Bach: Motets

Series: Baroque Era  Publisher: A-R Editions
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Johann Ludwig Bach
Motets

Edited by Daniel R. Melamed

B108 Bach: Motets
978-0-89579-470-3 Full Score (2001) 9x12, xix + 203 pp.
$94.00
In stock
SKU
B108
This edition presents for the first time all the known motets by Johann Ludwig Bach (1677–1731), a cousin of Johann Sebastian who spent most of his professional career at the small court of Meiningen. Johann Ludwig is best known as a composer of cantatas, including some of the very earliest using modern "Neumeister-type" texts, eighteen of which Johann Sebastian Bach performed in Leipzig.
The compositions, mostly for eight-part double chorus, are important examples of the early eighteenth-century German motet by one of the most talented composers of his time. They are the most ambitious and best motets outside of Johann Sebastian Bach’s own, and show Johann Ludwig Bach’s creative approach to his texts, harmonic sureness, contrapuntal control (within the limits of the style), a fondness for interesting constructive devices, and melodic gift.  The principal source for all of the motets—two manuscripts from the so-called Amalienbibliothek—apparently have a connection to the Bach family.  This raises the possibility that Johann Sebastian Bach, who was demonstrably interested in motets by members of his family and was a conduit for many of their works, knew these pieces, just as he was familiar with Johann Ludwig Bach’s cantatas.
1. Das Blut Jesu Christi
2. Das ist meine Freude
3. Die richtig vor sich gewandelt haben
4. Gedenke meiner, mein Gott
5. Gott sei uns gnädig
6. Ich habe dich ein klein Augenblick verlassen
7. Ich will auf den Herren schauen
8. Sei nun wieder zufrieden, meine Seele
9. Uns ist ein Kind geboren
10. Unsere Trübsal, die zeitlich und leicht ist
11. Wir wissen, so unser irdisches Haus dieser Hütten zerbrochen wird
Jeremy Summerly, Early Music, November 2002