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The brief descriptions of the chorale preludes are based on the detailed analysis in and . :
To listen to a MIDI recording, please click on the link. • '
BWV 651 Fantasia super Komm, Heiliger Geist
'[Come, Holy Ghost], canto fermo in Pedale (cantus firmus chorale) :Over the pedal chorale melody sweeps an exuberant toccata, conveying the "rushing mighty wind" of the Holy Spirit; a second ornamented subject symbolises the
Hallelujas at the culmination of the hymn. • '
BWV 652 Komm, Heiliger Geist
'[Come, Holy Ghost], alio modo a 2 Clav. e Pedale (ornamental chorale) :The ornate chorale melody sings out above a lyrical and calm three-part sarabande, with flowing semiquavers marking the
Hallelujas of the coda, in this, the longest of the chorale preludes. • '
BWV 653 An Wasserflüssen Babylon
'[By the waters of Babylon], a 2 Clav. e Pedale (ornamental chorale) :The hymn "
An Wasserflüssen Babylon" is a paraphrase of
Psalm 137, a lament in exile in Babylon. The gentle
ritornellos of the accompanying parts in the two upper parts and pedal of this sarabande anticipate the ornamented chorale in the tenor, evoking the mournful tone of the hymn, the "organs and harps, hung up on willow trees", based on
Psalm 137. In a famous concert in 1720 on the great organ in
St Catherine's Church in
Hamburg, Bach had improvised for almost half an hour on the same hymn tune as a tribute to the church's organist
Johann Adam Reinken and his celebrated fantasy on the same theme. A derivation of the theme is used in the fugue from Bach's Violin Sonata No. 3 in C Major, BWV 1005. • '
BWV 654 Schmücke dich, o liebe Seele
'[Adorn yourself, dear soul], a 2 Clav. e Pedale (ornamental chorale) :The soberly ornamented, but
melismatic, chorale,
Schmücke dich, o liebe Seele, in the soprano alternates with the dance-like ritornellos of the two intertwining lower parts above a pedal bass; the unearthly counterpoint between the four parts creates an air of great serenity, a "rapturous meditation" on the rite of communion. The adornment in the title is illustrated by the French-style ornamentation of the upper parts. • '
BWV 655 Trio super Herr Jesu Christ, dich zu uns wend
'[Lord Jesu Christ, turn to us], a 2 Clav. e Pedale (chorale trio) :Similar in texture to movements from the organ
trio sonatas, this jubilant and lively concerto-like chorale prelude echos the "eternal joy and blissful light" of the last verse. The chorale prelude's progression through the keys of G, D, E minor, B minor, D and finally G, is reminiscent of Vivaldi concertos. The two manual solo parts and pedal continuo are based on elements from the cantus firmus, which is heard in its entirety in the pedal part of the recapitulation. • '
BWV 656 O Lamm Gottes unschuldig
'[Oh innocent lamb of God], 3 Versus (chorale partita) :The first verse of this
Good Friday hymn, is a subdued prelude in four parts based on the cantus firmus, which appears explicitly in the soprano line over the flowing quaver accompaniment; in the second verse the cantus firmus moves to the alto line and the quaver figures become more lively; in the final verse, the pedal finally appears to take up the cantus firmus, beneath a four-part fugal counter-subject in triplets, first in a forthright angular figuration, then in hammered repeated notes leading to an anguished chromatic passage, indicative of the crucifixion, and finally in peaceful flowing quavers. • '
BWV 657 Nun danket Alle Gott
'
[Now Thank We All Our God] (
Leuthen Chorale), a 2 Clav. e Pedale, canto fermo in Soprano (cantus firmus chorale) :This chorale prelude closely follows the model of Pachelbel, with a diversity of imitative elements in the lower parts, beneath the unadorned cantus firmus of the soprano line. • '
BWV 658 Von Gott will ich nicht lassen
'[I will not forsake the Lord], Canto fermo in Pedale (cantus firmus chorale) :The ornate three-part keyboard accompaniment is derived from the opening notes of the hymn and a separate "joy motif" that permeates the piece, exquisitely "winding above and around [the chorale melody] like a luxurious garland of amaranth." Only four lines of the cantus firmus are heard in the tenor pedal, the chorale prelude closing with a seemingly timeless bell-like coda over a pedal point, perhaps illustrating the final lines of the hymn, "after death we will be buried deep in the earth; when we have slept, we will be awoken by God." In this "bell" coda, the note c1 sharp is heard 7 times consecutively, within a fourth voice, outside of the three accompaniment voices. This is indicative of the German funeral bell. • Drone & Bach Quartet '
BWV 659 Nun komm' der Heiden Heiland
'[Come now, Saviour of the heathen], a 2 Clav. e Pedale (ornamental chorale) in G minor :Over the quavers of the continuo-like "
walking bass" in the pedal, the two inner parts move forward meditatively in canon, beneath the florid and melismatic cantus firmus of "
Nun komm, der Heiden Heiland". The beautiful melody, endlessly prolonged and never fully perceptible amid the freely spiraling arabesques, evokes the mystery of the
incarnation; it is matched by the perfection of the accompaniment. • '
BWV 660 Trio super Nun komm' der Heiden Heiland
'[Come now, Saviour of the heathen], a due Bassi e canto fermo (chorale trio) :This chorale prelude is unusually scored as a two-part invention for pedal and bass, with the ornamented cantus firmus in the soprano line following the original hymn melody fairly closely. The opening ritornello, played imitatively in canon, contains the notes of the cantus firmus—g, g, f♯, b♭, a, g, a, g— distributed between the two bass parts. • '
BWV 661 Nun komm' der Heiden Heiland
'[Come now, Saviour of the heathen], in Organo Pleno, Canto fermo in Pedale (cantus firmus chorale) :Beneath a three-part keyboard fugue, typical of Bach's large scale free organ fugues, with an angular quaver theme derived from the melody, the cantus firmus is heard in the pedal; the fugal theme, its counter-subject and their inversions are combined in numerous ways in the course of the piece. • '
BWV 662 Allein Gott in der Höh' sei Ehr
'[Alone to God on high be honour], a 2. Clav. e Pedale, Canto fermo in Soprano (ornamental chorale) :This chorale prelude, unusually marked
adagio, is based on "
Allein Gott in der Höh sei Ehr", a German version of the hymn
Gloria in excelsis Deo. It has two ornate fugal inner parts over a continuo-like pedal, with a florid and melismatic cantus firmus in the soprano, its figurations reminiscent of those for obligato violin or oboe in the
Weimar cantatas (e.g. the
sinfonia of
Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis, BWV 21). • '
BWV 663 Allein Gott in der Höh' sei Ehr
'[Alone to God on high be honour], a 2. Clav. e Pedale, Canto fermo in Tenore (cantus firmus chorale) :The accompanying ritornello of this chorale prelude takes the form of a trio sonata, the two fantasia-like upper parts, with their lively constantly varying contrapuntal quaver figurations, matched by a solid pedal continuo; the aria-like ornamented cantus firmus is heard in the long tenor part, with its quaver melismas and sighs. • '
BWV 664 Trio super Allein Gott in der Höh' sei Ehr
'[Alone to God on high be honour], a 2. Clav. e Pedale (chorale trio) :This is another chorale prelude similar to movements from the organ
trio sonatas, inventive, scintillating, joyous and concerto-like; the two independent solo parts and the pedal continuo are based on elements from the cantus firmus, the first two phrases of which are only heard right at the end of the piece in the pedal before the final pedal point and coda. The chorale prelude is in three parts: six fugal statements of the ritornello; a series of brilliant violinistic episodes with
suspensions, semiquavers and prolonged trills, punctuated twice by the ritornello in the minor mode; and a return of the ritornello over the cantus firmus ending in a long pedal point. • '
BWV 665 Jesus Christus, unser Heiland '[Jesus Christ, our Saviour],
sub communione, Pedaliter (chorale motet) :In this choral prelude, each of the four lines of the cantus firmus passes through the four different voices, accompanied by a counter-subject giving the musical colour appropriate to that line: the carrying of the Cross; God's anger; Christ's bitter suffering; and resurrection from the torment of Hell, for which Bach provides the longest and most elaborate pedal point of the whole collection. • '
BWV 666 Jesus Christus, unser Heiland
'[Jesus Christ, our Saviour], alio modo (chorale motet) :This short chorale prelude for keyboard alone is a simple form of the chorale motet, with the cantus firmus again passed between parts and a different counter-subject for each of the four lines of the hymn. • '
BWV 667 Komm, Gott, Schöpfer, Heiliger Geist
'[Come, God, the Creator, Holy Ghost], in Organo pleno con Pedale obligato (chorale partita) :This chorale prelude on
Martin Luther's
hymn for Pentecost "" consists of two variations linked by a bridging interlude: the first is a miniature chorale prelude almost identical to
BWV 631 in the
Orgelbüchlein, with an uninterrupted cantus firmus in the soprano line; in the second, the four lines of the cantus firmus are heard in the pedal, beneath a flowing imitative ritornello accompaniment on the keyboard. • '
BWV 668 Vor deinen Thron tret' ich hiermit
'[Before your throne I now appear] (fragment) (cantus firmus chorale) :The three-part imitative accompaniment in the pedal and lower keyboard of this chorale prelude is based on figures derived from the 4 different lines of the melody and their inversions; each line of the cantus firmus itself is heard in the simple soprano line, stripped of any embellishment, after its pre-imitation in the ritornello parts. == Variants ==