Where are you going

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bach cantata
Where are you going
BWV: 166
Occasion: Cantata
Year of origin: 1724
Place of origin: Leipzig
Genus: cantata
Solo : SATB
Choir: SATB
Instruments : If; Str; BC
text
unknown
List of Bach cantatas

Where are you going ( BWV 166) is a church cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach . He composed it in Leipzig for the fourth Sunday after Easter, Cantata , and performed it for the first time on May 7, 1724.

Story and words

Bach wrote the cantata in Leipzig for Cantata Sunday , the fourth Sunday after Easter. The prescribed readings for Sunday were 1 Petr 2,11–20  LUT and Joh 16,16–23  LUT from Jesus' farewell speeches. The unknown poet used the question from the Gospel for the first movement of the cantata, which Bach assigned to the bass as the Vox Christi . As the third movement, he inserted the third stanza of the chorale Herr Jesu Christ, I know well (1582) by Bartholomäus Ringwaldt , as the final chorale Aemilie Juliane von Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt's Who knows how near my end (1688).

Occupation and structure

The cantata is occupied by three soloists, alto , tenor and bass , four-part choir only in the final chorale, oboe , two violins , viola and basso continuo .

  1. (Bass): Where are you going
  2. Aria (tenor): I want to think of the sky
  3. Chant (soprano): I ask you, Lord Jesus Christ
  4. Recitativo (bass): Just as the rainwater soon runs away
  5. Aria (Alt): Be careful
  6. Chorale: Who knows how close my end is to me

Recordings

literature

Web links