释义 |
- Structure
- Cantatas I Ad pedes II Ad genua III Ad manus IV Ad latus V Ad pectus VI Ad cor VII Ad faciem
- Selected recordings
- References
- External links
{{Infobox musical composition | name = {{lang|la|Membra Jesu Nostri}} | type = Cantata cycle | composer = {{nowrap|Dieterich Buxtehude}} | image = BuxWV75 title page.jpg | caption = Title page | full_title = {{lang|la|Membra Jesu nostri patientis sanctissima}} | full_title_English = The most holy limbs of our suffering Jesus | catalogue = BuxWV 75 | composed = {{Start date|1680}} | text = {{plainlist|- Bible
- {{lang|la|Rhythmica oratio}} by Arnulf of Leuven
}} | movements = 43 in seven cantatas | vocal = 2 sopranos, alto, tenor, bass | instrumental = {{hlist | violins in cantatas 1 to 5 and 7 | viols in 6 | continuo }} }}{{italic title}}Membra Jesu Nostri (English: The Limbs of our Jesus), BuxWV 75, is a cycle of seven cantatas composed by Dieterich Buxtehude in 1680, and dedicated to Gustaf Düben. The full Latin title Membra Jesu nostri patientis sanctissima translates to "The most holy limbs of our suffering Jesus". This work is known as the first Lutheran oratorio.[1] The main text are stanzas from the Medieval hymn Salve mundi salutare[2] – also known as the Rhythmica oratio – a poem formerly ascribed to Bernard of Clairvaux, but now thought more likely to have been written by Medieval poet Arnulf of Leuven (died 1250). It is divided into seven parts, each addressed to a different part of Christ's crucified body: feet, knees, hands, sides, breast, heart, and face. In each part, biblical words referring to the limbs frame verses of the poem. Structure Each cantata in Membra Jesu Nostri is divided into six sections; an instrumental introduction; a concerto for instruments and five voices (SSATB), with the exception of the fifth and sixth cantatas where only three voices are used; three arias for one or three voices, each followed by an instrumental ritornello; and an exact reprise of the concerto. The first and the last cantata of the cycle deviate from this pattern. In the first cantata the choir repeats the first aria after the reprise, in the last one, Ad faciem, 5 parts sing the last aria, and then a final Amen instead of the reprise concludes the cycle. The structure of Membra is dictated by its text. Buxtehude selected biblical verses for the concertos, and three strophes from each part of the poem Salve mundi salutare for the arias in each cantata. The biblical words are chosen for mentioning the member of the cantata and taken mostly from the Old Testament. The metre of the poetry unifies the arias' rhythmic patterns. Example 1 (in bold are stressed syllables): I Ad pedes:
Sal-ve mun-di sa-lu-ta-re
II Ad genua:
Quid sum ti-bi re-spon-so-rus
III Ad manus:
In cru-o-re tu-o lo-tum
V Ad pectus:
Pec-tus mi-hi con-fer mun-dum
Cantatas The work is scored for five voices SSATB who may also form the choir, two violins and basso continuo. A viola da gamba consort is called for only in part VI, Ad cor, to the heart. The following table shows for each cantata the title and its translation, Tempo marking, the voices (SATB, first for the choir, then for the arias, with S2 for the second soprano), the Baroque instruments of two violins (Vl) and five violas da gamba (Vg), and the biblical text source for the concerto. The source for the arias is always Salve mundi salutare. The continuo, playing throughout, is not shown. Movements of Buxtehude's Membra Jesu NostriNo. | Title | Translation | Voices | Instruments | Text source |
---|
I | {{lang>la|Ad pedes}} | To the feet | SSATB S S2 B | 2Vl | source=Bible|version=King James|book=Nahum|chapter=1|verse=15}} | II | {{lang>la|Ad genua}} | To the knees | SSATB T A SSB | 2Vl | source=Bible|version=King James|book=Isaiah|chapter=66|verse=12}} | III | {{lang>la|Ad manus}} | To the hands | SSATB S S2 ATB | 2Vl | source=Bible|version=King James|book=Zechariah|chapter=13|verse=6}} | IV | {{lang>la|Ad latus}} | To the sides | SSATB S ATB S2 | 2Vl | source=Bible|version=King James|book=Song of Solomon|chapter=2|verse=13|range=–14}} | V | {{lang>la|Ad pectus}} | To the breast | SSATB A T B | 2Vl | source=Bible|version=King James|book=1 Peter|chapter=2|verse=2 | range=–3} | VI | {{lang>la|Ad cor}} | To the heart | SSB S S2 B | 5Vg | source=Bible|version=King James|book=Song of Solomon|chapter=4|verse=9}} | VII | {{lang>la|Ad faciem}} | To the face | SSATB ATB B | 2Vl | source=Bible|version=King James|book=Psalms|chapter=31|verse=17}} | |
I Ad pedes (To the feet) {{clear}}1 Sonata (instrumental introduction) 2 Concerto (SSATB) |
Ecce super montes pedes evangelizantis et annunciantis pacem Behold, upon the mountains the feet of one bringing good news and proclaiming peace. |
3 Aria (S I) |
Salve mundi salutare, salve, salve Jesu care! Cruci tuae me aptare vellem vere, tu scis quare, da mihi tui copiam. Hail, salvation of the world, Hail, hail, dear Jesus! On Your cross would I hang Truly, You know why Give me Your strength. |
4 Aria (S II) |
Clavos pedum, plagas duras, et tam graves impressuras circumplector cum affectu, tuo pavens in aspectu, tuorum memor vulnerum The nails in Your feet, the hard blows and so grievous marks I embrace with love, Fearful at the sight of You Mindful of Your wounds. |
5 Aria (B) |
Dulcis Jesu, pie Deus, Ad te clamo licet reus, praebe mihi te benignum, ne repellas me indignum de tuis sanctis pedibus. Sweet Jesus, merciful God I cry to You, in my guilt Show me Your grace, Turn me not unworthy away From Your sacred feet. |
6 Concerto (da capo: Ecce super montes) |
7 Concerto (SSATB) |
Salve mundi salutare, salve Jesu care! Cruci tuae me aptare vellem vere, tu scis quare, da mihi tui copiam. Hail, salvation of the world, Hail, hail, dear Jesus! On Your cross would I hang Truly, You know why Give me Your strength. |
II Ad genua (To the knees) 1 Sonata 2 Concerto (SSATB) |
Ad ubera portabimini, et super genua blandicentur vobis. You will be brought to nurse and dandled on the knees [of Jerusalem, portrayed as a mother].
|
3 Aria (T) |
Salve Jesu, rex sanctorum, spes votiva peccatorum, crucis ligno tanquam reus, pendens homo verus Deus, caducis nutans genibus. Hail Jesus, King of Saints Hope of sinners' prayers, like an offender on the wood of the cross, a man hanging, true God, Bending on failing knees! |
4 Aria (A) |
Quid sum tibi responsurus, actu vilis corde durus? Quid rependam amatori, qui elegit pro me mori, ne dupla morte morerer. What answer shall I give You, Vile as I am in deed, hard in my heart? How shall I repay Your love, Who chose to die for me Lest I die the second death? |
5 Aria (SSB) |
Ut te quaeram mente pura, sit haec mea prima cura, non est labor et gravabor, sed sanabor et mundabor, cum te complexus fuero. That I may seek You with pure heart, Be my first care, It is no labour nor shall I be loaded down: But I shall be cleansed, When I embrace You. |
6 Concerto (da capo: Ad ubera portabimini) |
III Ad manus (To the hands) 1 Sonata 2 Concerto (SSATB) |
Quid sunt plagae istae in medio manuum tuarum?. What are those wounds in the midst of Your hands? |
3 Aria (S I) |
Salve Jesu, pastor bone, fatigatus in agone, qui per lignum es distractus et ad lignum es compactus expansis sanctis manibus. Hail, Jesus, good shepherd, wearied in agony, tormented on the cross nailed to the cross Your sacred hands stretched out. |
4 Aria (S II) |
Manus sanctae, vos amplector, et gemendo condelector, grates ago plagis tantis, clavis duris guttis sanctis dans lacrymas cum osculis. Holy hands, I embrace you, and, lamenting, I delight in you, I give thanks for the terrible wounds, the hard nails, the holy drops, shedding tears with kisses. |
5 Aria (ATB) |
In cruore tuo lotum me commendo tibi totum, tuae sanctae manus istae me defendant, Jesu Christe, extremis in periculis. Washed in Your blood I wholly entrust myself to You; may these holy hands of Yours defend me, Jesus Christ, in the final dangers. |
6 Concerto (da capo: Quid sunt plagae istae) |
IV Ad latus (To the sides) 1 Sonata 2 Concerto (SSATB) |
Surge, amica mea, speciosa mea, et veni, columba mea in foraminibus petrae, in caverna maceriae. Arise, my love, my beautiful one, and come, my dove in the clefts of the rock, in the hollow of the cliff. |
3 Aria (S I) |
Salve latus salvatoris, in quo latet mel dulcoris, in quo patet vis amoris, ex quo scatet fons cruoris, qui corda lavat sordida. Hail, side of the Saviour, in which the honey of sweetness is hidden, in which the power of love is exposed, from which gushes the spring of blood that cleans the dirty hearts. |
4 Aria (ATB) |
Ecce tibi appropinquo, parce, Jesu, si delinquo, verecunda quidem fronte, ad te tamen veni sponte scrutari tua vulnera. Lo I approach You, Pardon, Jesus, if I sin, With reverent countenance freely I come to You to behold Your wounds. |
5 Aria (S II) |
Hora mortis meus flatus intret Jesu, tuum latus, hinc expirans in te vadat, ne hunc leo trux invadat, sed apud te permaneat. In the hour of death, may my soul Enter, Jesus, Your side Hence dying may it go into You, Lest the cruel lion seize it, But let it dwell with You. |
6 Concerto (da capo: Surge amica mea) |
V Ad pectus (To the breast) 1 Sonata 2 Concerto a 3 voci (in 3 voices: ATB) |
Sicut modo geniti infantes rationabiles, et sine dolo concupiscite, ut in eo crescatis in salutem. Si tamen gustatis, quoniam dulcis est Dominus. Like newborn infants, long for the guileless milk of reason, that by it you may grow into salvation, if indeed you have tasted that the Lord is good. |
3 Aria (A) |
Salve, salus mea, Deus, Jesu dulcis, amor meus, salve, pectus reverendum, cum tremore contingendum, amoris domicilium. Hail God, my salvation, sweet Jesus, my beloved, hail, breast to be revered, to be touched with trembling, dwelling of love. |
4 Aria (T) |
Pectus mihi confer mundum, ardens, pium, gemebundum, voluntatem abnegatam, tibi semper conformatam, juncta virtutum copia. Give me a clean breast, ardent, pious, moaning, an abnegated will, always conforming to You, with an abundance of virtues. |
5 Aria (B) |
Ave, verum templum Dei, precor miserere mei, tu totius arca boni, fac electis me apponi, vas dives Deus omnium. Hail, true temple of God, I pray, have mercy on me, You, the ark of all that is good, make me be placed with the chosen, rich vessel, God of all. |
6 Concerto a 3 voci (da capo: Sicut modo geniti) |
VI Ad cor (To the heart) In this part a consort of viola da gamba replaces the violins. 1 Sonata 2 Concerto a 3 voci (SSB) |
Vulnerasti cor meum, soror mea, sponsa, vulnerasti cor meum. You have wounded my heart, my sister, my bride, You have wounded my heart. |
3 Aria (S I) |
Summi regis cor, aveto, te saluto corde laeto, te complecti me delectat et hoc meum cor affectat, ut ad te loquar, animes. Heart of the highest king, I greet You, I salute You with a joyous heart, it delights me to embrace You and my heart aspires to this: that You move me to speak to You. |
4 Aria (S II) |
Per medullam cordis mei, peccatoris atque rei, tuus amor transferatur, quo cor tuum rapiatur languens amoris vulnere. Through the marrow of my heart, of a sinner and culprit, may Your love be conveyed by whom Your heart was seized, languishing through the wound of love. |
5 Aria (B) |
Viva cordis voce clamo, dulce cor, te namque amo, ad cor meum inclinare, ut se possit applicare devoto tibi pectore. I call with the living voice of the heart, sweet heart, for I love You, to incline to my heart, so that it may commit itself to you in the breast devoted to You. |
6 Concerto a 3 voci (da capo: Vulnerasti cor meum) |
VII Ad faciem (To the face) 1 Sonata 2 Concerto (SSATB) |
Illustra faciem tuam super servum tuum, salvum me fac in misericordia tua. Let Your face shine upon Your servant, save me in Your mercy. |
3 Aria (ATB) |
Salve, caput cruentatum, totum spinis coronatum, conquassatum, vulneratum, arundine verberatum facie sputis illita. Hail, bloodied head, all crowned with thorns, beaten, wounded, struck with a cane, the face soiled with spit. |
4 Aria (A) |
Dum me mori est necesse, noli mihi tunc deesse, in tremenda mortis hora veni, Jesu, absque mora, tuere me et libera. When I must die, do not then be away from me, in the anxious hour of death come, Jesus, without delay, protect me and set me free! |
5 Aria (SSATB) |
Cum me jubes emigrare, Jesu care, tunc appare, o amator amplectende, temet ipsum tunc ostende in cruce salutifera. When You command me to depart, dear Jesus, then appear, O lover to be embraced, then show Yourself on the cross that brings salvation. |
6 Concerto (SSATB) |
Amen |
Selected recordings - Choir of Magdalen College, Oxford, Opus Arte – 2014
- Claudio Cavina, La Venexiana – 2009
- John Eliot Gardiner, English Baroque Soloists, Monteverdi Choir – Archiv Produktion 447 298–2
- Ton Koopman, Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir – Erato
- René Jacobs, Concerto Vocale – 2003 – Harmonia Mundi – Soloists María Cristina Kiehr Soprano I, Rosa Dominguez Soprano II, Andreas Scholl Alto, Gerd Türk Tenor, Ulrich Messenthaler Bass (The soloists serve as the chorus) – a DVD of the recording with the same singers and the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis (2007) is available as a DVD.
- The Sixteen, Harry Christophers, CORO 16082 (Re-release)
- The Sixteen, Harry Christophers – 2001 – CKD 141 – Soloists Carolyn Sampson Soprano I, Libby Crabtree Soprano II, Robin Blaze Alto, James Gilchrist Tenor, Simon Birchall Bass (The soloists serve as the chorus)
- Masaaki Suzuki, Bach Collegium Japan – 1997 – BIS-CD-871
- Jos van Veldhoven, The Netherlands Bach Society – 2006 – Channel Classics, CCS SA 24006 – Soloists Anne Grimm Soprano I, Johannette Zomer Soprano II, Peter de Groot Alto, Andrew Tortise Tenor, Bas Ramselaar Bass (The soloists serve as the chorus)
- Konrad Junghänel, Cantus Cölln – 2005 – Harmonia Mundi – HMC901912
- Diego Fasolis director; Sonatori della Gioiosa Marca + Accademia Strumentale Italiana; Roberto Balconi alto, Caterina Trogu soprano I, Roberta Invernizzi soprano II, Mario Cecchetti tenor, Daniele Carnovich Bass; Choir of Radio Svizzera – 1997 NAXOS 8.553787
- Erik Van Nevel, Currende – 1998 – Eufoda 1294 – Soloists Johannette Zomer Soprano I, Anne-Marie Buyle Soprano II, Vincent Darras Alto, Jan Caals Tenor, Conor Biggs Bass, Currende Consort & Capella Currende
References 1. ^http://www.msrcd.com/catalog/cd/MS1530 2. ^Salve Mundi Salutare article at Catholic Encyclopedia
External links - {{DNB portal|300220405}}
- Free sheet music of all choral parts at the Choral Public Domain Library
- Free score at IMSLP
- Scanned images of original manuscript in the Düben Collection, Uppsala University
- Salve Mundi Salutare – Article in the Catholic Encyclopedia
- [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8A5DB914D456BE65 Buxtehude: 'Membra Jesu Nostri'] YouTube channel sample recordings
- Oratio rhythmica text after the Patrologia Latina at Bibliotheca Augustana
{{Authority control}} 3 : 1680 compositions|Church cantatas|Compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude |