Chapter 23: Bach and the Sacred Cantata
Study Plan
Key Points
- The sacred cantatas of north German composer Johann Sebastian Bach were mostly written for the Lutheran church service; they are multimovement works with solo arias, recitatives, and choruses, all with orchestral accompaniment.
- Lutheran cantatas are generally unified by a chorale, or hymn tune, sung in four-part harmony.
- J. S. Bach was better known in his lifetime as a virtuoso organist than as a composer.
- In addition to his many cantatas and one Mass, Bach wrote orchestral suites, concertos, and much keyboard music for organ and harpsichord.
- The cantata, A Mighty Fortress Is Our God, is an eight-movement work based on a familiar Protestant chorale tune, probably written by Martin Luther. The opening movement is an elaborate choral fugue (a form based on imitation).
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