Structure and scoring The cantata is structured in five movements, with alternating arias, recitatives and a four-part chorale. Bach scored for a
bass soloist, a four-part choir () in the closing chorale, and a
Baroque instrumental ensemble of two
oboes (Ob),
taille (Ot), two
violins (Vl),
viola (Va),
cello (Vc), and
basso continuo. Except for the
obbligato oboe in the third movement, the three oboes double the violins and viola
colla parte. The title page of the autograph score reads:
"Domin. 19 post Trinit. / Ich will den Xstab gerne tragen / a / 2 / Hautb. o Viol. / Viola o / Taille / 4 Voci / Basso solo / e / Cont. / di / J.S.Bach". The score begins with the line "" ("J.J. Sunday 19 after Trinity, Cantata for solo voice, and instruments"), making it one of the few works Bach termed a
cantata. It is 21 minutes long. In the following table, the scoring follows the (
New Bach Edition). The
keys and
time signatures are from
Alfred Dürr, and use the symbol for common time. The continuo, played throughout, is not shown.
Movements Musicologist and Bach scholar
Christoph Wolff wrote that Bach achieves "a finely shaded series of timbres" in . The four solo movements are scored differently: all instruments accompany the opening aria; only the continuo is scored for the
secco recitative, an obbligato oboe adds colour to the central aria, and strings intensify for the
accompagnato recitative. All instruments return for the closing chorale. In his biography of Bach,
Albert Schweitzer points out that is among the few works in which Bach carefully marked the
phrasing of the parts; others are the
Brandenburg Concertos, the
St Matthew Passion, the
Christmas Oratorio and a few other cantatas, including and , BWV 60.
1 The opening aria begins with "" ("I will my cross-staff gladly carry, it comes from God's beloved hand."). The German text with
Henry Drinker's English translation reads: It is in
bar form (AAB pattern), with two (A) followed by an (B). The first begins with a for full
orchestra—with the theme initially heard in the second oboe and violin parts—anticipating in
counterpoint the rising and falling motif of the bass soloist. An
augmented second C♯ emphasises the word , followed by descending sighing figures symbolising the bearing of the cross. \new StaffGroup > \layout { indent = 2\cm } \midi {\tempo 4 = 72 }
John Eliot Gardiner, who conducted the
Bach Cantata Pilgrimage in 2000, described the beginning of the bass melody as a musical rebus, or conjunction of two words, -, with the upward part "a harrowing
arpeggio to a
sharpened seventh (of the sort
Hugo Wolf might later use)", and the downward part as "six and a half bars of pained descent to signify the ongoing burden of the Cross". After the soloist sings a series of
melismatic lines, groups of strings and oboes are introduced as counterpoint, echoing motifs from the opening . The refrain is again taken up in the second
stollen, but with significant variations due to the differing text: "It leads me after my torments to God in the Promised Land". After a repeat of the opening , the final contains the words, "There at last I will lay my sorrow in the grave, there my Saviour himself will wipe away my tears" (""). Declamatory
triplets, spanning the bass register, are responded to in the accompaniment by sighing motifs. A reprise of the orchestral
ritornello ends the aria. In his book ''L'esthétique de J.-S. Bach'',
André Pirro describes Bach's use of prolonged notes and sighing motifs, reflecting the suffering on the cross (). They give an impression of resistance, of hesitation and hindrance, as the rhythm is arduously dragged along, breaking the momentum of the melody: "They take on a faltering demeanour, both uncertain and overwhelmed, like the stride of a man enchained in shackles." Pirro continues that in the soloist's opening phrases of the aria, the repeated notes have particular importance; the motif not only conveys an impression of encumbrance but also of unrelieved distress; the melismatic
vocalise displays an unsure hesitant feeling, like that of a sick pilgrim struggling to make his way along the dark recesses of an unfamiliar flight of steps; it conveys weakness and anxiety; the aria, constantly drawn out, seems imbued with an infinite weariness.
2 In the second movement, the recitative "" ("My pilgrimage in the world is like a sea voyage"), the sea is evoked by the undulating cello accompaniment of the semiquaver
arpeggiation. The German text and Drinker's English translation read: In his 1911 biography of Bach, Schweitzer wrote that the composer was often inspired by a single word to create an image of waves, and recommended augmenting the cello with a viola and bassoon to give more weight to the image. According to Gardiner, the style harks back to the 17th-century music of Bach's forebears—the assuring words from the
Book of Hebrews, "" ("I am with you, I will not leave nor forsake you"), are a "whispered comfort".
3 The third movement, the
da capo aria "" ("Finally, finally my yoke must fall away from me"), illustrates a passage from
Isaiah. The full German text with Drinker's English translation reads: The lively and joyous
concertante is written as a duet for obbligato oboe, bass soloist and continuo, and is full of elaborate
coloraturas in the solo parts. According to Gardiner, in the aria "one senses Bach bridging the gap between living and dying with total clarity and utter fearlessness".
4 The fourth movement, "" ("I stand ready to receive the inheritance of my divinity with desire and longing from Jesus' hands"), is a with strings. The German text and Drinker's translation read: It begins as an impassioned recitative, with sustained string accompaniment. After seven bars the time signature changes from 4/4 to 3/4, resuming a simple, calm version of the second half of the
abgesang from the first movement and repeating words related to the
Book of Revelation in a triplet rhythm: "" ("There my Saviour Himself wipes away my tears"). According to
William G. Whittaker, in an unusual departure from music of that period, Bach displayed "a remarkable stroke of genius" in the reprise of the
abgesang for the recitative, marked
adagio. It is heard like a distant memory of the cantata's beginning, when the anguished Pilgrim yearned for the Promised Land. Now, however, the mood is of joyful ecstasy; it reaches a climax when the word "Heiland" is heard on a high note in a moment of sustained exaltation; finally, "above a pulsating bassi C, the tear-motive in the upper strings sinks slowly in the depths". Gardiner describes this change similarly: " ... now slowed to adagio and transposed to
F minor, and from there by means of melisma floating effortlessly upwards, for the first time, to
C major".
5 The final four-part chorale, "" ("Come, o death, brother of sleep"), with the orchestra doubling the vocal parts, is regarded as an inspired masterpiece. The imagery of the sea from the first recitative is revisited in what Whittaker calls an "exquisite hymn-stanza". Death is addressed as a brother of sleep and asked to end the voyage of life by loosening the rudder of the pilgrim's boat or 'little ship' (
Schifflein) and bringing it safely to harbour; it marks the end of the cantata's metaphorical journey. A metrical translation into English was provided by Drinker: The melody was written by Johann Crüger and published in 1649. Bach set the tune in a four-part setting, BWV 301, and introduced dramatic
syncopation for the beginning "" ("come"). At the end of the penultimate line, torment and dissonance are transformed into glory and harmony and illuminate the words "" ("For through you I will come to my beloved Jesus"). As Whittaker comments: "The voices are low-lying, the harmonies are richly solemn; it makes a hushed and magical close to a wonderful cantata." Gardiner notes that it is Bach's only setting of Crüger's melody, which recalls the style of his father's cousin
Johann Christoph Bach whom Bach regarded as a "profound composer". Psychologist and
gerontologist notes that the chorale conveys the transformation and transition from earthly life to an eternal harbour. He compares the setting to "", the closing chorale of Bach's
St John Passion, which is focused on sleep and awakening. Both settings end their works with "impressive composure" (""). == Manuscripts and publication ==