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Nimm, was dein ist, und gehe hin, BWV 144

(Take what is yours and go away), 144, is a church cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach. He composed it in Leipzig for the Sunday Septuagesimae, the third Sunday before Lent, and first performed it on 6 February 1724.

History and words

Bach wrote the cantata in his first year in Leipzig for Septuagesima, the third Sunday before Lent. The prescribed readings for the Sunday were taken from the First Epistle to the Corinthians, "race for victory" (), and from the Gospel of Matthew, the parable of the Workers in the Vineyard (). The unknown poet derives from the gospel only the thought to be content with one's lot and submit to God's will, "" (contentedness) being a key word. The opening chorus is based on verse 14 of the gospel. The third movement 3 is the first stanza of Samuel Rodigast's hymn "". The closing chorale is the first stanza of Albert, Duke of Prussia's "" (1547).

Bach first performed the cantata on 6 February 1724.

Scoring and structure

The cantata in six movements is scored for soprano, alto and tenor soloists, a four-part choir (SATB), two oboes, oboe d'amore, two violins, viola, and basso continuo.

  1. Chorus:
  2. Aria (alto):
  3. Chorale:
  4. Recitative (tenor):
  5. Aria (soprano):
  6. Chorale:

Music

Bach composed the extremely short biblical quote of the opening chorus as a motet fugue with the instruments playing colla parte, thus intensifying the attention for the words. The phrase "" (go away) is first presented in the slow motion of the theme, but then as a countersubject repeated twice, four times as fast as before. As John Eliot Gardiner notes: "In 1760 the Berlin music theoretician Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg singled out the opening of this cantata, admiring the "splendid declamation which the composer has applied to the main section and to a special little play on the words, "gehe hin!"". (Original German: ") Bach repeated the ""-figure sixty times in sixty-eight bars. The first aria has a menuet character. In "" (Do not grumble, dear Christian), the grumbling is illustrated by repeated eighth notes in the accompaniment. Movement 3 is the first stanza of the chorale "" which Bach used later that year completely for his chorale cantata BWV 99, and again in the 1730s for BWV 100. The words "" are repeated as a free arioso concluding the following recitative. The soprano aria is accompanied by an oboe d'amore obbligato. Instead of a da capo, the complete text is repeated in a musical variation. The closing chorale is set for four parts.

Recordings

References

Sources

External links