitta 1899, II, p. 432.
  39. ^ David, Mendel & Wolff 1999
  40. ^ Wolff & Zepf 2012, p. 145–147
  41. ^ Butler 2016, p. 1.
  42. ^ Butler 2016, p. 2.
  43. ^ Marshall 2002
  44. ^ a b Vetter, Daniel at Bach Digital.
  45. ^ a b c Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben [1st version] BWV 8.1 at Bach Digital.
  46. ^ a b c d e f g h i Dürr & Jones 2006, Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben, BWV 8, pp. 550–553.
  47. ^ Leaver 2017, p. 505.
  48. ^ Petzoldt, Martin. (in German). Carus-Verlag. Archived from the original on 24 July 2012. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
  49. ^ Richter 2018.
  50. ^ Schabalina 2009, pp. 12, 16–20 (II. Ein Heft mit Texten zu Kantaten J. S. Bachs aus dem Jahr 1724), 37–40 (facsimile).
  51. ^ Allein zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ BWV 33 at Bach Digital.
  52. ^ Jesu, der du meine Seele BWV 78 at Bach Digital.
  53. ^ Was Gott tut, das ist wohlgetan BWV 99 at Bach Digital.
  54. ^ Herr Gott, dich loben alle wir [1st version] BWV 130.1 at Bach Digital.
  55. ^ Dürr & Jones 2006, Wer weiß, wie nahe mir mein Ende, BWV 27, pp. 553–556.
  56. ^ Wer weiß, wie nahe mir mein Ende BWV 27 at Bach Digital.
  57. ^ a b Dürr & Jones 2006, p. 550.
  58. ^ a b c d e Anderson 2003.
  59. ^ a b c Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben [2nd version] BWV 8.2 at Bach Digital.
  60. ^ Dürr & Jones 2006, pp. 550–552.
  61. ^ a b c d Bach 1851, editor's preface, p. XIX.
  62. ^ Bach 1982, pp. 205–218.
  63. ^ Bach & Schulze 2017, pp. 4–5.
  64. ^ a b c d e f g Bach 1880.
  65. ^ a b c d e f g Bach 1932.
  66. ^ Bach 1931.
  67. ^ Bach 1981.
  68. ^ Ambrose 2020.
  69. ^ Unger 1996.
  70. ^ Dürr & Jones 2006, pp. 550–551.
  71. ^ Dellal translation.
  72. ^ Bischof 2013.
  73. ^ Dürr & Jones 2006, p. 34
  74. ^ Suzuki 2004
  75. ^ Dürr & Jones 2006, pp. 550–551.
  76. ^ Bach & Schulze 2017, p. 2.
  77. ^ a b c d e Maul & Wollny 2003.
  78. ^ a b c Whittaker 1978.
  79. ^ a b c d e f Smith 2013.
  80. ^ In the E major version of 1724, the marking for the broken chords in the upper strings is con sordini sempre staccato; in the D major version of 1747, the marking is sempre pizzicato.
  81. ^ a b c d e Schering 1932.
  82. ^ Whittaker 1978, pp. 488–490.
  83. ^ a b c d e f Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben: 1. Fassung (Text) at Bach Digital website.
  84. ^ a b Terry 1917, pp. 497, 537–538.
  85. ^ Whittaker 1978, pp. 490–492.
  86. ^ a b Dürr & Jones 2006, p. 553.
  87. ^ Whittaker 1978, p. 492.
  88. ^ a b c d e Whittaker 1978, pp. 492–494.
  89. ^ a b Lee 2005, p. 127–128.
  90. ^ Little & Jenne 2001.
  91. ^ Little & Jenne 2001, pp. 64–169 In Appendix B of the later online jstor edition, the bass aria is listed as of type Giga II.
  92. ^ Lee 2005, pp. 127–130.
  93. ^ Whittaker 1978, p. 494.
  94. ^ Dahn 2019.
  95. ^ a b Wolff 2020.
  96. ^ a b c Platen 1976.
  97. ^ Whittaker 1978, p. 490.
  98. ^ Bach 1932, English preface, page ii.
  99. ^ Glöckner 1996, pp. 27–29.
  100. ^ a b Schulze 1996.
  101. ^ a b Dürr 1957.
  102. ^ a b c Kobayashi 1988.
  103. ^ a b Bärwald 2016.
  104. ^ a b Maul 2018.
  105. ^ Glöckner 1996, pp. 29–32.
  106. ^ Williams 2016, p. 262.
  107. ^ Boomhower 2014.
  108. ^ Yearsley 2019, pp. 218–219.
  109. ^ Rettinghaus 2020.
  110. ^ a b Spitta 1899, II, p. 696.
  111. ^ Dürr 1957, p. 74.
  112. ^ a b Dürr & Kobayashi 1998.
  113. ^ Bach 1851.
  114. ^ Bach 1851, editor's preface, pp. XIX–XX.
  115. ^ Bach 1982.
  116. ^ Bach & Schulze 2017.
  117. ^ Spitta 1880, p. 264.
  118. ^ Dahn 2018.
  119. ^ Dürr & Kobayashi 1998, p. 468.
  120. ^ Dürr & Jones 2006, p. 553.
  121. ^ Jorgenson 1986
  122. ^ Jorgenson 1996, p. 110–121
  123. ^ Sposato 2018
  124. ^ Winterfeld 1847, pp. 308–309.
  125. ^ Spitta 1899, II, p. 433.
  126. ^ Dürr, Alfred (1971). Die Kantaten von Johann Sebatian Bach. Kassel: Bärenreiter-Verlag.
  127. ^ Dürr & Jones 2006, p. 552
  128. ^ a b "Cantate voor soli (4), koor en orkest BWV.8, 'Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben?'". Muziekweb (in Dutch). Retrieved 28 June 2020.
  129. ^ a b Anderson 2012.

References edit

External links edit

liebster, gott, wenn, werd, sterben, liebster, gott, wenn, werd, sterben, dearest, when, will, church, cantata, 16th, sunday, after, trinity, johann, sebastian, bach, chorale, cantata, part, bach, second, cantata, cycle, bach, performed, first, time, september. Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben lit Dearest God when will I die BWV 8 is a church cantata for the 16th Sunday after Trinity by Johann Sebastian Bach It is a chorale cantata part of Bach s second cantata cycle Bach performed it for the first time on 24 September 1724 in St Nicholas Church in Leipzig The cantata is scored for SATB singers four wind instruments strings and continuo Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV 8Chorale cantata by Johann Sebastian BachObbligato transverse flute part for the first performance of the cantataOccasion16th Sunday after TrinityBased on Liebster Gott wann werd ich sterben setting by Daniel Vetter Performed24 September 1724 1724 09 24 LeipzigMovements6VocalSATB choir and soloistsInstrumentalhorn or tailletraverso or piccolo2 oboes d amorestringscontinuo St Nicholas Church Leipzig The text of the cantata is a reflection on death based on Liebster Gott wann werd ich sterben a Lutheran hymn in five stanzas which Caspar Neumann wrote around 1690 Bach adapted Daniel Vetter s setting of this hymn composed in the early 1690s and first printed in 1713 in the cantata s first and last movements The opening movement is a chorale fantasia an extensive instrumental piece punctuated by the four part choir who sing line by line from the first stanza of Neumann s hymn The last movement the closing chorale is a version of Vetter s 1713 four part setting Liebster Gott borrowed and reworked by Bach The four other movements of the cantata a succession of arias and recitatives were composed by Bach for vocal and instrumental soloists The anonymous libretto for these movements is an expanded paraphrase of the second to fourth stanzas of Neumann s hymn Bach revived the cantata in the 1730s and after transposing it from E major to D major in the late 1740s After Bach s death the cantata was revived again in Leipzig in the mid 1750s The vocal parts of its closing chorale were published in the second half of the 18th century in Birnstiel s and Breitkopf s collections of four part chorales by Bach The Bach Gesellschaft BG published the cantata in 1851 in the first volume of their collected edition of Bach s works John Troutbeck s translation When will God recall my spirit was published in a vocal score a few decades later Both the E major and D major versions of the cantata were published in the New Bach Edition NBE in 1982 Commentators have agreed in their praise for the cantata William G Whittaker wrote that Few cantatas are so wholly attractive and so individual as this lovely work Alfred Durr has written that The opening chorus presents the listener with a sublime vision of the hour of death and Arnold Schering states that The opening movement of the cantata must be ranked as one of the most arresting tone pictures ever penned by Bach There have been many recordings of the cantata starting with that by Karl Richter in 1959 In the 1970s there were period instrument recordings of all the cantatas by Helmuth Rilling and by Gustav Leonhardt Nikolaus Harnoncourt Later recordings include those by Joshua Rifkin Philippe Herreweghe Ton Koopman and John Eliot Gardiner Contents 1 Compositional history 1 1 Background 1 2 Hymn and melody 1 3 BWV 8 1 in E major 1 4 BWV 8 2 in D major 2 Music and text 2 1 Text and translations 2 2 Scoring 2 3 Movements 2 3 1 1 2 3 2 2 2 3 3 3 2 3 4 4 2 3 5 5 2 3 6 6 3 Manuscripts and scores 3 1 Autograph manuscripts and copyists 3 2 Chronology 3 3 Score editions 4 Closing chorale 5 Reception 5 1 Eighteenth and nineteenth century 5 2 Critical appraisal 6 Recordings 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksCompositional history edit nbsp The Raising of the Son of the Widow of Nain L Cranach II Stadtkirche Wittenberg c 1570 nbsp Caspar Neumann writer of the hymn nbsp Daniel Vetter composer of the hymn nbsp J A Silbermann engraving c 1720 Johann Scheibe s organ in St Paul s Church Leipzig rebuilt 1710 1716 under Vetter s supervision and evaluated by Bach in 1717 1 2 nbsp Engraving of St Thomas School and St Thomas Church in Leipzig 1723 Background edit All of Bach s cantatas for the Trinity XVI occasion meditate on death a theme linked to the Gospel reading 3 4 In Bach s day a common interpretation of the Gospel reading was that it prefigured Christ resurrecting the faithful to eternal life and in this sense the reading inspired a longing for death an early death meant one would be sooner close to this desired resurrection 5 Two cantatas for the Trinity XVI occasion composed by Bach before BWV 8 take this approach on the theme of death 6 Komm du susse Todesstunde BWV 161 first performed in Weimar on 27 September 1716 7 8 Christus der ist mein Leben BWV 95 composed in Leipzig a year before BWV 8 and first performed on 12 September 1723 9 10 The second of these two cantatas was composed in Bach s first year as cantor at St Thomas in Leipzig as part of his first cantata cycle 11 For the Sundays after Trinity of 1724 around a year after he had moved to Leipzig Bach started his second cantata cycle 12 The cantatas of this cycle the chorale cantata cycle are each based on a pre existing Lutheran hymn and its chorale setting O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort BWV 20 a chorale cantata from Bach s second cycle was first presented in June 1724 and has a funereal theme comparable to that of a Trinity XVI cantata 13 14 BWV 8 a meditation on a Christian s death approaches the death theme differently from Bach s earlier Trinity XVI and BWV 10 cantatas anxious questions about the hour of death dominate the first half of the BWV 8 cantata while in its later movements such sorrows are dismissed with references to Christ and God s standfastness 6 15 14 Compared to the over 50 other chorale cantatas composed by Bach most of which are based on hymns and chorale melodies that were at least half a century old when Bach adopted them the BWV 8 cantata is based on relatively recent material that is by an author and a composer who lived into the 18th century Hymn and melody edit Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV 8 is one of Bach s church cantatas for the 16th Sunday after Trinity Trinity XVI 16 17 The prescribed readings for the Sunday were from the Epistle to the Ephesians praying for the strengthening of faith in the congregation of Ephesus Ephesians 3 13 21 and from the Gospel of Luke the raising from the dead of the young man from Nain Luke 7 11 17 18 Caspar Neumann a professor of Protestant theology and pastor from Breslau wrote Liebster Gott wann werd ich sterben a hymn in five stanzas of eight lines around 1690 19 3 20 21 Daniel Vetter a native of Breslau set Neumann s hymn in the first half of the 1690s 22 In 1695 this setting of the hymn was sung at the funeral of cantor Jakob Wilisius in Breslau 23 24 In 1713 Vetter published a SATB setting of his hymn tune Zahn No 6634 as the concluding piece Nos 91 92 of the second volume of his Musicalische Kirch und Hauss Ergotzlichkeit scores lit Musical Refreshment for Church and Home 25 22 23 26 27 28 The two volumes of that publication totalling 221 four part settings of Lutheran chorale melodies were first printed in Leipzig 27 29 30 31 Aimed at the pious Leipzig merchant class for spiritual recreation or refreshment through music the simple four part organ chorales were paired with spinet or clavichord broken chord variations in the style brise then in vogue Like Bach s Orgelbuchlein composed during the same period Vetter s collection starts with Nun komm der Heiden Heiland It has one piece per page except for the final chorale Liebster Gott of the 1713 volume which is annotated on two full pages with four separate staves for cantus alto tenor and figured bass 32 33 27 nbsp Vetter s chorale Liebster Gott as published in 1713 From Kirsten Beisswenger s 1992 dissertation on Bach s personal Library Bachs Notenbibliothek BNB 34 it is surmised that the Bach family owned a copy of the second volume of Vetter s Musicalische Kirch und Haus Ergotzlichkeit 35 36 37 Vetter became organist at St Nicholas Church in Leipzig in 1679 after succeeding his teacher Werner Fabricius 38 Vetter s and Bach s paths crossed in 1717 since 1710 Vetter had been supervising the remodelling by Johann Scheibe de of the organ of St Paul s Church in Leipzig and in December 1717 in a famous report Bach examined and evaluated the rebuilt instrument with a discussion of Vetter s and his reimbursement 39 40 41 In January 1718 Vetter referred to Bach s appraisal of Scheibe s organ 42 Vetter died in Leipzig in 1721 43 44 BWV 8 1 in E major edit BWV 8 1 the first version of Bach s chorale cantata Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben was first performed in St Nicholas Church on 24 September 1724 45 46 47 The sermon was preached by Salomon Deyling 46 48 A volume of Texte zur Leipziger Kirchen Music lit Texts for Church Music in Leipzig containing the librettos of all five chorale cantatas which Bach first performed in September 1724 is extant The volume was printed by Immanuel Tietze likely by the time the first of these five cantatas was performed 49 50 Allein zu dir Herr Jesu Christ BWV 33 for Trinity XIII first performed on Sunday 3 September 1724 51 Jesu der du meine Seele BWV 78 for Trinity XIV first performed on Sunday 10 September 1724 52 Was Gott tut das ist wohlgetan BWV 99 for Trinity XV first performed on Sunday 17 September 1724 53 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV 8 1 for Trinity XVI first performed on Sunday 24 September 1724 45 Herr Gott dich loben alle wir BWV 130 1 for St Michael s Day first performed on Friday 29 September 1724 54 The Trinity XVI cantata of Bach s third cantata cycle Wer weiss wie nahe mir mein Ende BWV 27 was first performed on 6 October 1726 55 56 BWV 8 1 in E major was revived in the 1730s with changes to the type of flute 57 58 BWV 8 2 in D major edit Bach revived the cantata in the late 1740s with the key transposed down a whole tone from E major to D major 57 58 This version of the cantata BWV 8 2 59 is also extant and was likely first performed in September 1747 46 Some changes to the instrumentation were also implemented 60 for example in the first movement the two oboe d amore parts are given to concertante violins 61 and in the bass aria an oboe d amore plays colla parte with the first violins 62 Music and text editText and translations edit The first and last verses of Neumann s hymn correspond to the first and final movements of the cantata both of them choral movements The middle four movements were written by an anonymous librettist but conformed fairly closely to the spirit of Neumann s other three verses 63 46 Novello published John Troutbeck s translation in the 1870s 64 65 A translation by J Michael Diack was published by Breitkopf amp Hartel in 1931 66 Jean Lunn s translation was published in 1981 67 In 2020 Z Philip Ambrose published a revised edition of his 1980s translation of the cantata s text 68 Melvin P Unger published an interlinear translation of the cantata in 1996 69 Richard D P Jones s 2005 translation of Alfred Durr s 1992 book on Bach s cantatas contains a translation of the cantata s libretto 70 Pamela Dellal s translation of the libretto can be found on the Emmanuel Music website 71 Scoring edit BWV 8 1 is scored for 45 72 SATB soloists and choir horn flute fl originally flauto piccolo a high pitched recorder later replaced by a transverse flute 73 74 two oboes d amore oba strings str two violin parts and one viola part basso continuo bc For BWV 8 2 59 same vocal forces as BWV 8 1 taille traverso fl 2 oba str as in BWV 8 1 with additionally two solo violins vl bc Movements edit The cantata is in six movements 75 76 Movements of Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV 8 Incipit Text Type Time BWV 8 1 BWV 8 2 Key Scoring Key Scoring 1 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben Neumann Chorus 128 E tutti D tutti 2 Was willst du dich mein Geist entsetzen after Neumann Aria 34 c T oba bc b T vl bc 3 Zwar fuhlt mein schwaches Herz after Neumann Recitative nbsp g A A str bc f G A str bc 4 Doch weichet ihr tollen vergeblichen Sorgen after Neumann Aria 128 A B fl str bc G B fl oba str bc 5 Behalte nur o Welt das Meine after Neumann Recitative nbsp f g S bc e f S bc 6 Herrscher uber Tod und Leben Neumann Chorale nbsp E tutti D tutti 1 edit nbsp Opening movement of BWV 8 copyist C F Barth c 1755 77 nbsp Second page of opening movement of BWV 8 first line and start of second line of vocal chorale The opening chorale fantasia sets the first stanza of Neumann s hymn 78 The opening chorus is a gapped chorale setting of Vetter s melody The alto tenor and bass voices sing free counterpoint while the sopranos sing the chorale unadorned 22 Spitta described the sound of this movement as a church yard full of flowers in the springtime 38 As Durr comments the chorus with instrumental ensemble of high obbligato flute two oboes d amore and downward plucked arpeggios presents a sublime vision of the hour of death 46 79 80 Schering 1932 deems the opening movement of BWV 8 to be one of the most arresting tone pictures ever penned by Bach Although in principle it could be described as a choral movement the two or two and a half bar choral passages are so brief and separated by themselves from the extensive instrumental music of the ritornellos that they recede as it were into the shadows The primarily orchestral movement conjures up a poetic image of death with a mood of prayerful contemplation by the Christian soul This human spirit is captured without words by the two expressive oboes d amore As Schering writes Their constant sweet sounding strains overflow in tenderly articulate or light and gracefully swelling figures which treated in dialogue form constitute a stream of almost ceaseless melody The mournful mood is reflected by the choice of E major as key signature Schering then explains further poetic ideas involving the movement metaphysical questions concerning fate mortality and the hereafter He describes the old church in Leipzig with its five bells the highest and most piercing of which was the death knell The staccato repetitive semiquavers of the transverse flute played at the top of its register portray pealing bells in Bach s musical iconography unexpected and unsettling sounds for the listeners The musical imagery for death is completed by hushed pizzicato triplet quavers in the strings accompanied by solemn beats in the basso continuo Schering explains how Bach uses all possible musical resources in depicting the troubled soul interrupted cadences chromaticism and diminished sevenths With a careful balance between choir and delicately scored orchestra the whole movement will produce an extraordinarily powerful effect 81 Whittaker 1978 compares BWV 8 with the cantata O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort BWV 20 a chorale cantata Bach had composed slightly earlier in June 1724 He notes that although both cantatas have a similar funereal theme the two have a quite different spirit BWV 20 has biblical references to the Raising of Lazarus and its tortured mood resonates with boiling cauldrons devils and hell fire as depicted in Early Netherlandish morality paintings by Hieronymous Bosch and his contemporaries In contrast the biblical references for BWV 8 are to the Raising of the son of the widow of Nain instead of instilling fear it presents a vision where a penitential sinner despite their unworthiness can be saved by God s mercy and be rewarded in heaven Whittaker finds it unusual that Bach has produced two such differing approaches to death as disparate as those of Berlioz and Franck 14 Having taken note of underlying biblical references Whittaker explains the highly original musical conception for the first movement It is virtually a duet for two oboes d amore tender and mournful an example of endless melody long before Wagner coined the term With about 70 bars in the movement the mournful elegy seems oblivious of space and time The upper strings are accompanied by arpeggio triplet quaver motifs only interrupted four times The continuo only plays on the first and third of each beat throughout the movement creating an unearthly quality The obbligato transverse flute solo playing at its highest register is unique the semiquavers repeated 24 times represent the quavering soul while the arpeggiated semiquavers depict pealing bells According to Whittaker because the original chorale was not developed in any way the movement should strictly be regarded as an extended chorale instead of a chorale fantasia The cantus firmus of the chorale is quite different from those Bach normally used more florid with more changes of note lengths It is not suitable for use as augmentation Bach s habitual way of employing way the melody It is sung one beat per note accompanied by the horn sometimes with ornamentation only once does the cantus firmus play for more than 3 bars and except for once when it is joined by the tenor it starts alone on the upbeat Although Whittaker comments on the changes to scoring for the different versions with solo violins replacing the oboes d amore possibly because of technical breathing difficulties he concludes it is wholly unlike any other expansion of a chorale One may think of it as a solemn funeral which is watched by someone who is himself about to depart and who from time to time breathes to himself this hymn 82 After outlining the technical difficulties involving performances of BWV 8 for the virtuosic obbligato flute solo passages in the opening movement Anderson 2003 finds that the later version in D major might be easier to execute but loses the iridescent tonal palette of E major the original key Anderson writes of the first movement of the cantata The transcendentally beautiful opening chorus of Liebster Gott must rank among Bach s most poetic and alluring fantasias Although Bach composed profoundly moving cantatas evoking the death knell before hand BWV 161 BWV 73 BWV 95 and afterwards BWV 127 BWV 198 the first movement of BWV 8 is unique in the imaginative and tender way it summons up the haunting atmosphere of chiming death knells Two melodious oboes d amore the high pitched transverse flute and pizzicato strings provide the extensive orchestral passages which are interspersed with each short vocal line of Vetter s chorale The soprano cantus firmus is sung colla parte with the horn When all these components are combined Bach s music evokes a melancholy but affirmative and in no sense desolate picture 58 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben Meine Zeit lauft immer hin Und des alten Adams Erben Unter denen ich auch bin Haben dies zum Vaterteil Dass sie eine kleine Weil Arm und elend sein auf Erden Und denn selber Erde werden When will God recall my spirit Lives of men run swiftly by All who Adam s frame inherit One among his heirs am I Know that this befalls the race They but for a little space Dwell on earth in want and mourning Soon to earth themselves returning Caspar Neumann 83 translated by John Troutbeck 65 64 84 2 edit nbsp Aria for tenor and oboe d amore manuscript copied by C F Barth c 1755 The second movement in C sharp minor is a tenor aria characterized by continued tones of the death knell in the pizzicato accompaniment of the continuo The instrumental and vocal lines with its detached quavers ornamentation and imitative entries are an eloquent duet between the oboe d amore and the tenor 22 46 79 58 For Schering 1932 the aria is a model of Bach s high regard for the text Dealing again with Christian faith and human fear of death the theme is now of terror the musical motifs are angular and the mood anguished 81 Whittaker 1978 gives a detailed description of the musical structure of the tenor aria not a da capo aria In contrast to the first movement where the chorus comment watchfully the text and mood are more empassioned The aria begins with a ritornello an expressive oboe d amore solo accompanied by detached pizzicato quavers for the continuo representing the solemn funeral bells The 1727 aria Erbarme dich mein Gott Have mercy my God for alto and violin from the St Matthew Passion is identical melodically although the phrasing is slightly different This musical motif is one that Bach often associates with pity The ritornello continues with a lengthy passage for semiquavers where musical iconography again comes into play As the tenor takes over the instrumental material the oboe d amore accompanies imitatively The tenor is later heard with emphatic detached staccato crotchets as he sings schlagt strikes for the clock striking on the hour and later still the oboe d amore semiquavers are heard in parallel thirds with the tenor s soaring tausend thousand The extended second section begins with the words Mein Leib my body here the inversion of melody is heard twice with further parallel renditions of thousand and long sustained notes for Ruh rest accompany a restatement of the oboe d amore melody The second section concludes with the instrumental ritornello 85 Was willst du dich mein Geist entsetzen Wenn meine letzte Stunde schlagt Mein Leib neigt taglich sich zur Erden Und da muss seine Ruhstatt werden Wohin man soviel tausend tragt And why art thou my soul so fearful Expecting life s last hour so sound My frame is daily earthward making Repose therein I would be taking Repose which thousands more have found after Caspar Neumann 83 translated by John Troutbeck 65 64 3 edit The third movement is an alto recitative where the soloist sings of their fear of death 79 With a string accompaniment they sing of their questions of anxiety Phrygian cadences with the voice rising are heard twice this musical technique was how Bach liked to introduce a questioning tone 86 Schering 1932 writes What mastery in the last four bars alone forming a questioning close in the Phrygian mode 81 As described by Whittaker 1978 the soloist complains of wordly suffering and loss This beautiful setting is filled with emotion the first violin moves uneasily as if the soul were trying to raise its load 87 Zwar fuhlt mein schwaches Herz Furcht Sorge Schmerz Wo wird mein Leib die Ruhe finden Wer wird die Seele doch Vom aufgelegten Sundenjoch Befreien und entbinden Das Meine wird zerstreut Und wohin werden meine Lieben In ihrer Traurigkeit Zertrennt vertrieben Within my heart I bear fear sorrow care Where will my body rest be finding And who will from my soul the weight of life s transgressions roll their grievous yoke unbinding Possessions have I none and for those whom I love I ponder and ask when I am gone where they will wander after Caspar Neumann 83 translated by John Troutbeck 65 64 4 edit nbsp Obbligato transverse flute solo of the ritornello for the bass aria in BWV 8 Contrasting with the preceding recitative the fourth movement is a joyous bass da capo aria in jig tempo 22 46 79 There is a complete change of mood It is a delightful gigue a piece of unabashed dance music made to serve the purpose of the church With all despondency quelled the obbligato transverse flute starts its rhythmic solo in A major and 12 8 times In Bach s sacred works the flute was most often associated with death and mourning but here it evokes joyous laughter this kind of virtuosic writing with brilliant rapid semiquaver passage work and extraordinary leaps is reminiscent of the Brandenburg Concertos or Orchestral Suites for example the last movements of the Third Fifth or Sixth Brandenburg Concerto or the Badinerie from Suite No 2 88 81 89 90 Little amp Jenne 2001 discuss Bach s gigue from the perspect of baroque dance music A special kind of 12 8 gigue used by Bach was singled out the Giga II his most complex exploratory and challenging They are characterised by their subdivided beats e g triplets normally with an upbeat a joyous and intense mood jigging rhythms long phrases without break and a dance like lilt Little and Jenne write that these were the farthest from actual dancing or any choreographic associations at all more of an instrumental excursion than any other Baroque dance type except the allemande It is easy to see why Bach was attracted to it even though his German contemporaries were not The bass aria falls into this category 91 92 The 16 bar ritornello for solo flute and strings has several striking characteristics the rollicking tune in the first two bars the quirky responses in quavers and semiquavers in bars three and four the leaping passages which dart up and below in bar five and even more so in bar six the sustained note a halo announced by an ornamental triplet in the flute while the first violins take up the boisterous tune in bars eight and nine the quaver triplet scales in bar eleven the triplet arpeggios cavorting upwards in bars twelve and thirteen and three repeating semiquaver motifs in bar fifteen that prepare for the final cadence The other parts of the ritornello involve rapid semiquaver passage work for the flute often in sequences as the strings gently accompany either with detached crotchets or long sustained notes 88 After the ritornello the singing of the bass soloist begins with a section of 22 bars There is an expository section for bass flute and strings The bass starts with its romping melody for two bars accompanied by the halo motif on the flute and a new sighing response in the strings the flute responds with the last two bars of the ritornello the bass then sings another two bars of the tune with the flute and strings swapping their roles After that bass and flute perform a duet with the strings playing the samme accompanying role as in the ritornello detached crotchets or long sustained notes The new music for the bass singer combines rapid semiquaver runs and turns detached quavers and long sustained notes this material is matched to the earlier flute motifs The flow is broken as the bass asks Mich rufet mein Jesus wer sollte nicht gehn in detached phrases accompanied on the flute by triplet scales and three bars of high pitched arpeggios Accompanied only by the continuo the bass then sings the same question to the tune of the triplet scale and arpeggio figures without pause the flute and strings play a two and a half bar coda similar to the end of the ritornello 88 The music of the next 15 bars is sung to the second part of the text and corresponds to the middle da capo section The bass here plays a more dominant role starting off in a dance like rhythm with several octave leaps There are initially gently responses from flute and strings Then as the bass solo starts to sing the staccato crotchets nichts the flute commences a motto perpetuo accompaniment with the repeating semiquaver motifs in sequence and sustained strings With strings playing only detached crotchets the bass solo begins a new long sequences of semiquaver figures on verklaret in parallel with the flute With an octave leap the bass sings a sustained Jesus As the flute in a flourish takes up its original jig tune in the relative minor accompanied by short sighs in the strings the bass sings verklaret with an octave leap and a one and a half bar note for the second syllable With just the continuo the bass finishes his phrase with herrlich vor Jesu zu stehn 88 The da capo section starts off with the 16 bar ritornello for flute and strings repeated without change The final section lasts 24 bars thus 22 bars for bass flute and strings plus a two and a half bar coda for orchestra alone The first six bars are identical to the corresponding solo bass section At that point a half bar of two semiquaver scales is introduced in the orchestra while the key modulates through D major to E major Otherwise with some adaptations flute and strings play as before but now off beat For the bass solo almost all of the musical material is unaltered a few semiquaver motifs become closer to those of the flute The final solo bass phrase with continuo acquires an additional half bar for the last words wer wollte ich gehn The movement concludes with a two and a half bar coda for flute and strings ending on an A major cadence 88 89 Doch weichet ihr tollen vergeblichen Sorgen Mich rufet mein Jesus wer sollte nicht gehn Nichts was mir gefallt Besitzet die Welt Erscheine mir seliger frohlicher Morgen Verklaret und herrlich vor Jesu zu stehn Yet silence for thoughtless and vain is my sorrow He calls me my Saviour and who would not go Nought would I receive which this world can give Appear then o blessed and lifegiving morrow In glory unclouded my Lord I will know after Caspar Neumann 83 translated by John Troutbeck 65 64 5 edit The fifth movement is a short secco recitative for soprano and continuo 86 79 The confident mood of the bass aria is maintained in the soprano line 81 Whittaker 1978 paraphrases the last sentence of the text Und kann nicht sterben as and cannot die He notes that In spite of the happiness of the mood Bach cannot resist falsifying the meaning of the sentence by painting die with a melisma involving a diminished third 93 Behalte nur o Welt das Meine Du nimmst ja selbst mein Fleisch und mein Gebeine So nimm auch meine Armut hin Genug dass mir aus Gottes Uberfluss Das hochste Gut noch werden muss Genug dass ich dort reich und selig bin Was aber ist von mir zu erben Als meines Gottes Vatertreu Die wird ja alle Morgen neu Und kann nicht sterben Whate er I have o world then take thou My very flesh and bones thine own now make thou Take poverty among the rest Enough that out of God s unbounded store The highest good on me will pour Enough that I am with heavenly wealth am blessed Of mine what gift is there to cherish Except the truth that God is true But that is ev ry morning new and can not perish after Caspar Neumann 83 translated by John Troutbeck 65 64 6 edit nbsp Closing chorale of BWV 8 copyist C F Barth c 1755 77 The chorus and orchestra unite in the final chorale 46 79 94 Wolff notes that the texturally transparent and rhythmically vibrant setting of the closing chorale is informed by the treatment of the opening chorus 95 Emil Platen and Christoph Wolff have observed that when Bach adapted or borrowed chorales from more recent composers such as Vopelius or Vetter he composed in a more fashionable and melodic style 95 96 According to the concluding sentence of Durr amp Jones 2006 there is a brief secco recitative after which all participants unite in the concluding chorale borrowed from Daniel Vetter albeit with radical alterations According to Whittaker 1978 Bach s musical treatment of the closing chorale closely modelled on Vetter s original from 1713 is modernistic and closer to songs from the Schemellis Gesangbuch 78 Mostly the soprano voice leads with an upbeat followed by the lower voices and for the concluding Schanden shame the harmony is forlorn Whittaker writes the basses have a splendid phrase sinking from upper C to low E The flute is instructed to double the melody ottava 97 Arnold Schering summarises the last movement as follows After the mood thus established has been re asserted by the soprano in a Recitative there follows the final Chorale this time arranged on a plan unusual with Bach The crotchets of each line are separated into upbeat quavers and in one or two voices are made to precede the others Hence a certain liveliness is achieved a happy counterpart to the spirit of joy attained in the bass aria 98 As Anderson 2003 comments a single crotchet bass note and a key change from A major to E major signal the beginning of the final chorale contrary to Bach s usual method of composition he did not produce an original harmonisation but adopted Vetter s as a gesture of appreciation towards a predecessor whom Bach must have respected 58 Herrscher uber Tod und Leben Mach einmal mein Ende gut Lehre mich den Geist aufgeben Mit recht wohlgefasstem Mut Hilf dass ich ein ehrlich Grab Neben frommen Christen hab Und auch endlich in der Erde Nimmermehr zuschanden werde Thou that life and death ordainest Make it mine in peace to die Let me yield the soul Thou trainest With a courage calm and high Grant that I an honoured grave With the holy dead may have Earthly grief and toil forsaking Nevermore to shame awaking Caspar Neumann 83 translated by John Troutbeck 65 64 84 Manuscripts and scores editAutograph manuscripts and copyists edit nbsp Obbligato solo in the first oboe d amore part at the beginning of J S Bach s cantata Autograph manuscript 1724 nbsp Obbligatio solo traverso part for opening movement of J S Bach s cantata D major version Autograph manuscript 1747 Although first performed in 1724 Bach s original manuscript for the vocal and orchestral parts of BWV 8 1 did not remain in the archives of the St Thomas Church around 150 years later the autograph manuscripts were acquired by the Royal Library of Belgium in Brussels In fact after Bach s death the music publishing company of Johann Gottlob Immanuel Breitkopf at the 1761 Michaelmas Fair in Leipzig started to advertise their own catalogue of hand copied and printed versions of sacred cantatas at that stage uniquely for feast days Apart from the two churches where Bach previously had duties the St Thomas Church and the St Nicholas Church the only church where concerts were regularly held was the Neukirche With a second Breitkopf catalogue for 1770 interest in church music was even more in decline during the second half of the eighteenth century possibly as a result of changing fashions with demands for more performable and simpler repertoire Breitkopf expressed regret that amateur musicians are not used to playing from engraved and printing editions but often prefer to play from more expensive handwritten copies With his company failing in 1796 Breitkopf sold his business concerns to Gottfried Christoph Hartel 99 100 Although the history of how Bach s autograph parts were transmitted to Brussels has become well known the role as copyists of schoolboys at the Thomasschule has been harder to establish Recently Maul 2018 has devoted a book to the topic In 2003 Michael Maul and Peter Wollny settled a mystery about a previously unidentified copyist for BWV 8 He had been described by Gottingen musicologists Durr and Kobayashi as the Doles copyist Schreiber der Doles Partituren because of the association with C F Doles Thomaskantor from 1756 until 1789 101 102 Maul amp Wollny 2003 discovered that the copyist was Carl Friedrich Barth born in 1734 the son of a merchant from Glauchau Barth became a chorister at the Thomasschule in 1746 where he was picked out by Bach for his skills in Latin to become music prefect After leading performances at the Thomaskirche and Nikolaikirche he enrolled at the University of Leipzig in 1757 to study philosophy and theology In 1770 he was appointed as a Cantor in Borna where he died in 1813 77 103 104 Although in 1803 Hartel stated that the Bach family had already received a large sum for purchasing Bach s inherited manuscripts the statement required some degree of qualification The rebranded company of Breitkopf amp Hartel advertised its 1810 Catalogue of Church Music that can be obtained in accurate and clean copies Amongst the Bach cantatas listed were BWV 8 as well as Widerstehe doch der Sunde BWV 54 BWV 80 BWV 97 BWV 117 BWV 118 and BWV 131 Hartel died in 1827 sending the publishing firm once more into financial disarray with grim years under shakey management This instability led to a great auction on 1 June 1836 to alleviate matters Original manuscripts were offered to the highest bidders although a few large libraries acquired copies it is still possible that some manuscripts remain undiscovered elsewhere At that auction the score of BWV 54 in the hand of Johann Gottfried Walther and the autograph manuscript parts of BWV 8 were purchased by Francois Joseph Fetis the Belgian musicologist Following Fetis death in 1871 BWV 8 and BWV 54 were acquired in 1872 by the Bibliotheque Royale Albert 1er in Brussels 105 100 Carl Friedrich Barth who had become a pupil of the St Thomas School in Leipzig in 1746 was a copyist who worked for Bach and his successors Gottlob Harrer and Johann Friedrich Doles 106 In the period between Harrer s demise 9 July 1755 and the start of Doles s tenure January 1756 he was together with Christian Friedrich Penzel acting Thomascantor 77 Around this period of Barth and Penzel s interim cantorate Barth copied a number of cantatas by Bach among these copies is an extant score of the E major version of BWV 8 102 101 107 103 104 Doles revived the D major version of the cantata after 1756 108 Original performance parts of the D major version of the cantata survive 59 3 These manuscripts partially in Bach s handwriting remained in Leipzig after the composer s death where they are conserved by the Bach Archive since the second half of the 20th century 109 3 Chronology edit Spitta thought based on his research that both the E major and D major versions of the cantata were composed in 1723 or 1724 110 In 1957 Durr published his research which found that the E major version was first performed of on 24 September 1724 and the D major version on a later date 111 Yoshitake Kobayahshi determined the chronology for Bach s late compositions and performances including the revival of BWV 8 in its D major version 102 These researchers relied on scientific methods such as use of watermarks and handwriting as well as working out possible copyists from that period 77 112 Score editions edit The cantata was first published in 1851 when the BG included it as No 8 in the first volume of their collected edition of Bach s works 113 The BG score in E major mixes elements from the BWV 8 1 and 8 2 versions 29 114 The edition was based on two manuscript copies of the E major version and the original manuscript of the D major performance parts which at the time were archived at the St Thomas School 61 A separate edition of both versions followed only in 1982 when they were included separately in the NBE s volume containing Bach s Trinity XVI and XVII cantatas edited by Helmuth Osthoff and Rufus Hallmark 29 115 In 2017 an updated version of Reinhold Kubik s 1981 edition of the BWV 8 1 version supplemented with a foreword by Hans Joachim Schulze was issued in the Stuttgarter Bach Ausgaben series 116 Closing chorale edit nbsp nbsp nbsp Vetter s four part setting 1713 nbsp nbsp nbsp Bach s four part setting See also Liebster Gott wann werd ich sterben Bach s son Carl Philipp Emanuel published the vocal parts of the cantata s closing chorale BWV 8 6 in the Birnstiel and Breitkopf editions of his father s four part chorales 26 No 47 p 24 in Birnstiel s 1765 publication No 43 p 24 in Breitkopf s 1784 publication Comparing Vetter s four part setting of his Liebster Gott wann werd ich sterben melody 1713 to the last movement of Bach s cantata Winterfeld wrote 24 Der Tonsatz Vetters uber diese seine Melodie den wir bereits fruher mit Bezug auf einen von Joh Sebastian Bach mittheilten Beispiel 97 a b gewahrt gegen diesen gehalten eine anziehende Vergleichung da er uns zeigt wie mit wenigen Zugen und anscheinend unerheblichen Veranderungen der gleichzeitige grosse Meister der loblichen Erfindung seines Kunstgenossen die letzte Vollendung gegeben hat Vetter s setting of this melody of his which we have already communicated earlier in connection with one by J S Bach example 97a and b offers a compelling comparison when the former is held against the latter while it shows us how with a few touches and seemingly insignificant modifications the contemporaneous great master gave the ultimate completion to the praiseworthy realisation of his fellow artist Carl von Winterfeld 1847 24 translation After referring to Vetter s four part setting published in 1713 and to Winterfeld s comments about it Spitta wrote Bach hat die vierstimmige Arie gekannt denn eben dieselbe ist es welche wenn auch umgearbeitet so doch in leicht wieder zu erkennender Gestalt den Schluss seiner Cantate ausmacht Man sieht wieder Bach hielt seine Leipziger Kunstvorganger in Ehren Bach must have known this four part aria for it is the same which appears at the end of his cantata in a somewhat altered form but easily recognisable Here again we perceive that Bach held his Leipzig predecessors in due honour Philipp Spitta 1880 117 Bell Fuller Maitland translation 38 Platen mentioned the closing chorale of BWV 8 in an article published in the 1975 edition of the Bach Jahrbuch describing the chorale movement as a reworked version of Vetter s 1713 four part setting 96 In 1991 and 1996 the musicologist Frieder Rempp published critical commentaries on the closing chorale for the New Bach Edition NBE 26 The closing chorale was listed as spurious in the 1998 edition of the Bach Werke Verzeichnis prepared by the Gottingen musicologists Durr and Kobayashi 112 The closing chorale is listed as a spurious work in the third Anhang of the 1998 edition of the Bach Werke Verzeichnis it is a reworked version of Vetter s 1713 four part setting 96 118 119 According to Durr translated by Jones Bach adopted Vetter s four part chorale setting with radical alterations 30 120 The Bach Digital website does not list the BWV 8 6 chorale among Vetter s compositions 26 44 Vetter s setting of Neumann s hymn is not homophonic according to Philipp Spitta it is not strictly a chorale but a sacred aria 38 Reception editEighteenth and nineteenth century edit Jorgenson 1986 Jorgenson 1996 and Sposato 2018 have written in detail about changes in the musical life of Leipzig both during Bach s lifetime and its aftermath The difficulties in finding students from the university available to perform as instrumentalists was already a problem while Johann Kuhnau was Thomaskantor responsible for two main churches the Nikolaikirche and the Thomaskirche as well as the Neuekirche With Bach replacing Kuhnau arranging church performances became more orderly Apart from secular concert music in the Cafe Zimmermann there were public concerts advertised as Concerts Spirituels in the Gewandhaus and the open air At the end of the eighteenth century Protestant worship and liturgical music was reformed in Saxony with hardly any use of Latin in the church With the turn of the century Germany saw a Bach renewal in which Felix Mendelssohn and Robert Schumann were to play an important role The musicians Franz Hauser and Moritz Hauptmann also became active in this movement At one stage Hauser asked Mendelssohn whether he might wish to be successor as Thomaskantor but with Mendelssohn s prompting and encouragement it was Hauptmann who assumed that post in 1842 albeit reluctantly Aided by Hauser whose personal collection of Bach manuscripts was one of the largest in Germany Hauptmann Schumann and his colleagues Otto Jahn and Carl Becker started the Bach Gesellschaft in 1850 and soon after in 1851 Hauptmann published the first volume of ten cantatas BWV 1 10 with Breitkopf amp Hartel Hauptmann and Hauser became directors of the conservatory in Leipzig and Munich respectively and the pair carried on a long correspondence which has been documented in German and English For cantatas Hauptmann records that although separate movements might be suitable for public performance changes in nineteenth century practices often made it hard to find suitable instrumentalists Other musicians such as Johann Nepomuk Schelble who had conducted a performance of BWV 8 in Frankfurt am Main considered that eighteenth century recitatives might no longer be suitable for the public so could be cut Carl von Winterfeld expressed doubts about whether Bach s larger sacred works could find a lasting place in a newly united newly invigorated and strength evangelical church of our day 121 122 123 According to 19th century hymnologist Carl von Winterfeld Bach felt more at ease with hymn tunes from a less distant past such as Cruger s Jesu meine Freude and Schmucke dich o liebe Seele Drese s Seelenbrautigam choralwiki and Vetter s Liebster Gott wann werd ich sterben than those by earlier generations of composers when adopting these chorale melodies in his own compositions the older melodies go against the grain of how music was experienced in his own time 124 citation needed Moritz Hauptmann who edited the cantata for the Bach Gesellschaft BG edition reckons that the D major arrangement was made for ease of performance E major being a more difficult key for wind instruments than D major and virtuoso parts such as the instrumental solos in the first movement are easier to perform by violins than by oboes 61 citation needed According to Philipp Spitta the D major version greatly facilitates the labours of the oboe players 110 Critical appraisal edit The cantata was praised by among others Philipp Spitta Arnold Schering William G Whittaker and Alfred Durr Commentators have agreed in their praise for the cantata According to Spitta The melodious and elaborate bass air and the two recitatives fully correspond in beauty to the other pieces 125 Schering states that The opening movement of the cantata must be ranked as one of the most arresting tone pictures ever penned by Bach Whittaker wrote that Few cantatas are so wholly attractive and so individual as this lovely work 78 and Durr translated by Jones has written that The opening chorus presents the listener with a sublime vision of the hour of death 46 The praise does however not extend to the D major arrangement According to Hauptmann the arrangement did not benefit the music for instance the solo violins having naturally a less pronounced volume than oboes have more difficulty to let their melodies be heard in the first movement 61 Also in Jones s translation of Durr the D major version of the cantata is qualified as having a makeshift character 29 This appears as a footnote in Durr amp Jones 2006 the editor Helmuth Osthoff prepared the D major version of the cantata for the Neue Bach Ausgabe in 1982 prior to Durr s German 1971 book on the cantatas 126 127 Recordings edit nbsp Philippe Herreweghe and his Collegium Vocale Gent Both E major and D major versions of the cantata have been recorded The aria of the BWV 8 2 version was recorded by Ton Koopman with Klaus Mertens as bass soloist with the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra and the chorus of that version by Koopman s pupil Masaaki Suzuki and the Bach Collegium Japan in addition to the full cantata in E major 128 The Dutch website Muziekweb lists several recordings of the cantata 128 Munchener Bach Chor Munchener Bach Orchester Karl Richter Bach Cantatas Vol 4 Sundays after Trinity Archiv Produktion 1959 129 Leonhardt Consort Choir of King s College Cambridge Gustav Leonhardt Teldec 1971 129 Bach Collegium Stuttgart Helmuth Rilling Hanssler Classic 1979 The Bach Ensemble Joshua Rifkin Decca L Oiseau Lyre 1988 455 706 2 American Bach Soloists Jeffrey Thomas Koch 1992 Collegium Vocale Gent Philippe Herreweghe Harmonia Mundi France 1998 Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra amp Choir Ton Koopman Challenge Classics 2000 CC72212 Monteverdi Choir English Baroque Soloists John Eliot Gardiner Soli Deo Gloria 2000 104 Bach Collegium Japan Masaaki Suzuki BIS 2004 CD1351 Notes edit Butler 2016 p 5 Wolff amp Zepf 2012 pp 47 50 83 86 a b c d Bach amp Schulze 2017 p 4 Durr amp Jones 2006 p 551 Durr amp Jones 2006 p 544 a b Durr amp Jones 2006 pp 551 552 Durr amp Jones 2006 Komm du susse Todesstunde BWV 161 pp 542 546 Komm du susse Todesstunde BWV 161 at Bach Digital Durr amp Jones 2006 Christus der ist mein Leben BWV 95 pp 546 550 Christus der ist mein Leben BWV 95 at Bach Digital Durr 1957 p 61 Durr 1957 pp 47 48 O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort BWV 20 at Bach Digital a b c Whittaker 1978 p 488 Lee 2005 p 127 Bach amp Schulze 2017 pp 1 4 Durr amp Jones 2006 Durr amp Jones 2006 p 542 Koch 2001 Neumann Caspar at Bach Digital Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV deest NBA Serie III 2 at Bach Digital a b c d e Bach amp Schulze 2017 p 5 a b Zahn 1891 a b c Winterfeld 1847 p 487 Rose 2005 a b c d Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV 8 6 at Bach Digital a b c Winterfeld 1847 pp 486 487 Vetter 1713 No 91 a b c d Durr amp Jones 2006 p 552 a b Vetter 1713 Vetter 1709 Rose 2005 p 39 Rathey Markus 2010 Buxtehude and the Dance of Death The Chorale Partita Auf meinem lieben Gott BuxWV 179 and the Ars Moriendi in the Seventeenth Century Early Music History 29 Cambridge University Press 161 188 doi 10 1017 S0261127910000124 JSTOR 40800911 S2CID 190683768 Stauffer George B 1994 Review of Johann Sebastian Bachs Notenbibliothek by Kirsten Beisswenger Notes 50 Music Library Association 1388 1390 doi 10 2307 898311 JSTOR 898311 Yearsley 2019 p 219 Leaver Robin A 2017b Luther s Liturgical Music Principles and Implications Lutheran Quarterly Books Fortress Press p 286 ISBN 9781506427164 Beisswenger 1992 a b c d Spitta 1899 II p 432 David Mendel amp Wolff 1999 Wolff amp Zepf 2012 p 145 147 Butler 2016 p 1 Butler 2016 p 2 Marshall 2002 a b Vetter Daniel at Bach Digital a b c Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben 1st version BWV 8 1 at Bach Digital a b c d e f g h i Durr amp Jones 2006 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV 8 pp 550 553 Leaver 2017 p 505 Petzoldt Martin Texte zu Bachs Leipziger Kirchenmusik in German Carus Verlag Archived from the original on 24 July 2012 Retrieved 8 November 2020 Richter 2018 Schabalina 2009 pp 12 16 20 II Ein Heft mit Texten zu Kantaten J S Bachs aus dem Jahr 1724 37 40 facsimile Allein zu dir Herr Jesu Christ BWV 33 at Bach Digital Jesu der du meine Seele BWV 78 at Bach Digital Was Gott tut das ist wohlgetan BWV 99 at Bach Digital Herr Gott dich loben alle wir 1st version BWV 130 1 at Bach Digital Durr amp Jones 2006 Wer weiss wie nahe mir mein Ende BWV 27 pp 553 556 Wer weiss wie nahe mir mein Ende BWV 27 at Bach Digital a b Durr amp Jones 2006 p 550 a b c d e Anderson 2003 a b c Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben 2nd version BWV 8 2 at Bach Digital Durr amp Jones 2006 pp 550 552 a b c d Bach 1851 editor s preface p XIX Bach 1982 pp 205 218 Bach amp Schulze 2017 pp 4 5 a b c d e f g Bach 1880 a b c d e f g Bach 1932 Bach 1931 Bach 1981 Ambrose 2020 Unger 1996 Durr amp Jones 2006 pp 550 551 Dellal translation Bischof 2013 Durr amp Jones 2006 p 34 Suzuki 2004 Durr amp Jones 2006 pp 550 551 Bach amp Schulze 2017 p 2 a b c d e Maul amp Wollny 2003 a b c Whittaker 1978 a b c d e f Smith 2013 In the E major version of 1724 the marking for the broken chords in the upper strings is con sordini sempre staccato in the D major version of 1747 the marking is sempre pizzicato a b c d e Schering 1932 Whittaker 1978 pp 488 490 a b c d e f Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben 1 Fassung Text at Bach Digital website a b Terry 1917 pp 497 537 538 Whittaker 1978 pp 490 492 a b Durr amp Jones 2006 p 553 Whittaker 1978 p 492 a b c d e Whittaker 1978 pp 492 494 a b Lee 2005 p 127 128 Little amp Jenne 2001 Little amp Jenne 2001 pp 64 169 In Appendix B of the later online jstor edition the bass aria is listed as of type Giga II Lee 2005 pp 127 130 Whittaker 1978 p 494 Dahn 2019 a b Wolff 2020 a b c Platen 1976 Whittaker 1978 p 490 Bach 1932 English preface page ii Glockner 1996 pp 27 29 a b Schulze 1996 a b Durr 1957 a b c Kobayashi 1988 a b Barwald 2016 a b Maul 2018 Glockner 1996 pp 29 32 Williams 2016 p 262 Boomhower 2014 Yearsley 2019 pp 218 219 Rettinghaus 2020 a b Spitta 1899 II p 696 Durr 1957 p 74 a b Durr amp Kobayashi 1998 Bach 1851 Bach 1851 editor s preface pp XIX XX Bach 1982 Bach amp Schulze 2017 Spitta 1880 p 264 Dahn 2018 Durr amp Kobayashi 1998 p 468 Durr amp Jones 2006 p 553 Jorgenson 1986 Jorgenson 1996 p 110 121 Sposato 2018 Winterfeld 1847 pp 308 309 Spitta 1899 II p 433 Durr Alfred 1971 Die Kantaten von Johann Sebatian Bach Kassel Barenreiter Verlag Durr amp Jones 2006 p 552 a b Cantate voor soli 4 koor en orkest BWV 8 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben Muziekweb in Dutch Retrieved 28 June 2020 a b Anderson 2012 References edit Allein zu dir Herr Jesu Christ BWV 33 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2020 08 26 Christus der ist mein Leben BWV 95 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2020 08 26 Herr Gott dich loben alle wir 1st version BWV 130 1 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2020 08 17 Jesu der du meine Seele BWV 78 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2020 08 17 Komm du susse Todesstunde BWV 161 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2019 09 13 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben 1st version BWV 8 1 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2020 08 17 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben 2nd version BWV 8 2 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2020 04 08 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV 8 6 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2019 05 22 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV deest NBA Serie III 2 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2018 07 15 Neumann Caspar Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2019 04 08 O Ewigkeit du Donnerwort BWV 20 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2020 11 23 Vetter Daniel Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2019 07 04 Was Gott tut das ist wohlgetan BWV 99 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2020 08 17 Wer weiss wie nahe mir mein Ende BWV 27 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al 2020 08 19 Ambrose Z Philip 2020 BWV 8 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben ISBN 9781664119840 via University of Vermont Department of Classics J S Bach Texts of the Vocal Works with English Translation and Commentary Anderson Nicholas 2003 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben In Boyd Malcolm Butt John eds J S Bach Oxford Companions Series Oxford University Press p 267 ISBN 9780198606208 Anderson Nicholas 19 April 2012 The Bach cantatas recording project The Bach Players Bach Johann Sebastian 1851 Hauptmann Moritz ed Joh Seb Bach s Kirchencantaten Erster Band No 1 10 Joh Seb Bach s church cantatas First volume Nos 1 10 Johann Sebastian Bach s Werke in German Vol 1 Bach Gesellschaft Breitkopf amp Hartel Editor s preface pp XV XX Score of cantata No 8 BWV 8 pp 211 242 B W I Bach Johann Sebastian 1880 1870s When will god recall my spirit Cantata for the sixteenth Sunday after Trinity Translated by Troutbeck John London Novello OCLC 972835050 Bach Johann Sebastian 1931 Raphael Gunter ed Kantate Nr 8 am sechzehnten Sonntage nach Trinitatis Liebster Gott wann werd ich sterben BWV 8 Vocal score translated by J Michael Diack Wiesbaden Breitkopf amp Hartel Bach Johann Sebastian 1932 Liebster Gott wann werd ich sterben Domenica 16 post Trinitatis Eulenburg miniature scores in German and English Vol 1028 Translated by Troutbeck John Foreword by Schering Arnold London Eulenburg ISMN 9790200208719 OCLC 869254885 ISMN number for 2009 reprint Bach Johann Sebastian 1981 Kubik Reinhold ed Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV 8 Kantate zum 16 Sonntag nach Trinitatis O my God when shall I perish BWV 8 Cantata for the 16th Sunday after Trinity in German and English Translated by Jean Lunn Continuo realisation by Paul Horn Hanssler ISBN 0193900815 OCLC 8406017 Bach Johann Sebastian 1982 Osthoff Helmuth Hallmark Rufus eds Kantaten zum 16 und 17 Sonntag nach TrinitatisKantaten BWV 8 1 und 2 Fassung 27 95 161 Fassung A und B BWV 47 114 148 Anhang Autographe Fassung des 2 Satzes BWV 47 Neue Ausgabe samtlicher Werke in German Barenreiter ISMN 9790006462780 Complete edition Critical commentary Anthology Bach Johann Sebastian Schulze Hans Joachim 2017 Kubik Reinhold ed Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV 8 Kantate zum 16 Sonntag nach Trinitatis O my God when shall I perish BWV 8 Cantata for the 16th Sunday after Trinity Urtext edition Stuttgarter Bach Ausgaben full score ed Carus Verlag German foreword by Hans Joachim Schulze 2006 with English translation by David Kosviner pp 3 5 score edited by Reinhold Kubik 1981 1996 with translation of libretto by Jean Lunn and continuo realisation by Paul Horn pp 7 78 31 008 1724 version in E major Barwald Manuel 2016 Recent Research Developments In Leaver Robin A ed The Routledge Research Companion to Johann Sebastian Bach Routledge pp 480 481 ISBN 9781409417903 Beisswenger Kirsten 1992 Johann Sebastian Bachs Notenbibliothek Johann Sebastian Bach s musical library in German Barenreiter p 321 ISBN 978 3 7618 1036 1 Bischof Walter F 2013 BWV 8 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben University of Alberta Retrieved 3 November 2013 Boomhower Daniel F 2014 C P E Bach Sources at the Library of Congress Notes 70 4 Music Library Association 597 660 doi 10 1353 not 2014 0049 JSTOR 43672821 S2CID 191630085 Butler Lynn Edwards 2016 Bach s Report on Johann Scheibe s Organ for St Paul s Church Leipzig In Dirst Matthew ed Bach s Report on Johann Scheibe s Organ for St Paul s Church Leipzig A Reassessment Bach Perspectives Vol 10 University of Illinois Press pp 1 15 doi 10 5406 illinois 9780252040191 003 0001 ISBN 9780252040191 JSTOR 10 5406 j ctt18j8xkb 5 LCCN 2015041912 OCLC 927141379 Dahn Luke 2018 So how many Bach four part chorales are there bach chorales com Retrieved 28 June 2020 Dahn Luke 2019 Chorale 8 6 in the key of E major bach chorales com Retrieved 28 June 2020 David Hans Theodore Mendel Arthur Wolff Christoph 1999 The New Bach Reader A Life of Johann Sebastian Bach in Letters and Documents W W Norton pp 83 86 ISBN 9780393319569 Dellal Pamela BWV 8 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben Emmanuel Music Retrieved 20 August 2022 Durr Alfred 1957 Zur Chronologie der Leipziger Vokalwerke J S Bachs On the chronology of Bach s Leipzig vocal works Bach Jahrbuch in German 44 Bach Gesellschaft 1 158 Durr Alfred Kobayashi Yoshitake eds 1998 Bach Werke Verzeichnis Kleine Ausgabe Nach der von Wolfgang Schmieder vorgelegten 2 Ausgabe Bach Works Catalogue Small Edition After Wolfgang Schmieder s 2nd edition in German Kirsten Beisswenger collaborator BWV2a ed Wiesbaden Breitkopf amp Hartel ISBN 9783765102493 Preface in English and German Durr Alfred Jones Richard D P 2006 2005 Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV 8 The Cantatas of J S Bach With Their Librettos in German English Parallel Text Oxford University Press pp 550 553 ISBN 9780199297764 Glockner Andreas 1996 Church Cantatas in the Breitkopf Catalogs in Stauffer George B ed J S Bach the Breitkopfs and Eighteenth Century Music Trade Bach Perspectives vol 2 translated by George B Stauffer University of Nebraska Press pp 27 33 Jorgenson Dale A 1986 Moritz Hauptmann of Leipzig Studies in the history and interpretation of music Vol 2 E Mellen Press ISBN 9780889464278 Jorgenson Dale A 1996 The Life and Legacy of Franz Xaver Hauser A Forgotten Leder in the Nineteenth century Bach Movement SIU Press ISBN 9780809319756 Kobayashi Yoshitake 1988 Zur Chronologie der Spatwerke Johann Sebastian Bachs Kompositions und Auffuhrungstatigkeit von 1736 bis 1750 On the chronology of the last phase of Bach s work compositions and performances 1736 to 1750 Bach Jahrbuch in German 74 Bach Gesellschaft 6 66 Koch Peter 2001 Caspar Neumann In Heyde C C Seneta E eds Statisticians of the Centuries Springer pp 29 32 doi 10 1007 978 1 4613 0179 0 6 ISBN 9780387952833 Leaver Robin A 2017 Life and Works 1685 1750 The Routledge Research Companion to Johann Sebastian Bach Routledge pp 487 539 ISBN 9781315452814 Lee Kayoung 2005 The Role of the 12 8 Time Signature in J S Bach s Sacred Vocal Music PhD University of Pittsburgh Docket etd 08022005 145802 Unpublished Little Meredith Jenne Natalie 2001 Dance and the Music of J S Bach Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253214645 JSTOR j ctt16xwc0p 20 the subsequent expanded edition is available online Marshall Robert L 2002 Vetter Daniel Grove Music Online Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 29266 Maul Michael Wollny Peter 2003 Quellenkundliches zu Bach Auffuhrungen in Kothen Ronneburg und Leipzig zwischen 1720 und 1760 Bach Jahrbuch in German 89 Neue Bachgesellschaft 97 141 doi 10 13141 bjb v20031784 Maul Michael 2018 Bach s Famous Choir The Saint Thomas School in Leipzig 1212 1804 Woodbridge ISBN 9781783271696 Platen Emil 1976 Zur Echtheit einiger Choralsatze Johann Sebastian Bachs On the authenticity of some of Johann Sebastian Bach s chorale settings In Schulze Hans Joachim Wolff Christoph eds Bach Jahrbuch 1975 Bach Yearbook 1975 Bach Jahrbuch in German Vol 61 Neue Bachgesellschaft Berlin Evangelische Verlagsanstalt pp 50 62 doi 10 13141 bjb v1975 Rettinghaus K ed 2020 01 13 D LEb Thomana 8 Fascicle 1 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al Richter G ed 2018 09 09 RUS SPsc 17 141 2 111 Bach Digital Leipzig Bach Archive et al Rose Stephen 1 February 2005 Daniel Vetter and the Domestic Keyboard Chorale in Bach s Leipzig Early Music 33 1 Oxford University Press 39 53 doi 10 1093 em cah040 JSTOR 3519514 Schabalina Tatjana 2009 Texte zur Music in Sankt Petersburg Weitere Funde Texts for Music in Saint Petersburg further discoveries In Wollny Peter ed Bach Jahrbuch 2009 Bach Yearbook 2009 Bach Jahrbuch in German Vol 95 Translated by Bojarkina Albina Contreras Koob Alejandro Neue Bachgesellschaft Leipzig Evangelische Verlagsanstalt pp 11 48 doi 10 13141 bjb v2009 ISBN 978 3 374 02749 1 ISSN 0084 7682 Schulze Hans Joachim 1996 J S Bach s Vocal Works in the Breitkopf Nonthematic Catalogs of 1761 to 1836 in Stauffer George B ed J S Bach the Breitkopfs and Eighteenth Century Music Trade Bach Perspectives vol 2 translated by George B Stauffer University of Nebraska Press pp 35 49 Smith Craig 2013 BWV 8 Emmanuel Music Retrieved 28 May 2013 Spitta Philipp 1880 Johann Sebastian Bach in German Vol II Leipzig Breitkopf amp Hartel Spitta Philipp 1899 Johann Sebastian Bach His Work and Influence on the Music of Germany 1685 1750 Translated by Bell Clara Fuller Maitland John Alexander Novello amp Co Vol I Vol II Vol III Sposato Jeffrey S 2018 Leipzig After Bach Church and Concert Life in a German City Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0190616984 Suzuki Maasaki 2004 Liner notes Cantatas No 24 BWV 8 33 113 PDF BIS Terry Charles Sanford 1917 The Hymns and Hymn Melodies of the Cantatas and Motetts Bach s Chorals Vol II Cambridge University Press Unger Melvin P 1996 Handbook to Bach s Sacred Cantata Texts an Interlinear Translation with Reference Guide to Biblical Quotations and Allusions Scarecrow Press pp 26 29 ISBN 9780810829794 Vetter Daniel 1709 Musicalische Kirch und Hauss Ergotzlichkeit Musical Church and Home Delectation in German Vol 1 1st ed Leipzig Christoph Friedrich Rumpff Vetter Daniel 1713 Musicalische Kirch und Hauss Ergotzlichkeit Musical Church and Home Delectation in German Vol 2 Leipzig OCLC 857536916 Whittaker William Gillies 1978 1959 The Cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach Sacred and Secular Vol I reprint ed Oxford University Press pp 488 494 ISBN 019315238X Williams Peter 2016 Bach A Musical Biography Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781316531389 Winterfeld Carl von 1847 Der Evangelische Kirchengesang im achtzehnten Jahrhunderte Evangelical sacred song in the 18th century Der evangelische Kirchengesang und sein Verhaltniss zur Kunst des Tonsatzes in German Vol III Leipzig Breitkopf amp Hartel Wolff Christoph 2020 Bach s Musical Universe The Composer and His Work W W Norton amp Company p 141 ISBN 9780393651799 Wolff Christoph Zepf Markus 2012 The organs of Johann Sebastian Bach a handbook Translated by Lynn Edwards Butler University of Illinois Press ISBN 9780252078453 Yearsley David 2019 Sex Death and Minuets Anna Magdalena Bach and Her Musical Notebooks University of Chicago Press pp 217 220 ISBN 9780226617701 Zahn Johannes 1891 Die Melodien der deutschen evangelischen Kirchenlieder in German Vol IV Bertelsmann p 130 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to BWV 8 Cantata Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV 8 Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Meinrad Walter 2009 Sterben Betrubnis Dank Drei dramatische Themen in J S Bachs musikalischer Sprache des Glaubens bachkantaten ch van Hengel Edouard Johann Sebastian Bach Liebster Gott wenn werd ich sterben BWV 8 Johann Sebastian Bach vocale werke in Dutch Retrieved 21 September 2020 Portal nbsp Classical music Retrieved 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