Thursday, April 26, 2018

April 26, 1733: First possible performance of Bach's Mass in B minor

Last updated August 31, 2018.

Mass in B minor, for soloists, chorus, & orchestra, BWV 232 (BC E1)

Johann Sebastian Bach (composer)


Composed: 1733-1749


First possible performance: 4/26/1733


Sales: - NA -


Peak: - NA -

Quotable: --


Genre: classical > choral music


Parts/Movements:

  1. [Part I: Missa, Kyrie] Kyrie eleison
  2. [Part I: Missa, Kyrie] Christe eleison
  3. [Part I: Missa, Kyrie] Kyrie eleison
  4. [Part I: Missa, Gloria] Gloria in excelsis Deo
  5. [Part I: Missa, Gloria] Et in terra pax
  6. [Part I: Missa, Gloria] Laudamus te
  7. [Part I: Missa, Gloria] Gratias agimus tibi
  8. [Part I: Missa, Gloria] Domine Deus, rex coelestis
  9. [Part I: Missa, Gloria] Qui tollis peccata mundi
  10. [Part I: Missa, Gloria] Qui sedes ad dexteram Patris
  11. [Part I: Missa, Gloria] Quoniam tu solus sanctus
  12. [Part I: Missa, Gloria] Cum Sancto Spiritu
  13. [Part II: Symbolum Nicenum, Credo] Credo in unum Deum
  14. [Part II: Symbolum Nicenum, Credo] Patrem omnipotentem
  15. [Part II: Symbolum Nicenum, Credo] Et in unum Dominum
  16. [Part II: Symbolum Nicenum, Credo] Et incarnatus est
  17. [Part II: Symbolum Nicenum, Credo] Cruxifixus
  18. [Part II: Symbolum Nicenum, Credo] Et resurrexit
  19. [Part II: Symbolum Nicenum, Credo] Et in Spiritum Sanctum
  20. [Part II: Symbolum Nicenum, Credo] Confiteor in unum baptisma
  21. [Part II: Symbolum Nicenum, Credo] Et expecto
  22. [Part III: Sanctus] Sanctus Dominus Deus Sabaoth
  23. [Part IV: Osanna, Benedictus] Pleni sunt coeli et terra
  24. [Part IV: Osanna, Benedictus] Osanna in excelsis
  25. [Part IV: Osanna, Benedictus] Benedictus qui venit
  26. [Part IV: Osanna, Benedictus] Agnus Dei, qui tollis peccata mundi
  27. [Part IV: Osanna, Benedictus] Dona nobis pacem

Average Length: 113:40

Review:

“In 1733, Bach wrote a letter petitioning Friedrich August II, the Catholic Elector of Saxony, to grant him a courtly title that might be of value to him in getting his due respect from the powers in Leipzig. To warm up the sovereign to his cause, he enclosed two pieces of music as special proof of his dedication to the composition of church music; these pieces were the Kyrie and Gloria of the Mass in B minor, a juggernaut of religious music that Bach didn’t complete until the very end of his life. Why a composer who must have normally worked at blinding speed took 15 years with a single mass is not known, since there was no opportunity for its performance. As a mass, it’s far too vast for liturgical use, and earnest religious music couldn’t have been welcomed in secular, courtly programs.” DM

There is debate about when the mass was first performed. “Arnold Shering…asserted that it was performed in Leipzig on April 26, 1733, when Augustus III of Poland visited.” WK However, modern scholars have argued otherwise for various reasons, including that “the proposed date fell during an official period of mourning "when concerted music was forbidden in Saxon churches.” WK “Christoph Wolff argues that on July 26, 1733 at the Sophienkirche in Dresden, where Wilhelm Friedemann Bach had been organist since June,” WK but Peter Williams noted that “there is no record of performers being assembled for such an event.” WK There is evidence of Bach performing organ recitals at the Sophienkirche on 9/14/1731, 6/23/1733, and 12/1/1736, WK and he may have performed part of the mass on those dates.

“It definitely wasn’t entirely performed while Bach lived, but it seems possible he didn’t intend it to be performed that way at all. Many movements are highly effective revisions of past works, often cantatas, spanning much of his career, and the others were composed expressly for the mass. These facts, and the wide differences in style the work contains, suggest it was intended as a summation of his whole oeuvre, but that can never be known.” DM

“Of course, the mystery of its purpose and origins have fed the fire of enthusiasm that surrounds the mass. For once, the hype is mostly worth believing. Commentators stumble over each other to praise it, treating it like a St. Peter’s of music for good reasons; the Mass in B minor positively crackles with energy, and almost everything that is good about Bach is found in it. Hearing even the brooding Kyrie for the first time can be like having of a pair of jumper cables applied to the heart. Unfortunately, the size, scale, and historical importance of the mass, taken together, seem to confuse certain interpreters into performing it with the overblown orchestral forces and exaggerated expression of late Romantic music. It becomes an overstated banality when treated that way; smaller orchestras can bring out of it an amazing, galvanized lyricism and mechanical power. The range and depth of moods is itself incredible enough; listeners almost prefer to hear the movements discretely to be able to properly take them in. From the most ecstatic, trumpeting orchestral jubilation of the start of the Gloria, to the tender, pained longing in the soprano and tenor duet of the Laudamus te, or the unstoppable fugue of the Cum sancto Spiritu. the Mass in B minor is as exhilarating to the listeners as it is exhausting to performers. Some lighter, simpler choral movements, like the Gratias agimus tibi, have a minor function of granting needed rest, but there don’t seem to be quite enough of them to make it really functional as a concert piece. For the highly trainable medium of the compact disc, however, it’s just right.” DM-


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