Schmucket das Fest mit Maien
Cantata for Pentecost
Johann Kuhnau/arr. ed. David Erler
This cantata has survived without any information about the time of its composition, its purpose, or its scoring. The librettist is also unknown, although there is a comparatively similar text in the work of the Silesian poet Hans Aßmann …
Read MoreMixed Voices Full Score and Strings
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Mixed Voices Vocal Score and Strings
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Ships from J.W. Pepper
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This cantata has survived without any information about the time of its composition, its purpose, or its scoring. The librettist is also unknown, although there is a comparatively similar text in the work of the Silesian poet Hans Aßmann Freiherr von Abschatz (1646–1699), printed in Leipzig in 1704. Since the copy of the score that serves as the source for this edition was probably written after 1708 and the work is closely related to the cantata Daran erkennen wir, it could have been written during Kuhnau's first years as Thomaskantor from 1701 on.
The text set to music provides information about the purpose of the cantata. In the course of the work, the image of the bridegroom and his bride from the Song of Songs is reinterpreted as the sending of the Holy Spirit upon the congregation of Christians. In the first part, passages from the Song of Songs predominate, while the second part quotes their symbolic interpretations or treats them in free poetry. In the concluding chorale, a stanza from Philipp Nicolai's Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern (“How beautifully the morning star shines”), the outpouring and the flames are also mentioned, so its purpose for the feast of Pentecost is clear.
Another special feature of the cantata is the varied and colorful instrumentation with the scoring of two flutes, two oboes and bassoon in individual movements, in addition to the usual, sometimes divided strings.