Structure and scoring Bach structured the cantata in six movements. The first and last are set for choir as a chorale fantasia and a closing chorale. They frame alternating recitatives and arias with the text arranged by the librettist. Bach scored the work for three vocal soloists (
alto (A),
tenor (T) and
bass (B)), a
four-part choir, and a
Baroque instrumental ensemble:
cornett (Ct) to reinforce the soprano chorale tune in the last movement,
trombone (Tb) to reinforce the bass chorale tune in the first movement, two
oboes (Ob), two
violins (Vl),
viola (Va), and
basso continuo (Bc). The duration of the cantata has been stated as 17 minutes. In the following table of the movements, the scoring follows the
Neue Bach-Ausgabe. The
keys and
time signatures are taken from the book by Bach scholar
Alfred Dürr, using the symbols for common time (4/4) and
alla breve (2/2). The instruments are shown separately for winds and strings, while the continuo, playing throughout, is not shown.
Structure The opening chorus is a
chorale fantasia as in the previous chorale cantatas. Bach had started the first one of his second cycle with the
cantus firmus of the chorale tune in the soprano, in this fourth work the bass has the honour. According to the Bach scholar
Christoph Wolff, the first four cantatas of the cycle form a group, distinctively different in their chorale fantasias. After a
French Overture (), a
motet () and an Italian concerto (), the movement is an "extraordinary filigree of vocal and instrumental counterpoint" of the chorale melody. All parts, even the instruments, take part in the polyphonic setting of the tune. Bach used the melody, originally a love song, later for the first chorale of his
Christmas Oratorio, "", and several times in his
St Matthew Passion, most prominently "". All eight lines of the text are first treated instrumentally, then vocally. The instrumental anticipation is a trio without continuo of oboe I and II against the strings, which play in
unison the cantus firmus. In stark contrast to this high texture, the four-part vocal setting is dominated by the cantus firmus in the bass, reinforced by the trombone and the continuo. The strings play
colla parte with the other voices. On the words "" (that I may live forever) the cantus firmus is broadened to three times as slow. In the tenor recitative, "rushes of notes" illustrate the images of the repentant sinner's "tears, which, like rapid rivers, roll down my cheeks. My soul is anxious and fearful with terror". It is concluded by an original line from the chorale, "Ah, Lord, why so long?". In the tenor aria, accompanied by the two oboes, the "collapse in death" is pictured by falling sevenths, "silent in death" by long silences. The alto recitative opens with an original line of the chorale, "I am weary of sobbing", expressed in a variation of the first line of the tune. The bass aria is a vigorous call, "Hence, all you evildoers". The strings play a forceful two-bar phrase, repeated twice at lower pitches, at which point it soars upwards and becomes increasingly dispersive in nature. In Bach's Obituary, written by
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach and
Agricola and published in 1754 mention is made of his distinctive melodies which are described as "strange" and "like no others". This is a good example; scrupulously shaped and crafted, ranging over nearly three octaves and carried forward through jagged shapes whilst radiating an unprecedented vigour and all the time reflecting the imagery of the text. The cantata closes with a four-part chorale, the soprano reinforced by the cornett. == Recordings ==