Structure and scoring Bach structured the cantata in six movements, beginning with
chorale fantasia, followed by a series of alternating recitatives and arias and concluded by a chorale. He scored it for three vocal soloists (
soprano (S),
tenor (T) and
bass (B)), and a
Baroque instrumental ensemble of
violins (Vl), two
violas (Va), and
basso continuo (Bc), including
cello (Vc) and
bassoon (Fg). The
autograph score is titled: "Dominica 1. Adventus Xsti. / Nun komm der Heyden Heyland. / â . / due Violini / due Viole / Violoncello / è & / Fagotto. / Sopr: Alto. Tenore è Baßo / Col' / Organo. / da / Joh Sebast Bach / anno. / 1714". The duration is given as 18 minutes. According to the Bach scholar
Christoph Wolff, the use of two viola parts is French style. Dürr notes that perhaps the strings were doubled by oboes, at least in the Leipzig performance, in a practice that was "not always marked in the score". In the following table of the movements, the scoring,
keys and
time signatures are taken from Dürr, using the symbol for common time (4/4). The continuo, playing throughout, is not shown. }} }}
Movements 1 The first Sunday of Advent begins the liturgical year. Bach marked it by creating the opening chorus, "" (Now come, Saviour of the Gentiles), as a
chorale fantasia in the style of a
French overture, which follows the sequence slow – fast (
fugue) – slow. In a French opera performance, the King of France would have entered during the overture; Bach greets a different king. Two of the four lines of the chorale melody are combined in the first slow section, line three is treated in the fast section, and line four in the final slow section. The melody of line 1 is first presented in the continuo, then sung by all four voices one after another, accompanied by a solemn dotted rhythm in the orchestra. Line 2 is sung by all voices together, accompanied by the orchestra. Line 3 is a fast , with the instruments playing , marked "gai". Line 4 is set as line 2. Wolff notes that Bach possibly followed the model of an opera by
Agostino Steffani,
Henrico Leone, which uses a chorus in a French overture.
2 The recitative for tenor, "" (The Saviour has come), begins but continues as an , with tenor and continuo imitating one another. This more lyrical style of recitative derives from early
Italian operas and cantatas, where it was known as '''' – half aria.
3 The tenor aria, "" (Come, Jesus, come to Your Church), is accompanied by the violins and violas in
unison. It is written in the rhythm of a
gigue, and the combination of voice, unison strings and continuo gives it the texture of a
trio sonata. Dürr comments that the use of the unison string ritornello, played even during the vocal passages, provides a "rather pointedly strict and unified character". The musicologist
Richard Taruskin commented: "This hybridization of operatic and instrumental styles is ... standard operating procedure in Bach's cantatas."
4 The quote from Revelation, "" (See, I stand before the door and knock), is given as a recitative to the bass as the (voice of Christ). The knocking on the door is expressed by chords in the strings. Dürr notes: "The most expressive text-engendered declamation is here ingeniously melted down into a structure only ten bars long but of compelling musical logic."
John Eliot Gardiner, who conducted the
Bach Cantata Pilgrimage in 2000, compares it to an Emmaus scene in Bach's later cantata
Bleib bei uns, denn es will Abend werden, BWV 6, the "post-Resurrection appearance to the disciples" in
Halt im Gedächtnis Jesum Christ, BWV 67, even to "the entry of the Commendatore in Mozart’s opera
Don Giovanni. Bach would later frequently use the bass as the voice of Christ, in his
St Matthew Passion even with a similar string accompaniment.
5 The response to the invitation is the individual prayer of the soprano, "" (Open, my whole heart). It is accompanied only by the continuo, with an
adagio middle section.
6 In the closing chorale, "" (Amen, amen! Come, you fair crown of joy), Bach sets the
Abgesang only of the final stanza of Nicolai's hymn. The musicologist Julian Mincham offers the thought: "Conceivably the most convincing explanation lies, as it so often does, within the text– ... do not delay, I await You longingly. The hymn tune itself, through its very abbreviation implies a sense of urgency and the feeling of being unable to defer any longer." In Bach's setting, the violin adds a jubilant fifth part to the four vocal parts. The violin has to "climb three octaves to convey the extent of the soul's longing for the joys of a future life and the prospect of Jesus returning at the end of time". == Recordings ==