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Cantata No. 36, "Schwingt freudig euch empor," BWV 36 (BC A3)

 

Review

BWV 36 ("Soar joyfully aloft") has a particularly complex history. The version under consideration here represents Bach's reworking of a work that started life in 1725 as a secular cantata of the same name (BWV 36c). Composed to a libretto by the Leipzig civil servant and poet Picander (the pseudonym of the poet Christian Friedrich Henrici), the cantata was written as a birthday tribute to an unidentified Leipzig academic. The following year, Bach revived the work with a new text by Picander for the birthday of the wife of his old employer, Prince Leopold of Anhalt-Cöthen, with whom he maintained close contact after moving to Leipzig. This version, now lost, bears the name Steigt freudig in die Luft, BWV 36a. At some point between this second secular version and 1730, Bach decided to turn the work into a sacred cantata for Advent Sunday, adding a chorale and adapting it to a new text by an unknown author. In 1731, he returned to the work yet again, expanding it from five numbers to eight, while further restructuring and revising the existing numbers. Finally, in 1735, Bach returned the work to its secular origins using yet another new text, Die Freude reget sich (BWV 36b), probably also by Picander. According to the Bach scholar Christoph Wolff the occasion may have been the inauguration of the Leipzig professor Andreas Florens Rivinius as rector of the Thomasschule. The whole history of BWV 36 provides an interesting insight into the working methods of Bach, who, throughout his composing life, constantly reworked and refined material he considered to be of value.

The 1731 sacred cantata is a large-scale work divided into two parts, the first of which would have been performed before the sermon, the second afterwards.

The scoring of the cantata is the usual SATB vocal disposition, with solo arias for soprano, tenor, and bass; the instrumental forces are a pair of oboes d'amores, strings, and continuo. A particular feature of the 1731 version was the addition of three stanzas of Martin Luther's great Advent hymn "Nun komm der Heiden Heiland" (Nos. 2, 4, and 6), previously used in the two Advent cantatas which bear its name, BWV 61 and 62. For the final chorale Bach retained a strophe he had added in 1730 from another beautiful Advent hymn, Philip Nicolai's "Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern" (1599).

The opening chorus, as befits the season and its original secular celebratory origins, is a joyous affair; each part enters in imitation, but the writing involves both contrapuntal and homophonic passages. The only aria in the first part is for tenor; it is a dance-like movement in da capo form with an obbligato part for oboe d'amore, the text casting Jesus in the familiar role of bridegroom of the enraptured soul. Part two opens with a spirited aria for bass ("Welcome precious treasure"), the text calling on Jesus to enter the "pure heart." The final soprano aria is a delicately textured movement with muted string accompaniment. ~ All Music Guide

Albums with Complete Performances of the Work

Title Date
Bach 2000 Light: The Complete Bach Edition (without Sacred Cantatas) (includes Commemorative Book) (Box Set) 1999
Bach 2000 Light: The Complete Bach Edition (without Sacred Cantatas) (includes Commemorative Book) (Box Set) 1999
Bach 2000: The Complete Bach Edition (Includes Commemorative Book) (Box Set) 1999
Bach 2000: The Complete Bach Edition (Includes Commemorative Book) (Box Set) 1999
Bach 2000: The Complete Bach Edition (Includes Commemorative Book) (Box Set) 1999
Bach Edition: Cantatas BWV 36, BWV 184 & BWV 129
Bach Edition: Cantatas II [Box Set]
Bach Edition: Cantatas, BWV 36, 184, 129
Bach Edition: Complete Works [Box Set]
Bach Edition: Complete Works [Box Set] 2006
Bach Edition: Vol. 4 [Box Set]
Bach: Advent Cantatas 1992
Bach: Cantatas I 1999
Bach: Cantatas, BWV 1-64, Box 1 [Box Set] 2001
Bach: Cantatas, BWV 35-37 1982
Bach: Christmas Cantatas 2000
Bach: Das Kantatenwerk, Vol. 10
Bach: Kantaten 1997
Bach: Kantaten
Bach: Kantaten 140, 61 & 36 2003
Bach: Kantaten zum Weihnachtsfestkreis 1992
Bach: Made in Germany, Vol. 1 (Box Set) 1999
Bach: Sacred Cantatas 1 1999
Bach: Sacred Cantatas [Box Set] 1994
Bach: Sacred Cantatas, Vol. 2, BWV 20 - 36 [Box Set] 1994
Bach: The Sacred Cantatas [Box Set] 2007
Church Cantatas, Vol. 1-69
Das Kantatenwerk, Vol.10
Die Bach Kantate, Vol. 61 1992
J. S. Bach: Cantates de fêtes [Box Set]
J.S. Bach: Adventskantaten, BWV 36, 61 & 62
J.S. Bach: Cantatas, Vol. 18 2005
J.S. Bach: Geistliche Kantaten [Box Set] 2008
J.S. Bach: Sacred Cantatas BWV Nos. 35 & 36
The Bach Cantata, Vol. 61 1992

Albums with Excerpt Performances of the Work

Title Date
A Bach Album 2002
Arleen Augér Sings Bach 1998
Arleen Augér singt Bach
Bach Edition: Chorales
Bach Edition: Complete Works [Box Set] 2006
Bach Edition: Vocal Works [Box Set]
Bach Edition: Vol. 5 [Box Set]
Bach, Händel, Haydn, Britten: Arien aus Kantaten und Oratorien 2004
Bach: Cantata 147; 6 Motet; Chorales & chorale preludes for Advent & Christmas
Bach: Choruses 1985
Bach: Orchestrations
Bach: Organ Works 1999
Bach: Organ Works, Vol. 2 1995
Cantatas & Arias
J. S. Bach: Arias 2005
J.S. Bach: Great Choruses 2000
J.S. Bach: Jesus Bleibet Meine Freude
Johann Sebastian Bach: Tenor Arias 1982
Lobe den Herren 1968
Peter Schreier Sings Bach 1987
Peter Schreier's Legendary Recordings [Box Set] 2005
Peter Schreier: Arien aus Kantaten und Oratorien 1995
Peter Schreier: Vom Knabenalt Zum Lyrischen Tenor (From Boy Alto To Lyric Tenor) 1995
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