Structure and scoring Bach structured the cantata in two parts. Part I contains seven movements and is to be performed before the sermon while Part II has four movements and is to be performed after the sermon. Part I begins with a
chorale fantasia, and both parts are concluded by the same four-part setting of two other stanzas of the chorale. The inner movements are mostly alternating recitatives and arias, with the last aria a duet. Bach scored the work festively for three vocal soloists (
alto (A),
tenor (T) and
bass (B)), a
four-part choir (
SATB), and a
Baroque instrumental ensemble:
tromba da tirarsi (slide trumpet, Tt), three
oboes (Ob), two
violins (Vl),
viola (Va), and
basso continuo (Bc).
Alfred Dürr gave the cantata's duration as 31 minutes. In the following table of the movements, the scoring follows the
Neue Bach-Ausgabe. The
keys and
time signatures are taken from 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.
Movements The opening chorus, beginning not only the cantata but also the second annual cantata cycle, is in the style of a solemn
French Overture in the typical three sections slow – fast (
vivace) – slow. The French Overture was designed to mark the entry of the king. The melody is sung by the soprano as a
cantus firmus in long notes, doubled by the slide trumpet. The chorale is in
bar form. The first
Stollen of three lines is handled in the slow section, the second
Stollen of lines 4 to 6 in the fast section, the
Abgesang of lines 7 an 8 in the concluding slow section. The lower voices are mostly in
homophony. The development of
themes happens in the orchestra. The rising theme of the slow section in dotted rhythm is derived from the beginning of the chorale tune, whereas the theme of the fast section is not related to the tune. The fast section is not a strict
fugue. Bach uses a number of musical illustrations to complement the text: "" (eternity) is rendered in long notes in the lower voices and the instruments; "" (thunderous word) appears as a sudden change to short notes with a
melisma in the bass; on the words "" (great sadness), a downward chromatic line from the instrumental counterpoint in the fast section also appears in the voices; "" (terrified) is rendered in jarred rhythms interrupted by rests, first in the orchestra, then also in the voices; "" (cleave) is a long note in the voices.
John Eliot Gardiner, who conducted the
Bach Cantata Pilgrimage in 2000, summarised: "Confronted by the baffling and disquieting subject of eternity, and specifically the eternity of hell, Bach is fired up as never before". The recitatives are mostly secco, with an
arioso only in movement 9 on the words "" (splendor, pride, riches, honor, and wealth) from the chorale. The arias, by contrast, interpret the text in its
affekt and in single phrases. Gardiner notes the following about the first pair of recitative and aria: In movement 8, the call to wake up is intensified by trumpet signals and fast scales, evoking the
Last Judgement. The first motif in movement 10 is sung by the two singers of the duet on the words
O Menschenkind ("o child of man") and are repeated instrumentally as a hint of that warning. Both parts of the cantata are concluded by the same four-part chorale setting, asking finally "" (Take me, Jesus, if you will, into the felicity of your tent).
Chorale setting \header { tagline = " " } \layout { indent = 0 \context { \Score \remove "Bar_number_engraver" } } global = { \key f \major \numericTimeSignature \time 4/4 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \set Timing.beamExceptions = #'()} soprano = \relative c' { \global \repeat volta 2 { \partial 4 f8 g a4 bes c c | d e f\fermata f,8 g | a4 bes c c | bes a g\fermata a | f f bes a | g2 f4\fermata } c' | g a bes bes | a a g\fermata c | d e f a, | g g f\fermata \bar "|." } alto = \relative c' { \global \partial 4 c4 f e f a | bes8 a g4 a c, | f e e f | f8 e f4 e e | e d d8 e f4 | f e c f | g g fis g | g fis d f | f c'8 bes a g f4 | f e c } tenor = \relative c' { \global \partial 4 a8 bes c4 bes a8 c f4 | f c c a | d d c8 bes a4 | bes c c a | a a g a | d c8 bes a4 a | bes c d e! | a,8 bes c4 bes c | bes8 a g4 f8 g a bes | c g c bes a4 } bass = \relative c { \global \partial 4 f4 f g a f | bes c f, f8 e | d4 c8 bes a4 d | g,4 a8 bes c4 cis | d8 e f d g4 d8 c | bes4 c f, f' | e ees d cis | d d g, a | bes c d8 e f4 | c2 f,4 } \score { \new ChoirStaff > \new Lyrics \lyricsto "soprano" { > \set stanza = "7." Denn wird sich en -- den die -- se Pein, wenn Gott nicht mehr wird e -- wig sein. } \new Lyrics \lyricsto "soprano" { > \set stanza = "11." Nimm du mich, wenn es dir ge -- fällt, Herr Je -- su, in dein Freu -- den zelt! } \new Staff \with { midiInstrument = "choir aahs" \consists Merge_rests_engraver } > >> \layout { } \midi { \tempo 4=90 } } == Recordings ==