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[[Johann Sebastian Bach]]'s '''{{lang|la|Magnificat}}''' is a musical setting of the biblical [[canticle]] [[Magnificat]]. The sacred choral work on a [[Latin]] text is scored for five vocal parts (two sopranos, alto, tenor and bass), and a [[Baroque instruments|Baroque orchestra]]. Formally it is a [[cantata]].
[[Johann Sebastian Bach]]'s '''{{lang|la|Magnificat}}''' is a musical setting of the biblical [[canticle]] [[Magnificat]]. The sacred choral work on a [[Latin]] text is scored for five vocal parts (two sopranos, alto, tenor and bass), and a [[Baroque instruments|Baroque orchestra]]. Formally it is a [[cantata]].


The first version of the piece, in the [[key signature|key]] of [[E-flat major]], was in twelve [[Movement (music)|movement]]s. Bach composed it in 1723, his first year as [[Thomaskantor]] in [[Leipzig]], for the feast of the [[Visitation (Christianity)|Visitation]], and first performed it on the feast day, [[2 July]]. For Christmas the same year, he performed it again with four inserted hymns related to the occasion. In the [[BWV|catalogue of Bach's works]] this version of the work was given the number '''BWV 243a'''.
The first version of the piece, in the [[key signature|key]] of [[E-flat major]], was in twelve [[Movement (music)|movement]]s. Bach composed it in 1723, his first year as [[Thomaskantor]] in [[Leipzig]], for the feast of the [[Visitation (Christianity)|Visitation]], and first performed it on the feast day, [[2 July]]. For Christmas the same year, he performed it again with four inserted hymns related to the occasion.<ref name="Schweitzer1911V2p166">Schweitzer 1911 (volume 2), p. 166</ref> In the [[BWV|catalogue of Bach's works]] this version of the work was given the number '''BWV 243a'''.


For the feast of visitation of 1733, Bach produced a new version of the Magnificat, without the Christmas hymns: there were some changes in instrumentation, and the [[key signature|key]] changed from E-flat major to [[D major]], for performance reasons of the trumpet parts. This version of Bach's Magnificat is known as '''BWV 243'''.
For the feast of visitation of 1733, Bach produced a new version of the Magnificat, without the Christmas hymns: there were some changes in instrumentation, and the [[key signature|key]] changed from E-flat major to [[D major]], for performance reasons of the trumpet parts. It was this final version of Bach's Magnificat, '''BWV 243''', that became a standard for performance.

After publication of both versions (and the Christmas additions) in the 19th century, the D major version became the standard for performance, most often performed without the Christmas additions.


{{TOC limit|3}}
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==History==
==History==
In Leipzig, the Magnificat was regularly part of Sunday services, sung in German on ordinary Sundays but more elaborately and in Latin on the high holidays (Christmas, Easter and Pentecost){{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}} and on the three Marian feasts [[Annunciation]], Visitation and [[Purification of the Virgin|Purification]].{{sfn|Jones|2013}}{{sfn|Schröder|2012}}
In Leipzig, the Magnificat was regularly part of Sunday services, sung in German on ordinary Sundays but more elaborately and in Latin on the high holidays (Christmas, Easter and Pentecost){{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}} and on the three Marian feasts [[Annunciation]], Visitation and [[Purification of the Virgin|Purification]].{{sfn|Jones|2013}}{{sfn|Schröder|2012}}


While the canticle {{lang|la|Magnificat}} was often set to music, being a regular part of Catholic [[vespers]] and Anglican [[Evening Prayer (Anglican)|evensong]], Bach's work is one of few extended settings, along with his son's [[Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach]] Magnificat and [[Magnificat (Rutter)|the 1990 work]] by John Rutter.
===Extended settings of the Magnificat===
The canticle {{lang|la|Magnificat}} was often set to music, being a regular part of liturgy in many Christian denominations, for example in Catholic [[vespers]] and Anglican [[Evening Prayer (Anglican)|evensong]]. Most of these settings are however not in the [[Neapolitan mass|Neapolitan style]], like Bach's. Contemporary settings in that style include examples [[List of compositions by Johann David Heinichen#Canticles|by Heinichen]] and [[Magnificat (Vivaldi)|by Vivaldi]].


===Magnificat in E-flat major, BWV 243a (1723)===
===Five-part choral writing===
Bach composed the E-flat major version of the [[Magnificat]] in 1723, for Visitation, which was celebrated on 2 July in Bach's time. Later that year he used that E-flat major version again for the Christmas [[Vespers]], with additional interpolated texts related to Christmas.<ref name="Jones" />
Another specific characteristic of Bach's Magnificat is that it is set for a five-part chorus. In the legacy Bach's predecessor in Leipzig, [[Johann Kuhnau]], had left there was a [[motet]] in a five-part choral setting: ''[[scores:Tristis est anima mea (Kuhnau, Johann)|Tristis est anima mea]]''.<ref>Spitta 1899, p. 333</ref> Bach would compose for such setting again in his funeral motet ''[[Jesu, meine Freude, BWV 227|Jesu, meine Freude]]'', premiered the same month as his Magnificat, and ten years later in the [[Mass for the Dresden court (Bach)|Mass for the Dresden court]], which was ultimately incorporated in his [[Mass in B minor]]. Musicologist Richard D. P. Jones notes: "Without exception these works lie outside the normal routine of Bach's sacred vocal works".{{sfn|Jones|2013}}


Bach used as a {{lang|la|[[cantus firmus]]}} in movement 10 the [[Gregorian chant]] {{Lang|la|[[reciting tone#tonus peregrinus|tonus peregrinus]]}}. A year later Bach composed for the feast of the Visitation the [[Chorale cantata (Bach)|chorale cantata]] {{lang|de|[[Meine Seel erhebt den Herren, BWV 10|''Meine Seel erhebt den Herren'', BWV 10]]}}, on a paraphrase of the Magnificat as the text, and with the same {{lang|la|tonus peregrinus}} as the base for the music.{{sfn|Rizzuti}}
===Tonus peregrinus===
In movement [[#10. Suscepit Israel|10 (Suscepit Israel)]] Bach used the [[Gregorian chant|Gregorian]] [[melodic formula]] of the {{Lang|la|[[reciting tone#tonus peregrinus|tonus peregrinus]]}} as a {{lang|la|[[cantus firmus]]}}. For Visitation of 1724 Bach composed the [[Chorale cantata (Bach)|chorale cantata]] {{lang|de|[[Meine Seel erhebt den Herren, BWV 10|''Meine Seel erhebt den Herren'', BWV 10]]}}, the text of which was a German paraphrase of the Magnificat, basing the music on the same {{lang|la|tonus peregrinus}}.{{sfn|Rizzuti}}


===Bach's Magnificat for the feast of Visitation 1723 (2 July)===
====Version for the feast of Visitation (2 July)====
Bach composed the E-flat major version of the [[Magnificat]] in 1723, his first year as {{lang|de|[[Thomaskantor]]}} in [[Leipzig]], for the [[Marian feast days|Marian feast]] of the Visitation.<ref name="Glockner2003">Glöckner 2003</ref><ref>Butler 2008, p. 53</ref> Bach first performed the Magnificat on the feast day, 2 July.{{sfn|Digital}}
Bach composed the work in 1723, his first year as {{lang|de|[[Thomaskantor]]}} in [[Leipzig]], for the [[Marian feast days|Marian feast]] of the Visitation.<ref>Glöckner 2003</ref><ref>Butler 2008, p. 53</ref> Bach first performed the Magnificat on the feast day, 2 July.{{sfn|Digital}}


A few weeks after he had taken up his post on the first Sunday after Trinity,{{sfn|Rizzuti}} he presented an unusual extended composition, his first five-part choral setting in Leipzig.
A few weeks after he had taken up his post on the first Sunday after Trinity,{{sfn|Rizzuti}} he presented an unusual extended composition and introduced five-part choral setting to Leipzig church music. Otherwise, he used five voices only in the funeral motet ''{{lang|de|[[Jesu, meine Freude, BWV 227|Jesu, meine Freude]]}}'' (1723), the [[Missa, BWV 232a|Missa in B minor]] (1733) with the derived [[Bach cantata|cantata]] {{lang|la|[[Gloria in excelsis Deo, BWV 191|''Gloria in excelsis Deo'', BWV 191]]}}, and in the [[Mass in B minor structure|Mass in B minor]]. Musicologist Richard D. P. Jones notes: "Without exception these works lie outside the normal routine of Bach's sacred vocal works".{{sfn|Jones|2013}}


===Adding the hymns (laudes) for Christmas 1723===
====Version for Christmas====
For Christmas 1723, Bach inserted four ''laudes'', songs of praise partly in German, partly in Latin to the E-flat major version of his Magnificat.{{sfn|Jones|2013}}{{sfn|Digital}} These four hymns had been used in Leipzig in a Christmas cantata by his predecessor [[Kuhnau]].{{sfn|Cantagrel|2011}}{{sfn|Spitta|1899}} This version, BWV 243a, was performed at the Christmas [[Vespers]].{{sfn|Jones|2013}}
For Christmas the same year, he performed it again with four inserted ''laudes'', songs of praise partly in German, partly in Latin.{{sfn|Jones|2013}}{{sfn|Digital}}


===Version in D major, BWV 243, for the feast of Visitation 1733===
===Version in D major, BWV 243, for the feast of Visitation 1733===
Around 1730 Bach reworked this Magnificat to a version in D major without the Christmas additions.<ref name="Schweitzer1911V2p166">Schweitzer 1911 (volume 2), p. 166</ref> This final version had its premiere at the [[St. Thomas Church, Leipzig|Thomaskirche]] on Visitation 1733, which coincided with the fourth Sunday after [[Trinity Sunday]] that year. The feast ended the period of mourning the death of the elector [[Augustus II the Strong|Augustus the Strong]]. The key of D major was better suited to the trumpets.{{sfn|Jenkins|2000}}
Around 1730 Bach reworked this Magnificat to a version in D major without the Christmas additions.<ref name="Schweitzer1911V2p166">Schweitzer 1911 (volume 2), p. 166</ref> This final version had its premiere at the [[St. Thomas Church, Leipzig|Thomaskirche]] on Visitation 1733, which coincided with the fourth Sunday after [[Trinity Sunday]] that year. The feast ended the period of mourning the death of the elector [[Augustus II the Strong|Augustus the Strong]]. The key of D major was better suited to the trumpets.{{sfn|Jenkins}}


After publication of both versions (and the Christmas additions) in the 19th century, the D major version became the best known version, most often performed without the Christmas additions.
==Structure and movements==

==Scoring==
{{Listen
{{Listen
| filename = The Tudor Consort - J S Bach - Magnificat BWV 243 - Gloria Patri.ogg
| filename = The Tudor Consort - J S Bach - Magnificat BWV 243 - Gloria Patri.ogg
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| description = The Tudor Consort performs Gloria Patri part of BWV 243, 2006
| description = The Tudor Consort performs Gloria Patri part of BWV 243, 2006
}}
}}
The Magnificat is one of few works which Bach set for a five-part choir, along with the motet [[Jesu, meine Freude, BWV 227|''Jesu, meine Freude'', BWV 227]], and the 1733 [[Mass for the Dresden court (Bach)|Mass for the Dresden court]], consisting of a Kyrie and Gloria that quarter of a century later were included in the [[Mass in B minor structure|Mass in B minor]].<ref name="Jones" />
Bach's Magnificat consists of eleven movements for the text of Luke 1:46–55, concluded by a twelfth [[doxology]] movement. Each verse of the canticle is assigned to one movement, except verse 48, beginning with a soprano solo in the role of Mary (third movement), then switching to the fourth movement chorus when "all generations" are mentioned. These movements are numbered one to twelve in all versions of Bach's Magnificat.


===BWV 243a===
The four Christmas hymn movements that were added in December 1723 are placed after the second, fifth, seventh and ninth movement on the Magnificat text. The hymn movements are usually indicated by the letters A to D.
Bach scored the work festively for five vocal soloists (two [[soprano]]s (SI, SII), [[alto]] (A), [[tenor]] (T) and [[Bass (voice type)|bass]] (B)) and a [[SATB|SSATB five-part choir]]. The [[Baroque instruments|Baroque orchestra]] consists of "due violini, due oboe, tre trombi, tamburi, basson, viola e basso continuo",<ref>Simrock 1811</ref> i.e. two [[violin]]s, two [[oboe]]s, three [[trumpet]]s (in E-flat), [[timpani]] (E-flat and B-flat), [[bassoon]], [[viola]] and [[basso continuo]]. Two [[Recorder (musical instrument)|recorder]]s ([[flauto dolce]]) are required for aria No. 9 Esurientes.<ref name="Jenkins2000p5">Jenkins 2000, Introduction p. 5</ref>


===BWV 243===
A performance of the Magnificat lasts approximately twenty-five to thirty minutes.
The 1733 version of Bach's Magnificat is scored for five soloists, [[soprano]] I/II, [[alto]], [[tenor]], [[Bass (voice type)|bass]], a five-part choir, three [[trumpets]] (in D), [[timpani]] (in D and A), two [[traverso]]s, two [[oboe]]s ([[oboe d'amore]] for movements three and four), two [[violin]]s, [[viola]], and [[Figured bass#Basso continuo|basso continuo]].{{sfn|Dellal}}<ref name="Jenkins2000p5">Jenkins 2000, Introduction p. 5</ref><ref>Autograph (D major version), frontispiece</ref>


==Structure and movements==
===Scoring===
Bach's Magnificat is divided into twelve movements (+ the 4 additional movements of the Christmas 1723 version). Its performance lasts approximately twenty-five to thirty minutes.
The movements [[#1. Magnificat|1 (Magnificat)]], [[#7. Fecit potentiam|7 (Fecit potentiam)]] and [[#12. Gloria patri|12 (Gloria patri)]] are the cornerstones of the composition: they are in the [[tonic (music)|tonic key]] (E{{flat}} major for BWV 243a, D major for BWV 243), and are the only movements that feature as well a five-part chorus as a [[tutti]] orchestra. The chorus also sings in movement [[#4. Omnes generationes|4 (Omnes generationes)]], accompanied by an orchestra without trumpets and timpani. Each of these four choral movements are, in the version without the Christmas hymns, followed by two movements for a vocal soloist, the second one often with richer scoring.{{sfn|Digital}} As in other cantatas, the movements for vocal soloists are accompanied by an [[obbligato]] instrument, only strings or even only continuo. Movement [[#A. Vom Himmel hoch|A (Vom Himmel hoch)]] is the only [[a cappella]] movement.


====Voices====
===Structure===
The work consists of eleven movements for the text of Luke 1:46–55, concluded by a twelfth [[doxology]] movement. Each verse of the canticle is assigned to one movement, except verse 48, beginning with a soprano solo in the role of Mary (third movement), then switching to the fourth movement chorus when "all generations" are mentioned.
Bach set the Magnificat for [[SATB|SSATB five-part choir]]. Five vocal soloists are required: two [[soprano]]s (sI, sII), [[alto]] (s), [[tenor]] (t) and [[Bass (voice type)|bass]] (b). In movement [[#10. Suscepit Israel|10 (Suscepit Israel)]] both sopranos sing together with the bass.


The full orchestra (apart from the recorders in the BWV 243a version) plays in the first and last movements and the choral movements 4 and 7, ''{{lang|la|Fecit potentiam}}''. As in other cantatas, the movements for soloists are accompanied by an [[obbligato]] instrument, only strings or even only continuo. The choral movements are followed by two solo movements, the second one often with richer scoring.{{sfn|Digital}}
====Orchestra====
The [[Baroque instruments|Baroque orchestra]] for BWV 243a consists of "due violini, due oboe, tre trombi, tamburi, basson, viola e basso continuo",<ref>Simrock 1811</ref> i.e. two [[violin]]s, two [[oboe]]s (Ob), three [[trumpet]]s (Tr, tonic), [[timpani]] (Ti, tonic and [[dominant (music)|dominant]]), [[bassoon]], [[viola]] (Va) and [[basso continuo]] (Bc). Two [[Recorder (musical instrument)|recorder]]s ([[flauto dolce]], Fl) are required for aria No. 9 Esurientes, but are not part of the tutti.<ref name="Jenkins2000p5">Jenkins 2000, Introduction p. 5</ref>


The four Christmas hymn movements are placed after the second, fifth, seventh and ninth movement on the Magnificat text.
For the 1733 version, Bach used a somewhat more extended orchestra: the recorders are replaced by [[traverso]]s (Fl) and they get separate parts in all four choral movements.<ref name="Bach1733">Bach 1733 (autograph of D major version)</ref> In movements three and four the oboes are replaced by [[oboe d'amore|oboes d'amore]] (Oa). In the [[#10. Suscepit Israel|10th movement (Suscepit Israel)]] an oboe replaces the trumpet for the obbligato instrumental part.{{sfn|Dellal}}<ref name="Jenkins2000p5" />


===Overview of movements===
The continuo part is played by [[organ (music)|organ]], bassoon, [[cello]] and [[violone]] in most movements. In the 1723 version movement 10 (Suscepit Israel) has a continuo part played exclusively by violins and viola in [[unison]]o.<ref>Rizutti, p. 4</ref> In the 1733 version this continuo line is given to a continuo that includes cello, but not bassoon and violone.
The following table shows the title, text sources, [[Time (music)|time]] and voices. Additionally,

;for BWV 243a :
* Orchestration:
** [[Wind instrument|Winds]] (& Timpani): trumpets (Tr), timpani (Ti), traversos (Fl) and oboes (Ob) / oboes d'amore (ObA)
** [[String instrument|Strings]] (& Basso continuo): violins (Vl), viola (Va) and organ/basso continuo (Bc)
* [[Key signature]]

;for BWV 243 :
* [[Tempo (music)|Tempo]] marking
* Instruments (two columns)
* Key signature
* Page number in Bach's autograph


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
! colspan="4" | Magnificat by Johann Sebastian Bach
! colspan="5" | Magnificat (Bach)
! colspan="3" | BWV 243a<br>Christmas 1723 version
! colspan="3" | BWV 243a<br>Christmas 1723 version
! colspan="4" | BWV 243<br>Visitation 1733 version
! colspan="5" | BWV 243<br>Visitation 1733 version
|-
|-
! scope="col" | No. and title
! scope="col" | No.
! scope="col" | Title
! scope="col" | Text source
! scope="col" | Text source
! scope="col" | [[Time signature|Time]]
! scope="col" | Time
! scope="col" | Voices
! scope="col" | Voices
! scope="col" | Instruments
! scope="col" | Winds & Ti
! scope="col" | Strings & Bc
! scope="col" | Key
! scope="col" | Key
! scope="col" | Autogr.<br>p.<ref name="autographs">Autograph at bach-digital.de</ref>
! scope="col" | Tempo
! scope="col" | Tempo
! scope="col" | Instruments
! scope="col" | Winds
! scope="col" | Strings
! scope="col" | Key
! scope="col" | Key
! scope="col" | Autogr.<br>p.<ref name="autographs" />
! scope="col" | Autograph p.
|-
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#1|1]] || {{lang|la|Magnificat anima mea}} || {{nowrap|{{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=46}}}} || 3/4 || SSATB || 3Tr Ti 2Ob || 2Vl Va || {{nowrap|[[E-flat major]]}} || || 3Tr Ti 2Fl 2Ob || 2Vl Va Bc || {{nowrap|[[D major]]}}
| [[#1. Magnificat|1. Magnificat]]
| {{nowrap|{{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=World English|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=46}}}}
| 3/4
| SSATB
| ''tutti''
| style="text-align: center;" | [[E-flat major|E{{flat}}]]
| style="text-align: center;" | 1-9
|
| ''tutti''
| style="text-align: center;" | [[D major|D]]
| style="text-align: center;" | 1-15
| style="text-align: center;" | 1-15
|-
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#2|2]] || {{lang|la|Et exultavit spiritus meus}} || {{nowrap|{{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=47}}}} ||3/8 || SII || || 2Vl Va || E-flat major || || || 2Vl Va Bc || D major
| {{nowrap|[[#2. Et exultavit|2. Et exultavit]]}}
| {{nowrap|{{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=World English|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=47}}}}
| 3/8
| sII
| 2Vl Va Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | E{{flat}}
| style="text-align: center;" | 3-7
|
| 2Vl Va Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | D
| style="text-align: center;" | 16-18
| style="text-align: center;" | 16-18
|-
|-
| {{nowrap|&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[[#A. Vom Himmel hoch|A. Vom Himmel hoch]]}}
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#A. Vom Himmel hoch|A]] || {{lang|de|Vom Himmel hoch}} || Hymn by [[Martin Luther]] || {{music|alla-breve}} || SSATB || || || E-flat major || || || ||
| style="text-align: center;" | /
| Hymn by [[Martin Luther]]
| {{music|alla-breve}}
| SSATB
|
| style="text-align: center;" | E{{flat}}
| style="text-align: center;" | 23, 25-27
| style="background: white" |
| style="background: white" |
| style="text-align: center; background: white" | [D]
| style="text-align: center; background: white" |
|-
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#3|3]] || {{lang|la|Quia respexit humiltatem}} || {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=48}} beginning || {{music|common-time}} || SI || Ob || || C minor || Adagio || ObAI || Bc || B minor
| {{nowrap|[[#3. Quia respexit|3. Quia respexit]]}}
| {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=World English|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=48}} beginning
| {{music|common-time}}
| sI
| Ob Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | [[C minor|c]]
| style="text-align: center;" | 8-9
| Adagio
| OaI Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | [[B minor|b]]
| style="text-align: center;" | 18-19
| style="text-align: center;" | 18-19
|-
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#4|4]] || {{lang|la|Omnes generationes}} || {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=48}} end || {{music|common-time}} || SSATB || 2Ob || 2Vl Va || G minor || || 2Fl 2ObA || 2Vl Va Bc || <!--G minor-->
| {{nowrap|[[#4. Omnes generationes|4. Omnes generationes]]}}
| style="text-align: center;" |
| {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=World English|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=48}} end
| {{music|common-time}}
| SSATB
| 2Ob {{nowrap|2Vl Va Bc}}
| style="text-align: center;" | [[G minor|g]]
| style="text-align: center;" | 10-12
|
| {{nowrap|2Fl 2Oa}} {{nowrap|2Vl Va Bc}}
| style="text-align: center;" | [[F-sharp minor|f{{sharp}}]]
| style="text-align: center;" | 20-25
|-
| {{nowrap|[[#5. Quia fecit|5. Quia fecit]]}}
| {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=World English|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=49}}
| {{music|common-time}}
| b
| Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | [[B-flat major|B{{flat}}]]
| style="text-align: center;" | 12-13
|
| Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | [[A major|A]]
| style="text-align: center;" | 20-23
|-
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#5|5]] || {{lang|la|Quia fecit mihi magna}} || {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=49}} || {{music|common-time}} || B || || || E-flat major || || || || <!--E-flat major-->
| {{nowrap|&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[[#B. Freut euch und jubiliert|B. Freut euch und jubiliert]]}}
| style="text-align: center;" |
| Verse by [[Sethus Calvisius]]
| {{music|common-time}}
| SSAT
| Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | B{{flat}}
| style="text-align: center;" | 28-30
| style="background: white" |
| style="background: white" |
| style="text-align: center; background: white" | [A]
| style="text-align: center; background: white" |
|-
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#B. Freut euch und jubilieret|B]] || {{lang|de|Freut euch und jubilieret}} || Verse by [[Sethus Calvisius]]{{sfn|Cantagrel|2011}} || {{music|common-time}} || SSAT || || || {{nowrap|[[B-flat major]]}} || || || ||
| [[#6. Et misericordia|6. Et misericordia]]
| style="text-align: center;" | /
| {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=World English|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=50}}
| 12/8
| a t
| 2Vl Va Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | [[F minor|f]]
| style="text-align: center;" | 13-15
|
| 2Fl {{nowrap|2Vl Va Bc}}
| style="text-align: center;" | [[E minor|e]]
| style="text-align: center;" | 24-28
|-
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#6|6]] || {{lang|la|Et misericordia}} || {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=50}} || 12/8 || A T || || 2Vl Va || [[F minor]] || || || 2Vl Va || <!--[[F minor]]-->
| [[#7. Fecit potentiam|7. Fecit potentiam]]
| style="text-align: center;" |
| {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=World English|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=51}}
| {{music|common-time}}
| SSATB
| ''tutti''
| style="text-align: center;" | E{{flat}}
| style="text-align: center;" | 15-19
|
| ''tutti''
| style="text-align: center;" | D
| style="text-align: center;" | 28-34
|-
| {{nowrap|&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[[#C. Gloria in excelsis|C. Gloria in excelsis]]}}
| {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=World English|book=Luke|chapter=2|verse=14}}
| {{music|common-time}}
| SSATB
| Vl Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | E{{flat}}
| style="text-align: center;" | 30-31
| style="background: white" |
| style="background: white" |
| style="text-align: center; background: white" | [D]
| style="text-align: center; background: white" |
|-
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#7|7]] || {{lang|la|Fecit potentiam}} || {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=51}} || {{music|common-time}} || SSATB || 3Tr Ti 2Ob || 2Vl Va || E-flat major || || 3Tr Ti 2Ob || 2Vl Va || <!--E-flat major-->
| [[#8. Deposuit|8. Deposuit potentes]]
| style="text-align: center;" |
| {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=World English|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=52}}
| 3/4
| t
| Vl Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | g
| style="text-align: center;" | 17-20
|
| Vl Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | f{{sharp}}
| style="text-align: center;" | 34-36
|-
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#C. Gloria in excelsis Deo|C]] || {{lang|la|Gloria in excelsis Deo}} || {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=2|verse=14}} || {{music|common-time}} || SSATB || || Vl || E-flat major || || || ||
| [[#9. Esurientes|9. Esurientes]]
| style="text-align: center;" | /
| {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=World English|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=53}}
| {{music|common-time}}
| a
| 2Fl Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | [[F major|F]]
| style="text-align: center;" | 20-21
|
| 2Fl Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | [[E major|E]]
| style="text-align: center;" | 36-38
|-
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#8|8]] || {{lang|la|Deposuit potentes}} || {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=52}} || 3/4 || T || || Vl || {{nowrap|[[G minor]]}} || || || Vl || <!--{{nowrap|[[G minor]]}}-->
| {{nowrap|&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[[#D. Virga Jesse floruit|D. Virga Jesse floruit]]}}
| [[Virga Jesse floruit|Fragment of a Christmas hymn]]
| 12/8
| s b
| Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | F
| style="text-align: center;" | 32
| style="background: white" |
| style="background: white" |
| style="text-align: center; background: white" | [E]
| style="text-align: center; background: white" |
|-
| [[#10. Suscepit Israel|10. Suscepit Israel]]
| {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=World English|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=54}}
| {{music|common-time}}
| sI sII a
| TrI Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | c
| style="text-align: center;" | 22
|
| Ob Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | b
| style="text-align: center;" | 38-40
|-
| {{nowrap|[[#11. Sicut locutus est|11. Sicut locutus est]]}}
| {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=World English|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=55}}
| {{music|common-time}}
| SSATB
| Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | E{{flat}}
| style="text-align: center;" | 23-24
|
| Bc
| style="text-align: center;" | D
| style="text-align: center;" | 40-42
|-
|
[[#12. Gloria patri|12. Gloria Patri]]
----
{{nowrap|&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;{{lang|la|Sicut erat in principio}}}}
| [[Glory Be to the Father|Doxology]]
|
{{music|common-time}}
----
3/4
| SSATB
| ''tutti''
| style="text-align: center;" | E{{flat}}
| style="text-align: center;" |
| style="text-align: center;" |
|-
24-27
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#9|9]] || {{lang|la|Esurientes}} || {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=53}} || {{music|common-time}} || A || 2Fl || || F major || || 2Fl || <!--F major--> ||
----
| style="text-align: center;" |
27-29
|
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#D. Virga Jesse floruit|D]] || {{lang|la|Virga Jesse floruit}} || [[Virga Jesse floruit|fragment of a longer Christmas hymn]]{{sfn|Spitta|1899}} || 12/8 || S B || || || F major || || || ||
| ''tutti''
| style="text-align: center;" | D
| style="text-align: center;" | /
|-
| style="text-align: center;" |
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#10|10]] || {{lang|la|Suscepit Israel}} || {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=54}} || {{music|common-time}} || SSA || Tr || || [[C minor]] || || Tr || || <!--[[C minor]]-->
42-45
| style="text-align: center;" |
----
|-
45-48
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#11|11]] || {{lang|la|Sicut locutus est}} || {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=1|verse=55}} || {{music|common-time}} || SSATB || || || E-flat major || || || || <!--E-flat major--> ||
|-
| style="text-align: center;" | [[#12|12]] || {{lang|la|Gloria Patri}}<br />{{lang|la|Sicut erat in principio}} || [[Glory Be to the Father|Doxology]] || {{music|common-time}}<br />3/4 || SSATB || 3Tr Ti 2Ob || 2Vl Va || E-flat major || || 3Tr Ti 2Ob || 2Vl Va || <!--E-flat major-->
| style="text-align: center;" |
|-
|-
|}
|}


===The twelve movements of the Magnificat canticle===
===The twelve movements of the Magnificat canticle===
{{Section OR|date=October 2014}}
{{see also|Magnificat in E-flat major, BWV 243a#The twelve movements of the Magnificat canticle}}
The description of the movements refers to both the E-flat major version (BWV 243a) and the D-major version (BWV 243), unless otherwise indicated.


==== 1. Magnificat ====
==== 1 ====


After thirty bars of instrumental introduction ([[ritornello]]), the sopranos sing the first word '''{{lang|la|Magnificat}}''' (literally: makes great).<ref name="autographs" /> The fact that the sopranos enter alone has been given a symbolic meaning.{{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}} One measure after the sopranos, alto and tenor begin to imitate the sopranos, and another measure later the bass enters.<ref name="autographs" /> The text remains {{lang|la|Magnificat}} for most of the movement, the conclusion "anima mea" (my soul) is heard by the alto for the first time, in measure 67, embedded in the other voices' {{lang|la|Magnificat}}.<ref name="autographs" /> All parts sing "{{lang|la|Dominum}}" (the Lord) only once, soprano II beginning with a long note continued by a melisma in measure 73, the others in 74.<ref name="autographs" /> The closing ritorello is a shorter version of the beginning.<ref name="autographs" />
The opening movement '''{{lang|la|Magnificat anima mea}}''' is performed by all forces, except, in the E-flat major version, the recorders.<ref name="Jenkins2000p5"/> In the D major version, BWV 243, two traversos are included in the orchestra and play in the opening movement.<ref>Autograph (D major version), pp. 1-15</ref> An instrumental [[ritornello]] presents the material with almost continuous runs in the upper parts, [[octave]]s and broken [[Triad (music)|triad]]s in the bass. The sopranos enter first, in third parallels: they sing the first word {{lang|la|Magnificat anima mea}} (literally: makes great) with a melisma on the first syllable, ending in a figure like a [[Trill (music)|trill]], then a stressed [[Dot (music)|dot]]ted note on the stressed syllable "gni", and relaxing on "ficat". The motif is abbreviated to a fanfare of just four notes, a low upbeat followed by three same notes, with the first one dotted. The sopranos sing it twice, reaching first E-flat, then G. The interplay of the fanfare and the melismas shapes the movement. [[Michael Steinberg (music critic)|Michael Steinberg]] assumes in his ''Choral Masterworks: A Listener's Guide'' that it is of symbolic meaning that the sopranos enter alone.{{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}} One measure after the sopranos, alto and tenor begin to imitate the sopranos, another measure later, the bass adds the short motif as an octave up. The text remains {{lang|la|Magnificat}} for most of the movement, the conclusion "anima mea" (my soul) is heard by the alto for the first time, in measure 67, embedded in the other voices' {{lang|la|Magnificat}}. All parts sing "{{lang|la|Dominum}}" (the Lord) only once, soprano II beginning with a long note continued by a melisma in measure 73, the others in 74. The closing ritorello is a shorter version of the beginning.


==== 2. Et exultavit ====
==== 2 ====


'''{{lang|la|Et exultavit spiritus meus}}''' is an aria sung by soprano II, accompanied by the strings.{{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}} In the Christmas 1723 version, this movement is followed by the [[#A. Vom Himmel hoch|first interpolation]], the hymn "Vom Himmel hoch, da komm ich her".{{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}}
'''{{lang|la|Et exultavit spiritus meus}}''' is an aria sung by soprano II, accompanied by the strings{{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}} which introduce the motifs in eight measures. {{lang|la|Et exultavit}} (And exults) begins with a broken upward triad and is followed by a rest, {{lang|la|spiritus meus}} (my spirit) is a sequence of 16th notes, two for every syllable. Longer melismas illustrate {{lang|la|salutari}} (salvation). In the Christmas version, it is followed by the [[#A. Vom Himmel hoch|first interpolation]], the hymn "Vom Himmel hoch, da komm ich her".{{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}}


==== 3. Quia respexit ====
==== 3 ====


'''{{lang|la|Quia respexit humiltatem}}''' (Because he respected the humility) is an aria sung by soprano I with an obbligato oboe.<ref name="autographs" /> It is the only movement for which Bach marked the tempo at the beginning: Adagio (only D major version).<ref name="autographs" /> Steinberg notes that voice and instrument first share the material in a "cotemplative duet", but on {{lang|la|ecce enim ex hoc beatam}} (from henceforth shall call me blessed) the voice changes to a "simpler, more declamatory style".{{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}}
'''{{lang|la|Quia respexit humiltatem}}''' (Because he respected the humility) is an aria sung by soprano I with an obbligato oboe. It is the only movement that Bach marked for a tempo at the beginning: Adagio (only D major version). Steinberg notes that voice and instrument first share the material in a "cotemplative duet", but on {{lang|la|ecce enim ex hoc beatam}} (from henceforth shall call me blessed) the voice changes to a "simpler, more declamatory style".{{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}}


==== 4. Omnes generationes ====
==== 4 ====


The continuation of the verse and completion of the sentence, '''{{lang|la|Omnes generationes}}''' (all generations), is given to the chorus, expressing the fullness of the praise. It is a complex [[Fugue (music)|fugue]], with four voices starting together. The theme, beginning with five repeated notes, appears first in the bass, a measure later in SI on the same note, followed every half by entrances a fifth higher in SII, alto, tenor and bass, half a measure later in the alto. Beginning in measure 10, the voices enter, again half a measure apart, with the bass beginning. From measure 15, every entrance is one note higher, covering an octave as a symbol of completeness (omnes), again in the fast succession of half a measure: A, SII, SI, T, B, SII, SI, A. In a final sequence beginning in measure 21, the voices enter from bottom to top on the same note, only one beat apart and doubling the word "omnes". The movement concludes repeating the theme in homophony. Steinberg comments that Bach took the idea of the separating the two words from the rest of the verse from earlier models, but filled it with an "exciting sense of drama" by the piled-up entrances in a "tremendous march across key after key", leading to "tense dissonances", finally a "dramatic pause" before the last statement.{{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}}
The continuation of the verse and completion of the sentence, '''{{lang|la|Omnes generationes}}''' (all generations), is given to the chorus.<ref name="autographs" /> There are earlier models of such separation of the concluding words from the preceding text of the verse.{{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}}


==== 5. Quia fecit ====
==== 5 ====


'''{{lang|la|Quia fecit mihi magna}}''' (Because he did great things for me) is an aria sung by the bass, accompanied only by the continuo.<ref name="autographs" /> The motif, again beginning with repeated notes, is introduced by four measures of the continuo, then repeated by the voice.<ref name="autographs" />
'''{{lang|la|Quia fecit mihi magna}}''' (Because he did great things for me) is an aria sung by the bass, accompanied only by the continuo. The motif, again beginning with repeated notes, is introduced by four measures of the continuo, then repeated by the voice. Elements are a downward leap of a sixth and a downward scale of an octave, which appears in the voice on the word "{{lang|la|sanctum}}" (holy).
<!--
==== B ====


{{lang|de|Freut euch und jubilieret}} || SSAT || || || {{nowrap|[[B-flat major]]}} || {{music|common-time}} || || Verse by [[Sethus Calvisius]]{{sfn|Cantagrel|2011}} -->
==== 6. Et misericordia ====


==== 6 ====
'''{{lang|la|Et misericordia}}''' (And mercy), a duet of alto and tenor, begins softly with undulating movement in 12/8 time, played by violins [[con sordino]].<ref name="autographs" />


'''{{lang|la|Et misericordia}}''' (And mercy) begins in great contrast softly with undulating movement in 12/8 time, played by violins [[con sordino]]. It is a duet of alto and tenor, beginning in parallels of sixths and staying in homophony for most of the movement.
==== 7. Fecit potentiam ====


==== 7 ====
'''{{lang|la|Fecit potentiam}}''' (He shows strength) shares key and scoring with the first movement.<ref name="autographs" /> The tenor is the first voice to enter, followed by alto, SII, bass and SI, leading to two calls without melismas near the middle of the movement.<ref name="autographs" /> ''{{lang|la|Dispersit}}'' appears in various voices, but then isolated, in a sequence from the highest voice to the lowest.<ref name="autographs" /> The conclusion, ''{{lang|la|mente cordis sui}}'', is marked Adagio and illustrates the text in long chords, with accents by the trumpets.<ref name="autographs" />


'''{{lang|la|Fecit potentiam}}''' (He shows strength) shares key and scoring with the first movement. Based on a continuo line of octaves and repeated 16th, strength is expressed by irregular coloraturas in one voice and homophonic simultaneous calls of the other voices. The tenor begins the coloraturas of four measures, followed by alto, SII, bass and SI, leading to the climax of the movement, two homophonic calls. The new text, ''{{lang|la|dispersit}}'', appears in various voices as broken triads, juxtaposed to material from the first section, but then isolated, in a sequence from the highest voice to the lowest and in downward triads. The conclusion, ''{{lang|la|mente cordis sui}}'', is marked Adagio and illustrates the text in pompous long chords, with accents in the trumpets.
==== 8. Deposuit ====
<!--
==== C ====


{{lang|la|Gloria in excelsis Deo}} () || SSATB || || Vl || E-flat major || {{music|common-time}} || || {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=2|verse=14}} -->
'''{{lang|la|Deposuit potentes}}''' (He hath put down the mighty) is an aria for tenor, accompanied only by [[unison]]o violins presenting material in a 14 measure ritornello.<ref name="autographs" /> The second thought of the verse, beginnning with ''{{lang|la|et exaltavit humiles}}'' (and exalted the humble), is sung without introduction.<ref name="autographs" /> After a shorter ritornello, the tenor sings the complete text again, the first part in a slightly modified version, but the exaltation considerably expanded after which the ritornello in full length is repeated at the end.<ref name="autographs" />


==== 9. Esurientes ====
==== 8 ====


'''{{lang|la|Deposuit potentes}}''' (He hath put down the mighty) is an aria for tenor, accompanied by only the violins united in powerful [[unison]]. The instrumental ritornello of 14 measures presents the material. The first motif, later sung on ''{{lang|la|Deposuit}}'', begins with a short upbeat and a long note, followed by a straight downward scale and a final leap up, while the continuo presents a broken triad, straight upward one octave. The second motif, later sung on ''{{lang|la|potentes}}'', begins with an upbeat of three 16th, followed by a rhythmic pattern which expands both the lowest as the highest note, while the continuo moves in steady steps down. For the third motif, sung on ''{{lang|la|de sede}}'' (from the seat), the continuo picks up the rhythm of the second motiv, while the violins play a more ornamented downward motion in sixteen continuous 16th. A fourth motif is a sequence of three measures, each a sequence of a figure of a figure of four 16th which is slowly moving upwards. When the singer takes over, the violins accent the end of each motif one to three by a broken downward triad.
'''{{lang|la|Esurientes}}''' (The hungry) is sung by the alto, accompanied by two flutes.<ref name="autographs" /> The ritornello of eight measures introduces a motiv moving up, on a continuo of steady quarter note, for four measures, later sung on ''{{lang|la|Esurientes implevit bonis}}'' (He hath filled the hungry with good things), while downward lines and a continuo moving in eighth notes later go with ''{{lang|la|et divites dimisit}}'' (and the rich he hath sent away). In Latin, the last word is ''{{lang|la|inanes}}'' (empty-handed).


The second thought of the verse, ''{{lang|la|et exaltavit humiles}}'' (exalted them of low degree), is sung without introduction as a melisma of four measures, which includes downward runs but in a steadily rising sequence and ending similarly to the sequence of motif four, on ''{{lang|la|exaltavit}}'', but a modest downward line on ''{{lang|la|humiles}}'' (the humble). After a shorter ritornello, the tenor sings the complete text again, the first part in a slightly modified version, but the exaltation considerably expanded. Nonetheless, the ritornello in full length is repeated at the end.
==== 10. Suscepit Israel ====


==== 9 ====
'''{{lang|la|Suscepit Israel}}''' (He hath holpen his servant Israel) is scored for an unusual combination of the three highest voices and two oboes in unison (a single trumpet in the E-flat major version).{{sfn|Jenkins|2000|p=1}}<ref name="autographs" /> The wind instrument(s) cite the {{Lang|la|[[reciting tone#tonus peregrinus|tonus peregrinus]]}} as a {{lang|la|[[cantus firmus]]}}, on a continuo line that most of the time only changes every measure, moving one step down or up.{{sfn|Rizzuti}}<ref name="autographs" /> The voices imitate each other, in gentle movement.<ref name="autographs" /> Almost the only leaps in the whole measure occur on the word ''{{lang|la|recordatus}}'', with a downward quart on each syllable.<ref name="autographs" />


'''{{lang|la|Esurientes}}''' (The hungry) is sung by the alto, accompanied by two recorders which may symbolise the need of the hungry. Bach used recorders also in his later [[Bach cantata|cantata]] {{lang|de|[[Brich dem Hungrigen dein Brot, BWV 39|''Brich dem Hungrigen dein Brot'', BWV 39]]}}. They often play in parallels of sixths and thirds. The ritornello of eight measures introduces a motiv moving up, on a continuo of steady quarter note, for four measures, later sung on ''{{lang|la|Esurientes implevit bonis}}'' (He hath filled the hungry with good things), while downward lines and a continuo moving in eighth notes later go with ''{{lang|la|et divites dimisit}}'' (and the rich he hath sent away). In Latin, the last word is ''{{lang|la|inanes}}'' (empty), which Bach sometimes separates by rests.
==== 11. Sicut locutus est ====
<!--
==== D ====


{{lang|la|Virga Jesse floruit}} || S B || || || F major || 12/8 || || [[Virga Jesse floruit|fragment of a longer Christmas hymn]]{{sfn|Spitta|1899}} -->
'''{{lang|la|Sicut locutus est}}''' (As he spake [to our fathers, to Abraham, and to his seed for ever]), the last line of the Magnificat has a theme in four distinct measures: the first repeated notes, the second flowing eighth notes, the third quarter notes in leaps, the fourth half notes leaping up a sixth.<ref name="autographs" /> When the theme is developed the first time, four voices enter from bottom to top.<ref name="autographs" /> In the second development, soprano I begins, followed by alto, tenor and bass.<ref name="autographs" /> The movements ends with a more homophonic section in which the bass has the theme once more, while soprano I sings long suspended notes covering almost an octave down.<ref name="autographs" />


==== 12. Gloria patri ====
==== 10 ====


'''{{lang|la|Suscepit Israel}}''' (He hath holpen his servant Israel) is scored for an unusual combination of the three highest voices and two oboes in unison. The text continuoes {{lang|la|recordatus misericordiae suae}} (in remembrance of his mercy) Bach "remembers" the [[Gregorian chant]] of the Magnificat, called {{Lang|la|[[reciting tone#tonus peregrinus|tonus peregrinus]]}}, which the oboes play as a {{lang|la|[[cantus firmus]]}}, on a continuo line changing only every measure, moving one step down or up. The voices imitate each other, also in gentle movement, the first a fifth up in a long upbeat, the second a fifth down oe measure later, the third up again, another measure later. Almost the only leaps in the whole measure occur on the word ''{{lang|la|recordatus}}'', with a downward quart on each syllable, a figure which Bach repeated in the ''{{lang|la|[[Mass in B minor structure#Et incarnatus est|Et incarnatus est]]}}'' of his Mass in [[B minor]]. The figure that has been interpreted as a symbol of the [[Cross (Christianity)|cross]], because a line drawn from the fist to the forth note crosses one from the second to the third.
The work is concluded by the doxology, '''{{lang|la|Gloria Patri}}''' (Glory to the father), performed by the complete ensemble.<ref name="autographs" /> The first part of the text ends in a long [[cadenza]]. After changing the [[time signature]] from [[common time]] to [[triple metre]], the second part of the text, {{lang|la|Sicut erat in principio}} (as it was in the beginning), repeats material from the beginning of the work.<ref name="autographs" />

==== 11 ====

'''{{lang|la|Sicut locutus est}}''' (As he spake [to our fathers, to Abraham, and to his seed for ever]), the last line of the Magnificat, is written in [[stile antico]], the old style of the musical "fathers", as a strict [[Fugue (music)|fugue]], one voice following the other as one generation follows the other. The theme has four distinctly different measures: the first repeated notes, the second flowing eighth notes, the third quarter notes in leaps, the fourth half notes leaping up a sixth. The countersubject has leaps down and up an octave in the second measure, the flowing eighth notes in the third measure. When the theme is developed the first time, four voices enter from bottom to top. In the second development, soprano I begins, followed by alto, tenor and bass. The movements ends with a more homophonic section in which the bass has the theme once more, while soprano I sings long suspended notes covering almost an octave down.

==== 12 ====

The work is concluded by the doxology, '''{{lang|la|Gloria Patri}}''' (Glory to the father), performed by the complete ensemble. {{lang|la|Gloria}} is first presented as the major chord repeated three times, with a dotted note on the first syllable. In the second {{lang|la|Gloria}}, leading to ''{{lang|la|Patri}}'', the voices sing the first syllable as an extended melisma beginning in upward moving lines, for three measures in the basses, half a measure less for each following voice. In the third {{lang|la|Gloria}}, leading to ''{{lang|la|Filio}}'' (to the Son), in a similar pattern soprano I begins, followed by alto, soprano II, tenor and bass. In the fourth {{lang|la|Gloria}}, leading to ''{{lang|la|et Spiritui sancto}}'' (and to the Holy Spirit), in again similar pattern the voices follow each other from top to bottom, ending in a long [[cadenza]]. The second part of the text, {{lang|la|Sicut erat in principio}} (as it was in the beginning) repeats material from the beginning of the work but shortened, as a frame.


===The hymns added in the Christmas 1723 version===
===The hymns added in the Christmas 1723 version===
The first time the Christmas hymns of the E-flat major version of Bach's Magnificat were printed was in the same volume as the D major version of the Magnificat, in the 1862 [[Bach Gesellschaft]] XI/1 publication, which presented the hymns in an annex. In that publication the hymns were however not transposed to fit in the D major setting of the Magnificat. More recently publishers offer such transposed (and completed) versions of the hymns, so that they can be performed as part of the D major version of the Magnificat, for instance Novello in 2000 (Neil Jenkins) and Bärenreiter in 2014.
The first time the Christmas hymns of the E-flat major version of Bach's Magnificat were printed was in the same volume as the D major version of the Magnificat, in the 1862 [[Bach Gesellschaft]] XI/1 publication, which presented the hymns in an annex. In that publication the hymns were however not transposed to fit in the D major setting of the Magnificat. More recently publishers offer such transposed (and completed) versions of the hymns, so that they can be performed as part of the D major version of the Magnificat, for instance Novello in 2000 (Neil Jenkins) and Bärenreiter in 2014.


The four hymns Bach inserted in the Magnificat for the 1723 Christmas vespers had been used by his predecessor [[Kuhnau]] in a Christmas cantata.{{sfn|Cantagrel|2011}}{{sfn|Spitta|1899}}
====A. {{lang|de|Vom Himmel hoch}}====

====A. {{lang|de|Vom Himmel hoch}}{{anchor|A}}====
: The text is the first stanza of a hymn by [[Martin Luther]], {{lang|de|[[Vom Himmel hoch, da komm ich her]]}}, a paraphrase of the [[Annunciation to the shepherds]]. It is set for four parts in E-flat major and {{music|alla-breve}} as a [[chorale fantasia]], with the soprano singing the melody in long notes, the lower voices in imitation of the [[Motif (music)|motif]]s.{{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}}
: The text is the first stanza of a hymn by [[Martin Luther]], {{lang|de|[[Vom Himmel hoch, da komm ich her]]}}, a paraphrase of the [[Annunciation to the shepherds]]. It is set for four parts in E-flat major and {{music|alla-breve}} as a [[chorale fantasia]], with the soprano singing the melody in long notes, the lower voices in imitation of the [[Motif (music)|motif]]s.{{sfn|Steinberg|2005|p=32}}


====B. {{lang|de|Freut euch und jubiliert}}====
====B. {{lang|de|Freut euch und jubilieret}}{{anchor|B}}====
: For SSAT, {{nowrap|[[B-flat major]]}}, {{music|common-time}}. The text is a verse by [[Sethus Calvisius]].{{sfn|Cantagrel|2011}}
: For SSAT, {{nowrap|[[B-flat major]]}}, {{music|common-time}}. The text is a verse by [[Sethus Calvisius]].{{sfn|Cantagrel|2011}}


====C. {{lang|la|Gloria in excelsis}}====
====C. {{lang|la|Gloria in excelsis Deo}}{{anchor|C}}====
: For SSATB and violins, E-flat major, {{music|common-time}}. Text: {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=2|verse=14}}.
: For SSATB and violins, E-flat major, {{music|common-time}}. Text: {{Sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Luke|chapter=2|verse=14}}.


====D. {{lang|la|Virga Jesse floruit}}====
====D. {{lang|la|Virga Jesse floruit}}{{anchor|D}}====
: For S B, F major, 12/8. Text: [[Virga Jesse floruit|fragment of a longer Christmas hymn]].{{sfn|Spitta|1899}}
: For S B, F major, 12/8. Text: [[Virga Jesse floruit|fragment of a longer Christmas hymn]].{{sfn|Spitta|1899}}


== Reception history ==
== Publication ==
The earliest sources for the E-flat major version of the Magnificat are autographs for the performances on 2 July and 25 December 1723, including the Christmas parts, kept by the [[Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin]].{{sfn|Digital}}{{sfn|Jones|2013}} The autograph of the D major version of the Magnificat can be dated around 1732-1753. Copies of both manuscripts have been published as on-line resources.<ref>Autograph (E-flat major version)</ref><ref>Autograph (D major version)</ref>
After the composer's death the autographs of both the E-flat major and the D major versions were owned by his son [[Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach|Carl Philipp Emanuel]].<ref name="autographs" /> Already in 1749 this son had composed a [[Magnificat (C. P. E. Bach)|Magnificat in D major]], like his father's in an extended setting. In 1786 Carl Philipp Emanuel staged his father's Magnificat in Hamburg.{{sfn|Jenckins|2000|p=3}}


In the 19th century both versions of Bach's Magnificat, also the Christmas hymns, were printed, including, for the D major version, a variety of vocal and instrumental scores adapted to contemporary performance practice.<ref>Bach 1811, 1841, 1862, 1864, 1874, 1895</ref> By the end of that century "The Magnificat in D (was) considered one of the grandest illustrations of Bach's genius."<ref name="Upton1886">Upton 1886</ref> Generally it was also the D major version without the Christmas hymns that was chosen for performance.<ref name="Upton1886" />

A new critical edition of both BWV 243 and 243a was published in 1955 as Series 2, Volume 3 of the [[New Bach Edition]].<ref>Bach 1955</ref> Although the D major version remained the standard for life performance and studio recordings, half a century later also the E-flat major version had been published in new editions adapted to performance,<ref>Bach 2000</ref> it had been recorded,<ref>Herreweghe 2002</ref> and the history of its two 1723 versions had been unraveled.<ref name="Glockner2003" />

===Autograph===
The earliest sources for the E-flat major version of the Magnificat are autographs for the performances on 2 July and 25 December 1723, including the Christmas parts, kept by the [[Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin]].{{sfn|Digital}}{{sfn|Jones|2013}} The autograph of the D major version of the Magnificat can be dated around 1732-1753. Copies of both manuscripts have been published as on-line resources.<ref name="Bach1723">Bach 1723 (autograph of E-flat major version)</ref><ref name="Bach1733" />

===Before the Neue Bach Ausgabe (1955)===
The score of the E-flat major version of Bach's Magnificat was first published by [[N. Simrock|Simrock]] in 1811, edited by Georg Pölchau, however without the Christmas hymns.<ref name="Schweitzer1911V2p166" /><ref>Zenck 1986</ref> At the time, this publication had little success in sales.
The score of the E-flat major version of Bach's Magnificat was first published by [[N. Simrock|Simrock]] in 1811, edited by Georg Pölchau, however without the Christmas hymns.<ref name="Schweitzer1911V2p166" /><ref>Zenck 1986</ref> At the time, this publication had little success in sales.


Line 362: Line 228:
[[Novello & Co|Novello]] printed an ''Octavo'' edition of the D major Magnificat in 1874, using a translation to English which [[John Troutbeck]] based on the text in [[The Book of Common Prayer]].<ref>Novello 1874</ref> In 1924 Arnold Schering edited the full orchestral score for publication by Ernst Eulenburg and Edition Peters.<ref>Schering 1924</ref>
[[Novello & Co|Novello]] printed an ''Octavo'' edition of the D major Magnificat in 1874, using a translation to English which [[John Troutbeck]] based on the text in [[The Book of Common Prayer]].<ref>Novello 1874</ref> In 1924 Arnold Schering edited the full orchestral score for publication by Ernst Eulenburg and Edition Peters.<ref>Schering 1924</ref>


The [[Neue Bach Ausgabe]] published Bach's Magnificat (both BWV 243a and BWV 243) in 1955, edited by [[Alfred Dürr]].{{sfn|Digital}} This [[Urtext edition|Urtext]] score was reused in several ensuing publications by [[Bärenreiter]], among which several with English translations. Novello published both the E-flat major and the D major version of the Magnificat in a single publication in 2000, edited by Neil Jenkins.{{sfn|Jenkins}} [[Bärenreiter]] published a critical edition of all versions, based on Dürr's 1955 edition, again in 2014/15.{{sfn|Bärenreiter}}
===Neue Bach Ausgabe and later===
The [[Neue Bach Ausgabe]] published Bach's Magnificat (both BWV 243a and BWV 243) in 1955, edited by [[Alfred Dürr]].{{sfn|Digital}} This [[Urtext edition|Urtext]] score was reused in several ensuing publications by [[Bärenreiter]], among which several with English translations. Novello published both the E-flat major and the D major version of the Magnificat in a single publication in 2000, edited by Neil Jenkins.{{sfn|Jenkins|2000}} This edition also offered a transposed version of the Christmas 1723 hymns so that they could be fitted in performances of the D major version of the Magnificat. [[Bärenreiter]] published a critical edition of all versions, based on Dürr's 1955 edition, again in 2014/15.{{sfn|Bärenreiter}}


== Selected recordings ==
A [[Magnificat (Rutter)|1990 setting of the Magnificat]] by [[John Rutter]] referred to Bach's composition on several levels: not only was it an extended setting, also it interspersed the Magnificat canticle with settings of other texts, like Bach's Christmas 1723 version.

=== Selected recordings ===
{{incompletelist|date=September 2014}}
{{incompletelist|date=September 2014}}
====BWV 243a====
===BWV 243a===
* The first version of Bach's Magnificat in the Christmas version was recorded in 2002 by the [[Collegium Vocale Gent]], conducted by [[Philippe Herreweghe]], with soloists [[Carolyn Sampson]], [[Ingeborg Danz]], [[Mark Padmore]] and [[Sebastian Noack]]. A reviewer noted "bracing but not rushed tempos, infectiously energetic and technically solid contributions from the chorus, and an intelligently paced flow from movement to movement.{{sfn|Vernier}}
* The first version of Bach's Magnificat in the Christmas version was recorded in 2002 by the [[Collegium Vocale Gent]], conducted by [[Philippe Herreweghe]], with soloists [[Carolyn Sampson]], [[Ingeborg Danz]], [[Mark Padmore]] and [[Sebastian Noack]]. A reviewer noted "bracing but not rushed tempos, infectiously energetic and technically solid contributions from the chorus, and an intelligently paced flow from movement to movement.{{sfn|Vernier}}


====BWV 243====
===BWV 243===
* Brilliant Classics 99376/6: Lynda Russell, Gillian Fisher, Alison Browner, Caroline Trevor, [[Ian Partridge]], Michael George, [[The Sixteen]] Choir & Orchestra, [[Harry Christophers]]
* Brilliant Classics 99376/6: Lynda Russell, Gillian Fisher, Alison Browner, Caroline Trevor, [[Ian Partridge]], Michael George, [[The Sixteen]] Choir & Orchestra, [[Harry Christophers]]


== References ==
== References ==

{{reflist|20em}}
{{reflist
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| refs =
<ref name="Jones">Jones 2013</ref>
}}


== Sources ==
== Sources ==
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}}
* Robert L. Marshall.
**[http://books.google.be/books?id=lT09AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA3&lpg=PA3&dq=%22Marshall%22+%22On+the+origin+of+Bach%27s+Magnificat%22&source=bl&ots=jyh0p8dubc&sig=IT3e0RD3ywPTf7lwnGGyqygihfs&hl=nl&sa=X&ei=xoV1VMrGKtLU7QaZpoGABA&ved=0CDEQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=%22Marshall%22%20%22On%20the%20origin%20of%20Bach's%20Magnificat%22&f=false "On the Origin of Bach's ''Magnificat'': a Lutheran composer's challenge"] in ''Bach studies'' (Don O. Franklin ed.) Cambridge 1988, republished 1989: ISBN 0521341051 ISBN 9780521341059 pp. 3-17.
**[http://books.google.be/books/about/The_Music_of_Johann_Sebastian_Bach.html?id=lN0TAQAAIAAJ&redir_esc=y ''The Music of Johann Sebastian Bach: The Sources, the Style, the Significance''.] Schirmer, 1989. ISBN 0028717813 ISBN 9780028717814
* {{cite web
* {{cite web
| last = Rizzuti
| last = Rizzuti
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| ref = harv
| ref = harv
}}
}}
* {{cite book
* [[Philipp Spitta|Spitta, Philipp]]. [http://archive.org/stream/johannsebastianb02spituoft/johannsebastianb02spituoft_djvu.txt ''Johann Sebastian Bach: his work and influence on the music of Germany, 1685–1750'', translated by Clara Bell and John Alexander Fuller-Maitland, Volume 2.] [[Novello & Co]], 1899. In particular: Book V: Leipzig, 1723-1734; Chapter V: Kuhnau – The Church Cantata – Texts by Neumeister and Picander – Comparison of their merits – Bach's Church Cantatas – The "Magnificat," pp. 332-437.
| last = Spitta
| first = Philipp
| authorlink = Philipp Spitta
| url = http://books.google.be/books?id=rZY5AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA369
| title = Johann Sebastian Bach: his work and influence on the music of Germany, 1685–1750
| publisher = [[Novello & Co|Novello]]
<!--| translation = Clara Bell and John Alexander Fuller-Maitland -->
| year = 1899
| volume = 2
| pages = 369–371
| ref = harv
}}
* {{cite web
* {{cite web
| last = Steinberg
| last = Steinberg
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| ref = harv
| ref = harv
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}}
* Upton, George P. [http://www.gutenberg.org/files/22793/22793-h/22793-h.htm#c05 "The Magnificat in D."] in ''The Standard Oratorios: Their Stories, Their Music, And Their Composers'' Chicago, 1886. pp. 49-50
* {{cite web
* {{cite web
| last = Vernier
| last = Vernier

Revision as of 18:26, 3 December 2014

Johann Sebastian Bach's Magnificat is a musical setting of the biblical canticle Magnificat. The sacred choral work on a Latin text is scored for five vocal parts (two sopranos, alto, tenor and bass), and a Baroque orchestra. Formally it is a cantata.

The first version of the piece, in the key of E-flat major, was in twelve movements. Bach composed it in 1723, his first year as Thomaskantor in Leipzig, for the feast of the Visitation, and first performed it on the feast day, 2 July. For Christmas the same year, he performed it again with four inserted hymns related to the occasion.[1] In the catalogue of Bach's works this version of the work was given the number BWV 243a.

For the feast of visitation of 1733, Bach produced a new version of the Magnificat, without the Christmas hymns: there were some changes in instrumentation, and the key changed from E-flat major to D major, for performance reasons of the trumpet parts. It was this final version of Bach's Magnificat, BWV 243, that became a standard for performance.

History

In Leipzig, the Magnificat was regularly part of Sunday services, sung in German on ordinary Sundays but more elaborately and in Latin on the high holidays (Christmas, Easter and Pentecost)[2] and on the three Marian feasts Annunciation, Visitation and Purification.[3][4]

While the canticle Magnificat was often set to music, being a regular part of Catholic vespers and Anglican evensong, Bach's work is one of few extended settings, along with his son's Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach Magnificat and the 1990 work by John Rutter.

Magnificat in E-flat major, BWV 243a (1723)

Bach composed the E-flat major version of the Magnificat in 1723, for Visitation, which was celebrated on 2 July in Bach's time. Later that year he used that E-flat major version again for the Christmas Vespers, with additional interpolated texts related to Christmas.[5]

Bach used as a cantus firmus in movement 10 the Gregorian chant tonus peregrinus. A year later Bach composed for the feast of the Visitation the chorale cantata [[[Meine Seel erhebt den Herren, BWV 10|Meine Seel erhebt den Herren, BWV 10]]] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help), on a paraphrase of the Magnificat as the text, and with the same tonus peregrinus as the base for the music.[6]

Version for the feast of Visitation (2 July)

Bach composed the work in 1723, his first year as Thomaskantor in Leipzig, for the Marian feast of the Visitation.[7][8] Bach first performed the Magnificat on the feast day, 2 July.[9]

A few weeks after he had taken up his post on the first Sunday after Trinity,[6] he presented an unusual extended composition and introduced five-part choral setting to Leipzig church music. Otherwise, he used five voices only in the funeral motet Jesu, meine Freude (1723), the Missa in B minor (1733) with the derived cantata [[[Gloria in excelsis Deo, BWV 191|Gloria in excelsis Deo, BWV 191]]] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help), and in the Mass in B minor. Musicologist Richard D. P. Jones notes: "Without exception these works lie outside the normal routine of Bach's sacred vocal works".[3]

Version for Christmas

For Christmas the same year, he performed it again with four inserted laudes, songs of praise partly in German, partly in Latin.[3][9]

Version in D major, BWV 243, for the feast of Visitation 1733

Around 1730 Bach reworked this Magnificat to a version in D major without the Christmas additions.[1] This final version had its premiere at the Thomaskirche on Visitation 1733, which coincided with the fourth Sunday after Trinity Sunday that year. The feast ended the period of mourning the death of the elector Augustus the Strong. The key of D major was better suited to the trumpets.[10]

After publication of both versions (and the Christmas additions) in the 19th century, the D major version became the best known version, most often performed without the Christmas additions.

Scoring

The Magnificat is one of few works which Bach set for a five-part choir, along with the motet Jesu, meine Freude, BWV 227, and the 1733 Mass for the Dresden court, consisting of a Kyrie and Gloria that quarter of a century later were included in the Mass in B minor.[5]

BWV 243a

Bach scored the work festively for five vocal soloists (two sopranos (SI, SII), alto (A), tenor (T) and bass (B)) and a SSATB five-part choir. The Baroque orchestra consists of "due violini, due oboe, tre trombi, tamburi, basson, viola e basso continuo",[11] i.e. two violins, two oboes, three trumpets (in E-flat), timpani (E-flat and B-flat), bassoon, viola and basso continuo. Two recorders (flauto dolce) are required for aria No. 9 Esurientes.[12]

BWV 243

The 1733 version of Bach's Magnificat is scored for five soloists, soprano I/II, alto, tenor, bass, a five-part choir, three trumpets (in D), timpani (in D and A), two traversos, two oboes (oboe d'amore for movements three and four), two violins, viola, and basso continuo.[13][12][14]

Structure and movements

Bach's Magnificat is divided into twelve movements (+ the 4 additional movements of the Christmas 1723 version). Its performance lasts approximately twenty-five to thirty minutes.

Structure

The work consists of eleven movements for the text of Luke 1:46–55, concluded by a twelfth doxology movement. Each verse of the canticle is assigned to one movement, except verse 48, beginning with a soprano solo in the role of Mary (third movement), then switching to the fourth movement chorus when "all generations" are mentioned.

The full orchestra (apart from the recorders in the BWV 243a version) plays in the first and last movements and the choral movements 4 and 7, Fecit potentiam. As in other cantatas, the movements for soloists are accompanied by an obbligato instrument, only strings or even only continuo. The choral movements are followed by two solo movements, the second one often with richer scoring.[9]

The four Christmas hymn movements are placed after the second, fifth, seventh and ninth movement on the Magnificat text.

Overview of movements

The following table shows the title, text sources, time and voices. Additionally,

for BWV 243a
  • Orchestration:
    • Winds (& Timpani): trumpets (Tr), timpani (Ti), traversos (Fl) and oboes (Ob) / oboes d'amore (ObA)
    • Strings (& Basso continuo): violins (Vl), viola (Va) and organ/basso continuo (Bc)
  • Key signature
for BWV 243
  • Tempo marking
  • Instruments (two columns)
  • Key signature
  • Page number in Bach's autograph
Magnificat (Bach) BWV 243a
Christmas 1723 version
BWV 243
Visitation 1733 version
No. Title Text source Time Voices Winds & Ti Strings & Bc Key Tempo Winds Strings Key Autograph p.
1 Magnificat anima mea Luke 1:46 3/4 SSATB 3Tr Ti 2Ob 2Vl Va E-flat major 3Tr Ti 2Fl 2Ob 2Vl Va Bc D major 1-15
2 Et exultavit spiritus meus Luke 1:47 3/8 SII 2Vl Va E-flat major 2Vl Va Bc D major 16-18
A Vom Himmel hoch Hymn by Martin Luther cut time SSATB E-flat major /
3 Quia respexit humiltatem Luke 1:48 beginning common time SI Ob C minor Adagio ObAI Bc B minor 18-19
4 Omnes generationes Luke 1:48 end common time SSATB 2Ob 2Vl Va G minor 2Fl 2ObA 2Vl Va Bc
5 Quia fecit mihi magna Luke 1:49 common time B E-flat major
B Freut euch und jubilieret Verse by Sethus Calvisius[15] common time SSAT B-flat major /
6 Et misericordia Luke 1:50 12/8 A T 2Vl Va F minor 2Vl Va
7 Fecit potentiam Luke 1:51 common time SSATB 3Tr Ti 2Ob 2Vl Va E-flat major 3Tr Ti 2Ob 2Vl Va
C Gloria in excelsis Deo Luke 2:14 common time SSATB Vl E-flat major /
8 Deposuit potentes Luke 1:52 3/4 T Vl G minor Vl
9 Esurientes Luke 1:53 common time A 2Fl F major 2Fl
D Virga Jesse floruit fragment of a longer Christmas hymn[16] 12/8 S B F major /
10 Suscepit Israel Luke 1:54 common time SSA Tr C minor Tr
11 Sicut locutus est Luke 1:55 common time SSATB E-flat major
12 Gloria Patri
Sicut erat in principio
Doxology common time
3/4
SSATB 3Tr Ti 2Ob 2Vl Va E-flat major 3Tr Ti 2Ob 2Vl Va

The twelve movements of the Magnificat canticle

The description of the movements refers to both the E-flat major version (BWV 243a) and the D-major version (BWV 243), unless otherwise indicated.

1

The opening movement Magnificat anima mea is performed by all forces, except, in the E-flat major version, the recorders.[12] In the D major version, BWV 243, two traversos are included in the orchestra and play in the opening movement.[17] An instrumental ritornello presents the material with almost continuous runs in the upper parts, octaves and broken triads in the bass. The sopranos enter first, in third parallels: they sing the first word Magnificat anima mea (literally: makes great) with a melisma on the first syllable, ending in a figure like a trill, then a stressed dotted note on the stressed syllable "gni", and relaxing on "ficat". The motif is abbreviated to a fanfare of just four notes, a low upbeat followed by three same notes, with the first one dotted. The sopranos sing it twice, reaching first E-flat, then G. The interplay of the fanfare and the melismas shapes the movement. Michael Steinberg assumes in his Choral Masterworks: A Listener's Guide that it is of symbolic meaning that the sopranos enter alone.[2] One measure after the sopranos, alto and tenor begin to imitate the sopranos, another measure later, the bass adds the short motif as an octave up. The text remains Magnificat for most of the movement, the conclusion "anima mea" (my soul) is heard by the alto for the first time, in measure 67, embedded in the other voices' Magnificat. All parts sing "Dominum" (the Lord) only once, soprano II beginning with a long note continued by a melisma in measure 73, the others in 74. The closing ritorello is a shorter version of the beginning.

2

Et exultavit spiritus meus is an aria sung by soprano II, accompanied by the strings[2] which introduce the motifs in eight measures. Et exultavit (And exults) begins with a broken upward triad and is followed by a rest, spiritus meus (my spirit) is a sequence of 16th notes, two for every syllable. Longer melismas illustrate salutari (salvation). In the Christmas version, it is followed by the first interpolation, the hymn "Vom Himmel hoch, da komm ich her".[2]

3

Quia respexit humiltatem (Because he respected the humility) is an aria sung by soprano I with an obbligato oboe. It is the only movement that Bach marked for a tempo at the beginning: Adagio (only D major version). Steinberg notes that voice and instrument first share the material in a "cotemplative duet", but on ecce enim ex hoc beatam (from henceforth shall call me blessed) the voice changes to a "simpler, more declamatory style".[2]

4

The continuation of the verse and completion of the sentence, Omnes generationes (all generations), is given to the chorus, expressing the fullness of the praise. It is a complex fugue, with four voices starting together. The theme, beginning with five repeated notes, appears first in the bass, a measure later in SI on the same note, followed every half by entrances a fifth higher in SII, alto, tenor and bass, half a measure later in the alto. Beginning in measure 10, the voices enter, again half a measure apart, with the bass beginning. From measure 15, every entrance is one note higher, covering an octave as a symbol of completeness (omnes), again in the fast succession of half a measure: A, SII, SI, T, B, SII, SI, A. In a final sequence beginning in measure 21, the voices enter from bottom to top on the same note, only one beat apart and doubling the word "omnes". The movement concludes repeating the theme in homophony. Steinberg comments that Bach took the idea of the separating the two words from the rest of the verse from earlier models, but filled it with an "exciting sense of drama" by the piled-up entrances in a "tremendous march across key after key", leading to "tense dissonances", finally a "dramatic pause" before the last statement.[2]

5

Quia fecit mihi magna (Because he did great things for me) is an aria sung by the bass, accompanied only by the continuo. The motif, again beginning with repeated notes, is introduced by four measures of the continuo, then repeated by the voice. Elements are a downward leap of a sixth and a downward scale of an octave, which appears in the voice on the word "sanctum" (holy).

6

Et misericordia (And mercy) begins in great contrast softly with undulating movement in 12/8 time, played by violins con sordino. It is a duet of alto and tenor, beginning in parallels of sixths and staying in homophony for most of the movement.

7

Fecit potentiam (He shows strength) shares key and scoring with the first movement. Based on a continuo line of octaves and repeated 16th, strength is expressed by irregular coloraturas in one voice and homophonic simultaneous calls of the other voices. The tenor begins the coloraturas of four measures, followed by alto, SII, bass and SI, leading to the climax of the movement, two homophonic calls. The new text, dispersit, appears in various voices as broken triads, juxtaposed to material from the first section, but then isolated, in a sequence from the highest voice to the lowest and in downward triads. The conclusion, mente cordis sui, is marked Adagio and illustrates the text in pompous long chords, with accents in the trumpets.

8

Deposuit potentes (He hath put down the mighty) is an aria for tenor, accompanied by only the violins united in powerful unison. The instrumental ritornello of 14 measures presents the material. The first motif, later sung on Deposuit, begins with a short upbeat and a long note, followed by a straight downward scale and a final leap up, while the continuo presents a broken triad, straight upward one octave. The second motif, later sung on potentes, begins with an upbeat of three 16th, followed by a rhythmic pattern which expands both the lowest as the highest note, while the continuo moves in steady steps down. For the third motif, sung on de sede (from the seat), the continuo picks up the rhythm of the second motiv, while the violins play a more ornamented downward motion in sixteen continuous 16th. A fourth motif is a sequence of three measures, each a sequence of a figure of a figure of four 16th which is slowly moving upwards. When the singer takes over, the violins accent the end of each motif one to three by a broken downward triad.

The second thought of the verse, et exaltavit humiles (exalted them of low degree), is sung without introduction as a melisma of four measures, which includes downward runs but in a steadily rising sequence and ending similarly to the sequence of motif four, on exaltavit, but a modest downward line on humiles (the humble). After a shorter ritornello, the tenor sings the complete text again, the first part in a slightly modified version, but the exaltation considerably expanded. Nonetheless, the ritornello in full length is repeated at the end.

9

Esurientes (The hungry) is sung by the alto, accompanied by two recorders which may symbolise the need of the hungry. Bach used recorders also in his later cantata [[[Brich dem Hungrigen dein Brot, BWV 39|Brich dem Hungrigen dein Brot, BWV 39]]] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help). They often play in parallels of sixths and thirds. The ritornello of eight measures introduces a motiv moving up, on a continuo of steady quarter note, for four measures, later sung on Esurientes implevit bonis (He hath filled the hungry with good things), while downward lines and a continuo moving in eighth notes later go with et divites dimisit (and the rich he hath sent away). In Latin, the last word is inanes (empty), which Bach sometimes separates by rests.

10

Suscepit Israel (He hath holpen his servant Israel) is scored for an unusual combination of the three highest voices and two oboes in unison. The text continuoes recordatus misericordiae suae (in remembrance of his mercy) Bach "remembers" the Gregorian chant of the Magnificat, called tonus peregrinus, which the oboes play as a cantus firmus, on a continuo line changing only every measure, moving one step down or up. The voices imitate each other, also in gentle movement, the first a fifth up in a long upbeat, the second a fifth down oe measure later, the third up again, another measure later. Almost the only leaps in the whole measure occur on the word recordatus, with a downward quart on each syllable, a figure which Bach repeated in the Et incarnatus est of his Mass in B minor. The figure that has been interpreted as a symbol of the cross, because a line drawn from the fist to the forth note crosses one from the second to the third.

11

Sicut locutus est (As he spake [to our fathers, to Abraham, and to his seed for ever]), the last line of the Magnificat, is written in stile antico, the old style of the musical "fathers", as a strict fugue, one voice following the other as one generation follows the other. The theme has four distinctly different measures: the first repeated notes, the second flowing eighth notes, the third quarter notes in leaps, the fourth half notes leaping up a sixth. The countersubject has leaps down and up an octave in the second measure, the flowing eighth notes in the third measure. When the theme is developed the first time, four voices enter from bottom to top. In the second development, soprano I begins, followed by alto, tenor and bass. The movements ends with a more homophonic section in which the bass has the theme once more, while soprano I sings long suspended notes covering almost an octave down.

12

The work is concluded by the doxology, Gloria Patri (Glory to the father), performed by the complete ensemble. Gloria is first presented as the major chord repeated three times, with a dotted note on the first syllable. In the second Gloria, leading to Patri, the voices sing the first syllable as an extended melisma beginning in upward moving lines, for three measures in the basses, half a measure less for each following voice. In the third Gloria, leading to Filio (to the Son), in a similar pattern soprano I begins, followed by alto, soprano II, tenor and bass. In the fourth Gloria, leading to et Spiritui sancto (and to the Holy Spirit), in again similar pattern the voices follow each other from top to bottom, ending in a long cadenza. The second part of the text, Sicut erat in principio (as it was in the beginning) repeats material from the beginning of the work but shortened, as a frame.

The hymns added in the Christmas 1723 version

The first time the Christmas hymns of the E-flat major version of Bach's Magnificat were printed was in the same volume as the D major version of the Magnificat, in the 1862 Bach Gesellschaft XI/1 publication, which presented the hymns in an annex. In that publication the hymns were however not transposed to fit in the D major setting of the Magnificat. More recently publishers offer such transposed (and completed) versions of the hymns, so that they can be performed as part of the D major version of the Magnificat, for instance Novello in 2000 (Neil Jenkins) and Bärenreiter in 2014.

The four hymns Bach inserted in the Magnificat for the 1723 Christmas vespers had been used by his predecessor Kuhnau in a Christmas cantata.[15][16]

A. Vom Himmel hoch

The text is the first stanza of a hymn by Martin Luther, Vom Himmel hoch, da komm ich her, a paraphrase of the Annunciation to the shepherds. It is set for four parts in E-flat major and cut time as a chorale fantasia, with the soprano singing the melody in long notes, the lower voices in imitation of the motifs.[2]

B. Freut euch und jubilieret

For SSAT, B-flat major, common time. The text is a verse by Sethus Calvisius.[15]

C. Gloria in excelsis Deo

For SSATB and violins, E-flat major, common time. Text: Luke 2:14.

D. Virga Jesse floruit

For S B, F major, 12/8. Text: fragment of a longer Christmas hymn.[16]

Publication

The earliest sources for the E-flat major version of the Magnificat are autographs for the performances on 2 July and 25 December 1723, including the Christmas parts, kept by the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin.[9][3] The autograph of the D major version of the Magnificat can be dated around 1732-1753. Copies of both manuscripts have been published as on-line resources.[18][19]

The score of the E-flat major version of Bach's Magnificat was first published by Simrock in 1811, edited by Georg Pölchau, however without the Christmas hymns.[1][20] At the time, this publication had little success in sales.

The D major version of Bach's Magnificat didn't appear in print before the Bach-revival that followed Felix Mendelssohn's 1829 performance of the St Matthew Passion. In the 1840s a piano reduction of the D major version by Robert Franz appeared. In 1862 the orchestral and vocal score was published in Volume 11/1 of the Bach-Gesellschaft edition.[21] Soon an orchestration more in line with 19th century performance practice followed, e.g. the "organ and continuo" single stave with annotated bass from the autograph and the Bach-edition was expanded in several staves for organ, bassoon and celli by Robert Franz. The Christmas hymns for the E-flat major version had been included, and printed for the first time, in the appendix of the 1862 Bach-Gesellschaft publication.[22]

Novello printed an Octavo edition of the D major Magnificat in 1874, using a translation to English which John Troutbeck based on the text in The Book of Common Prayer.[23] In 1924 Arnold Schering edited the full orchestral score for publication by Ernst Eulenburg and Edition Peters.[24]

The Neue Bach Ausgabe published Bach's Magnificat (both BWV 243a and BWV 243) in 1955, edited by Alfred Dürr.[9] This Urtext score was reused in several ensuing publications by Bärenreiter, among which several with English translations. Novello published both the E-flat major and the D major version of the Magnificat in a single publication in 2000, edited by Neil Jenkins.[10] Bärenreiter published a critical edition of all versions, based on Dürr's 1955 edition, again in 2014/15.[25]

Selected recordings

BWV 243a

BWV 243

References

  1. ^ a b c Schweitzer 1911 (volume 2), p. 166
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Steinberg 2005, p. 32.
  3. ^ a b c d Jones 2013.
  4. ^ Schröder 2012.
  5. ^ a b Jones 2013
  6. ^ a b Rizzuti.
  7. ^ Glöckner 2003
  8. ^ Butler 2008, p. 53
  9. ^ a b c d e Digital.
  10. ^ a b Jenkins.
  11. ^ Simrock 1811
  12. ^ a b c Jenkins 2000, Introduction p. 5
  13. ^ Dellal.
  14. ^ Autograph (D major version), frontispiece
  15. ^ a b c Cantagrel 2011.
  16. ^ a b c Spitta 1899.
  17. ^ Autograph (D major version), pp. 1-15
  18. ^ Autograph (E-flat major version)
  19. ^ Autograph (D major version)
  20. ^ Zenck 1986
  21. ^ Breitkopf & Härtel 1862
  22. ^ Rust 1862.
  23. ^ Novello 1874
  24. ^ Schering 1924
  25. ^ Bärenreiter. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFBärenreiter (help)
  26. ^ Vernier.

Sources

External links