词条 | Denn du wirst meine Seele nicht in der Hölle lassen |
释义 |
History and textThe piece was initially thought to be an early work of Johann Sebastian Bach. However, Bach scholars reattributed the piece to his cousin, Johann Ludwig Bach. The piece was likely composed in Meiningen in 1704 for the first day of Eastertide, known as Easter Sunday. There is some evidence that it may have been performed again under the aegis of Johann Sebastian Bach on 21 April 1726 in Leipzig. The prescribed readings for the day are 1 Corinthians 5: 6-8 and Mark 16: 1-8.[2] Libretto{{see also|Church cantatas of Bach's third to fifth year in Leipzig#Libretto cycle published in Meiningen}}It has been proposed that the text may have been authored by Christoph Helm (as suggested by W. Blankenburg[3]) or by Herzog Ernst Ludwig von Sachsen-Meinigen (as suggested by K. Kuester, a suggestion that gets more traction in recent scholarship).[2] Scoring and structureThe piece is scored for two corni da caccia, two oboes, timpani, one oboe da caccia, violins, violas and viola da gamba, and basso continuo, four vocal soloists (soprano, altus, tenor, and bassus) and four-part choir. It is in two parts, totalling ten movements: Part one
Recordings
References1. ^{{citation | last=Owen | first= Angela Maria | year=1960 | title= The authorship of Bach's Cantata No. 15 | journal= Music & Letters | volume=41 | issue=1 | pages=28–32 | jstor= 729685 | doi=10.1093/ml/41.1.28}}. 2. ^1 Bach Digital Work {{BDW|0017}} at {{url|www.bachdigital.de}} 3. ^{{citation|url=http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Lib/Helm.htm|accessdate=27 May 2013|publisher=bach-cantatas|title=Christoph Helm}} External links
3 : Bach: spurious and doubtful works|Compositions by Johann Ludwig Bach|1704 compositions |
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