Scoring and structure Bach structured the cantata in eleven movements in two parts, Part I (movements 1–6) to be performed before the sermon, Part II (7–11) after the sermon. He scored it for three vocal soloists (
soprano (S),
tenor (T) and
bass (B)), a
four-part choir SATB, three
trumpets (Tr) and
timpani only in the final movement, four
trombones (Tb) (only in Movement 9 and only in the 1723 version to double voices in the fifth stanza of the chorale),
oboe (Ob), two
violins (Vl),
viola (Va), and
basso continuo (Bc), with
bassoon (Fg) and
organ (Org) explicitly indicated. The duration is given as 44 minutes. In the following table of the movements, the scoring and
keys are given for the version performed in Leipzig in 1723. The keys and
time signatures are taken from
Alfred Dürr, using the symbol for common time (4/4). The instruments are shown separately for winds and strings, while the continuo, playing throughout, is not shown. • 3/4 • }} }} }} • 3/4 • }} }}
Movements , who conducted the
Bach Cantata Pilgrimage, in 2007 The music for this early cantata uses
motet style in the choral movements.
Biblical words are used in a prominent way. They are treated in choral movements, different from other cantatas of the Weimar period where they were typically composed as recitatives.
John Eliot Gardiner, who conducted all of Bach's church cantatas in 2000 as the
Bach Cantata Pilgrimage, termed the cantata "one of the most extraordinary and inspired of Bach's vocal works". He notes aspects of the music which are similar to movements in Bach's early cantatas, suggesting that they may have been composed already when Bach moved to Weimar in 1708: the psalm verses resemble movements of cantatas such as , and , the dialogue of the Soul and Jesus (movement 8) is reminiscent of the , and the hymn in motet style (movement 9) recalls movements 2 and 5 of the
chorale cantata .
Part I Themes of deep suffering, pain and mourning dominate the music in the first part of the cantata. Gardiner notes that five of the six movements are "set almost obsessively in C minor".
1 The work is opened by a
Sinfonia similar to the cantata , possibly the slow movement of a concerto for oboe and violin. A sighing
motif, the picture of a storm of tears, and the flood image conjured by the upwelling music characterizes the dark and oppressive feeling.
2 The first vocal movement is a choral motet on the psalm verse "" (I had much trouble in my heart). The music has two contrasting sections, following the contrast of the psalm verse which continues "" (but your consolations revive my soul). The word "" (I) is repeated several times, followed by a
fugal section. A
homophonic setting of (but) leads to the second section, in free
polyphony, marked . It broadens to for a solemn conclusion.
3 The soprano aria "" (Sighs, tears, anguish, trouble) is one of the first arias in Italian style in a Bach cantata, accompanied by an
obbligato oboe.
4 The tenor sings in accompanied recitative with the strings "" (What? have You therefore, my God,).
5 The tenor, accompanied by the strings, intensifies the mood: "" (Streams of salty tears).
6 A consoling verse from a psalm is treated as a closing motet of Part I: "" (Why do you trouble yourself, my soul). Alfred Dürr analyzes in detail how different means of expression follow the text closely, with shifts in tempo and texture, culminating in a "permutation fugue of remarkably logical structure" on the final "" (for being the help of my countenance and my God).
Part II The second part begins in a different mood, through the trust of sinners in the grace of God. In a recitative and an aria, the Soul (soprano) and Jesus (bass as the voice of Christ) enter a dialogue, leading to a final choral movement as a strong hymn of praise.
7 Soprano and bass enter a dialogue in accompanied recitative with the strings. The Soul asks: "" (Ah, Jesus, my peace, my light, where are You?). Dialogue was common in Protestant church music from the 17th century but is especially dramatic here.
8 Soprano and bass unite in an
aria: "" (Come, my Jesus, and revive / Yes, I come and revive), accompanied only by the continuo. It resembles passionate love duets from
contemporary opera. {{Image frame { \new ChoirStaff > }
9 , the author of the hymn "" In a movement unusual in Bach works, biblical text from a psalm, "" (Be at peace again, my soul), is juxtaposed with two stanzas from
Georg Neumark's hymn, stanza 2, "" (What good are heavy worries?), and stanza 5, "" (Think not, in your heat of despair,) The first hymn stanza is sung by tenors while solo voices render the biblical text. In the second stanza the soprano has the melody and the voices are doubled by a choir of trombones introduced in the Leipzig version of 1723.
10 The tenor aria "" (Rejoice, soul, rejoice, heart) is accompanied only by the continuo. Dürr describes the mood as "spirited, excited abandon".
11 The concluding movement is a motet on a quotation from Revelation, "" (The Lamb, that was slain). Three trumpets and timpani appear only in this triumphant movements of praise. It begins in homophony and expresses the text "" (Glory and honour and praise and power) in another permutation fugue with a climax in the subject played by the first trumpet. == Recordings ==