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List of songs and arias by Johann Sebastian Bach
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| Lists of |
| Compositions by Johann Sebastian Bach |
|---|
Songs and arias by Johann Sebastian Bach are compositions listed in Chapter 6 of the Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis (BWV 439–524), which also includes the Quodlibet.[1] Most of the songs and arias included in this list are set for voice and continuo. Most of them are also spiritual, i.e. hymn settings, although a few have a worldly theme. The best known of these, "Bist du bei mir", was however not composed by Bach.
An aria by Bach was rediscovered in the 21st century, and was assigned the number BWV 1127.[2] Further hymn settings and arias by Bach are included in his cantatas, motets, masses, passions, oratorios and chorale harmonisations (BWV 1–438 and later additions). The second Anhang of the BWV catalogue also lists a few songs of doubtful authenticity.
Songs, arias and Quodlibet, BWV 439–524
[edit]| column | content | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | BWV | Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis (lit. 'Bach-works-catalogue'; BWV) numbers. Anhang (Annex; Anh.) numbers are indicated as follows: |
| 2 | 2a | Section in which the composition appears in BWV2a:
|
| 3 | Date | Date associated with the completion of the listed version of the composition. Exact dates (e.g. for most cantatas) usually indicate the assumed date of first (public) performance. When the date is followed by an abbreviation in brackets (e.g. JSB for Johann Sebastian Bach) it indicates the date of that person's involvement with the composition as composer, scribe or publisher. |
| 4 | Name | Name of the composition: if the composition is known by a German incipit, that German name is preceded by the composition type (e.g. cantata, chorale prelude, motet, ...) |
| 5 | Key | Key of the composition |
| 6 | Scoring | See scoring table below for the abbreviations used in this column |
| 7 | BG | Bach Gesellschaft-Ausgabe (BG edition; BGA): numbers before the colon indicate the volume in that edition. After the colon an Arabic numeral indicates the page number where the score of the composition begins, while a Roman numeral indicates a description of the composition in the Vorwort (Preface) of the volume.[3] |
| 8 | NBE | New Bach Edition (German: Neue Bach-Ausgabe, NBA): Roman numerals for the series, followed by a slash, and the volume number in Arabic numerals. A page number, after a colon, refers to the "Score" part of the volume. Without such page number, the composition is only described in the "Critical Commentary" part of the volume. The volumes group Bach's compositions by genre:[4]
|
| 9 | Additional info | may include:
Provenance of standard texts and tunes, such as Lutheran hymns and their chorale melodies, Latin liturgical texts (e.g. Magnificat) and common tunes (e.g. Folia), are not usually indicated in this column. For an overview of such resources used by Bach, see individual composition articles, and overviews in, e.g., Chorale cantata (Bach)#Bach's chorale cantatas, List of chorale harmonisations by Johann Sebastian Bach#Chorale harmonisations in various collections and List of organ compositions by Johann Sebastian Bach#Chorale Preludes. |
| 10 | BD | Bach Digital Work page |
| Voices (see also SATB) | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a | A | b | B | s | S | t | T | v | V | |||
| alto (solo part) | alto (choir part) | bass (solo part) | bass (choir part) | soprano (solo part) | soprano (choir part) | tenor (solo part) | tenor (choir part) | voice (includes parts for unspecified voices or instruments as in some canons) | vocal music for unspecified voice type | |||
| Winds and battery (bold = soloist) | ||||||||||||
| Bas | Bel | Cnt | Fl | Hn | Ob | Oba | Odc | Tai | Tbn | Tdt | Tmp | Tr |
| bassoon (can be part of Bc, see below) | bell(s) (musical bells) | cornett, cornettino | flute (traverso, flauto dolce, piccolo, flauto basso) | natural horn, corno da caccia, corno da tirarsi, lituo | oboe | oboe d'amore | oboe da caccia | taille | trombone | tromba da tirarsi | timpani | tromba (natural trumpet, clarino trumpet) |
| Strings and keyboard (bold = soloist) | ||||||||||||
| Bc | Hc | Kb | Lu | Lw | Org | Str | Va | Vc | Vdg | Vl | Vne | |
| basso continuo: Vdg, Hc, Vc, Bas, Org, Vne and/or Lu | harpsichord | keyboard (Hc, Lw, Org or clavichord) | lute, theorbo | Lautenwerck (lute-harpsichord) | organ (/man. = manualiter, without pedals) | strings: Vl I, Vl II and Va | viola(s), viola d'amore, violetta | violoncello, violoncello piccolo | viola da gamba | violin(s), violino piccolo | violone, violone grosso | |
| Colour | Meaning |
|---|---|
| green | extant or clearly documented partial or complete manuscript (copy) by Bach and/or first edition under Bach's supervision |
| yellow | extant or clearly documented manuscript (copy) or print edition, in whole or in part, by close relative, i.e. brother (J. Christoph), wife (A. M.), son (W. F. / C. P. E. / J. C. F. / J. Christian) or son-in-law (Altnickol) |
| orange-brown | extant or clearly documented manuscript (copy) by close friend and/or pupil (Kellner, Krebs, Kirnberger, Walther, ...), or distant family member |
| BWV | 2a | Date | Name | Key | Scoring | BG | NBE | Additional info | BD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 439 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Ach, dass nicht die letzte Stunde" (Schemelli #831; tune #56) | V Bc | 39: 279 | III/2.1: 210 | ↔ Z 6721; text by Neumeister | 00509 | |
| 440 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Auf, auf! die rechte Zeit ist hier" (Schemelli #171; tune #11) | V Bc | 39: 279 | III/2.1: 123 | ↔ Z 705; text by Opitz | 00510 | |
| 441 | 6. | c. 1735 or earlier | chorale setting "Auf, auf, mein Herz, mit Freuden" | F maj. | SATB | III/2.1: 67 | after Z 5243; text by Gerhardt | 00511 | |
| 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Auf, auf, mein Herz, mit Freuden" (Schemelli #320; tune #27) | V Bc | 39: 279 | III/2.1: 152 | |||||
| 442 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Beglückter Stand getreuer Seelen" (Schemelli #570; tune #39) | V Bc | 39: 280 | III/2.1: 176 | after Z 5970; text by Bonin | 00512 | |
| 443 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Beschränkt, ihr Weisen dieser Welt" (Schemelli #689; tune #47) | V Bc | 39: 280 | III/2.1: 192 | ↔ Z 7765; text by Wegleiter | 00513 | |
| 444 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Brich entzwei, mein armes Herze" (Schemelli #303; tune #24) | V Bc | 39: 280 | III/2.1: 146 | after Z 7110–7111a; → Z 7111b; text by Trommer | 00514 | |
| 445 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Brunnquell aller Güter" (Schemelli #335; tune #29) | V Bc | 39: 281 | III/2.1: 156 | after Z 6252b; text by Franck, J. | 00515 | |
| 446 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Der lieben Sonnen Licht und Pracht" (Schemelli #39; tune #2) | V Bc | 39: 281 | III/2.1: 106 | after Z 5659; text by Scriver | 00516 | |
| 447 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Der Tag ist hin, die Sonne gehet nieder" (Schemelli #40; tune #3) | V Bc | 39: 281 | III/2.1: 108 | after Z 923; ↔ BWV 297; text by Rube | 00517 | |
| 448 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Der Tag mit seinem Lichte" (Schemelli #43; tune #4) | V Bc | 39: 282 | III/2.1: 110 | after Z 7512b; text by Gerhardt | 00518 | |
| 449 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Dich bet ich an, mein höchster Gott" (Schemelli #396; tune #31) | V Bc | 39: 282 | III/2.1: 160 | ↔ Z 2437; text by Olearius, J. G.[5] | 00519 | |
| 450 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Die bittre Leidenszeit beginnet abermal" (Schemelli #258; tune #17) | V Bc | 39: 282 | III/2.1: 134 | after Z 7429; text by Elmenhorst | 00520 | |
| 451 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Die güldne Sonne" (Schemelli #13; tune #1) | V Bc | 39: 283 | III/2.1: 104 | after Z 8015; text by Gerhardt | 00521 | |
| 452 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Dir, dir, Jehova, will ich singen" (Schemelli #397; tune #32) | V Bc | 39: 284 | III/2.1: 162 | after BWV 299; → Z 3068; text by Crasselius | 00522 | |
| 453 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Eins ist not! ach Herr, dies Eine" (Schemelli #112; tune #7) | V Bc | 39: 284 | III/2.1: 116 | ↔ Z 7129; text by Schröder | 00523 | |
| 454 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Ermuntre dich, mein schwacher Geist" (Schemelli #187; tune #12) | V Bc | 39: 284 | III/2.1: 124 | after Z 5741; text by Rist | 00524 | |
| 455 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Erwürgtes Lamm, das die verwahrten Siegel" (Schemelli #580; tune #43) | V Bc | 39: 285 | III/2.1: 184 | after Z 3138; text by Bonin | 00525 | |
| 456 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Es glänzet der Christen inwendiges Leben" (Schemelli #572; tune #40) | V Bc | 39: 285 | III/2.1: 178 | after Z 6969; text by Richter | 00526 | |
| 457 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Es ist nun aus mit meinem Leben" (Schemelli #847; tune #57) | V Bc | 39: 286 | III/2.1: 212 | after Z 6969; text by Omeis | 00527 | |
| 458 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Es ist vollbracht! Vergiss ja nicht dies Wort" (Schemelli #306; tune #25) | V Bc | 39: 286 | III/2.1: 148 | after Z 2692; text by Schmidt | 00528 | |
| 459 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Es kostet viel, ein Christ zu sein" (Schemelli #522; tune #38) | V Bc | 39: 286 | III/2.1: 174 | after Z 2727; text by Richter | 00529 | |
| 460 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Gib dich zufrieden und sei stille" (Schemelli #647; tune #45) | V Bc | 39: 288 | III/2.1: 188 | after Z 7415; text by Gerhardt | 00530 | |
| 461 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Gott lebet noch" (Schemelli #488; tune #37) | V Bc | 39: 288 | III/2.1: 172 | after Z 7951; ↔ BWV 320; text by Zihn | 00531 | |
| 462 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Gott wie groß ist deine Güte" (Schemelli #360; tune #30) | V Bc | 39: 289 | III/2.1: 158 | text by Schemelli; → Z 7937 | 00532 | |
| 463 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Herr, nicht schicke deine Rache" (Schemelli #78; tune #5) | V Bc | 39: 289 | III/2.1: 112 | after Z 6863; text by Opitz | 00533 | |
| 464 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Ich bin ja, Herr, in deiner Macht" (Schemelli #861; tune #58) | V Bc | 39: 290 | III/2.1: 214 | after Z 5869a; text by Dach | 00534 | |
| 465 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Ich freue mich in dir" (Schemelli #194; tune #13) | V Bc | 39: 290 | III/2.1: 126 | after Z 5138; text by Ziegler, C. | 00535 | |
| 466 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Ich halte treulich still" (Schemelli #657; tune #46) | V Bc | 39: 290 | III/2.1: 190 | text by Till; → Z 5082 | 00536 | |
| 467 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Ich lass dich nicht" (Schemelli #734; tune #51) | V Bc | 39: 291 | III/2.1: 200 | after Z 7455; text by Deßler | 00537 | |
| 468 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Ich liebe Jesum alle Stund" (Schemelli #737; tune #52) | V Bc | 39: 291 | III/2.1: 202 | after Z 4731; → Z 4732 | 00538 | |
| 469 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Ich steh an deiner Krippen hier" (Schemelli #195; tune #14) | V Bc | 39: 292 | III/2.1: 128 | ↔ Z 4663; text by Gerhardt | 00539 | |
| 476 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Ihr Gestirn, ihr hohlen Lüfte" (Schemelli #197; tune #15) | V Bc | 39: 294 | III/2.1: 130 | after Z 3703; text by Franck, J. | 00546 | |
| 471 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Jesu, deine Liebeswunden" (Schemelli #139; tune #10) | V Bc | 39: 292 | III/2.1: 122 | text by Wegleit.?; → Z 1302 | 00541 | |
| 470 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Jesu, Jesu, du bist mein" (Schemelli #741; tune #53) | V Bc | 39: 292 | III/2.1: 204 | ↔ BWV 357; → Z 6446 | 00540 | |
| 472 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Jesu, meines Glaubens Zier" (Schemelli #119; tune #8) | V Bc | 39: 293 | III/2.1: 118 | after Z 6453; text by Sacer | 00542 | |
| 473 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Jesu, meines Herzens Freud" (Schemelli #696; tune #48) | V Bc | 39: 293 | III/2.1: 194 | after Z 4797–4798; text by Flittner | 00543 | |
| 474 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Jesus ist das schönste Licht" (Schemelli #463; tune #33) | V Bc | 39: 293 | III/2.1: 164 | after Z 6412; text by Richter | 00544 | |
| 475 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Jesus, unser Trost und Leben" (Schemelli #333; tune #28) | V Bc | 39: 294 | III/2.1: 154 | after Z 4918; text by Homburg | 00545 | |
| 477 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Kein Stündlein geht dahin" (Schemelli #869; tune #60) | V Bc | 39: 294 | III/2.1: 218 | after 4243b; text by Franck, M.? | 00547 | |
| 478 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Komm, süßer Tod" (Schemelli #868; tune #59) | V Bc | 39: 295 | III/2.1: 216 | → Z 4400 | 00548 | |
| 479 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Kommt, Seelen, dieser Tag" (Schemelli #936; tune #67) | V Bc | 39: 295 | III/2.1: 232 | → Z 5185; text by Löscher | 00549 | |
| 480 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Kommt wieder aus der finstern Gruft" (Schemelli #938; tune #68) | V Bc | 39: 296 | III/2.1: 234 | → Z 4709; text by Löscher | 00550 | |
| 481 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Lasset uns mit Jesu ziehen" (Schemelli #281; tune #18) | V Bc | 39: 296 | III/2.1: 136 | after Z 7886b; ↔ BWV 413; text by Birken | 00551 | |
| 482 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Liebes Herz, bedenke doch" (Schemelli #467; tune #34) | V Bc | 39: 297 | III/2.1: 166 | after Z 6434; text by Koitsch | 00552 | |
| 483 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Liebster Gott, wann werd ich sterben" (Schemelli #873; tune #61) | E♭ maj. | V Bc | 39: 297 | III/2.1: 220 | after Z 6634; text by Neumann | 00553 |
| 484 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Liebster Herr Jesu, wo bleibst du so lange" (Schemelli #874; tune #62) | V Bc | 39: 298 | III/2.1: 222 | ↔ Z 3969; text by Weselowius | 00554 | |
| 485 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Liebster Immanuel, Herzog der Frommen" (Schemelli #761; tune #54) | V Bc | 39: 298 | III/2.1: 206 | after Z 4932c; text by Fritsch | 00555 | |
| 488 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Meines Lebens letzte Zeit" (Schemelli #881; tune #63) | V Bc | 39: 299 | III/2.1: 224 | after Z 6380; ↔ BWV 381 | 00558 | |
| 486 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Mein Jesu, dem die Seraphinen" (Schemelli #121; tune #9) | V Bc | 39: 298 | III/2.1: 120 | after Z 5988; text by Deßler | 00556 | |
| 487 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Mein Jesu! was vor Seelenweh" (Schemelli #283; tune #19) | V Bc | 39: 299 | III/2.1: 138 | text by Schemelli?; → Z 8383 | 00557 | |
| 489 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Nicht so traurig, nicht so sehr" (Schemelli #574; tune #41) | V Bc | 39: 300 | III/2.1: 180 | after Z 3342; text by Gerhardt? | 00559 | |
| 490 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Nur mein Jesus ist mein Leben" (Schemelli #700; tune #49) | V Bc | 39: 300 | III/2.1: 196 | after Z 8404c | 00560 | |
| 491 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "O du Liebe meiner Liebe" (Schemelli #284; tune #20) | V Bc | 39: 300 | III/2.1: 140 | after Z 6693; text by Senitz[6] | 00561 | |
| 492 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "O finstre Nacht, wenn wirst du doch vergehen" (Schemelli #891; tune #64) | V Bc | 39: 301 | III/2.1: 226 | ↔ Z 6171; text by Breithaupt | 00562 | |
| 493 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "O Jesulein süß, o Jesulein mild" (Schemelli #203; tune #16) | V Bc | 39: 302 | III/2.1: 132 | after Z 2016a; text by Thilo | 00563 | |
| 494 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "O liebe Seele, zieh die Sinnen" (Schemelli #575; tune #42) | V Bc | 39: 302 | III/2.1: 182 | → Z 7787 | 00564 | |
| 495 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "O wie selig seid ihr doch, ihr Frommen" (Schemelli #894; tune #65) | V Bc | 39: 302 | III/2.1: 228 | after Z 1583; ↔ BWV 405; text by Dach | 00565 | |
| 496 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Seelenbräutigam" (Schemelli #472; tune #35) | V Bc | 39: 303 | III/2.1: 168 | after Z 3255a–b; ↔ BWV 409; text by Drese | 00566 | |
| 497 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Seelenweide" (Schemelli #710; tune #50) | V Bc | 39: 303 | III/2.1: 198 | after Z 1286; text by Drese | 00567 | |
| 499 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Sei gegrüßet, Jesu gütig" (Schemelli #293; tune #22) | V Bc | 39: 304 | III/2.1: 143 | after Z 3889b; ↔ BWV 410; text by Keymann | 00569 | |
| 498 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Selig, wer an Jesum denkt" (Schemelli #292; tune #21) | V Bc | 39: 304 | III/2.1: 142 | → Z 4846 | 00568 | |
| 500 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "So gehst du nun, mein Jesu hin" (Schemelli #296; tune #23) | V Bc | 39: 304 | III/2.1: 144 | after Z 7631b; ↔ BWV 500a; text by Nachtenhöfer | 00570 | |
| 501 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "So gibst du nun, mein Jesu, gute Nacht" (Schemelli #315; tune #26) | V Bc | 39: 304 | III/2.1: 150 | after Z 849; ↔ BWV 412; text by Pfeiffer | 00572 | |
| 502 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "So wünsch ich mir zu guter Letzt" (Schemelli #901; tune #66) | V Bc | 39: 305 | III/2.1: 230 | ↔ Z 5892; text by Rist | 00573 | |
| 503 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Steh ich bei meinem Gott" (Schemelli #945; tune #69) | V Bc | 39: 305 | III/2.1: 236 | after Z 5207; text by Herrnschmidt | 00574 | |
| 504 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Vergiss mein nicht, dass ich dein nicht vergesse" (Schemelli #475; tune #36) | V Bc | 39: 306 | III/2.1: 170 | after Z 4779; text by Arnold | 00575 | |
| 505 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Vergiss mein nicht, ..., Mein allerliebster Gott" (Schemelli #627; tune #44) | V Bc | 39: 306 | III/2.1: 186 | text by Arnold; → Z 4233 | 00576 | |
| 506 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Was bist du doch, o Seele, so betrübt" (Schemelli #779; tune #55) | A min. | V Bc | 39: 307 | III/2.1: 208 | after Z 1837; ↔ BWV 424; text by Schultt, R. F. | 00577 |
| 507 | 6. | 1735–1736 or earlier | song "Wo ist mein Schäflein, das ich liebe" (Schemelli #108; tune #6) | V Bc | 39: 308 | III/2.1: 114 | after Z 5958a; text by Schultt, J. P. | 00578 | |
| 508 | 6. | 1718-11-16 (GHS) after 1733–1734 (AMB) |
Notebook A. M. Bach (1725) No. 25: aria "Bist du bei mir" | E♭ maj. | V Bc | 432: 36 39: 309 |
V/4: 102 | after Stölzel (Diomedes) | 00579 |
| 509 | 6. | 1725–1733 (AMB) | Notebook A. M. Bach (1725) No. 41: aria "Gedenke doch, mein Geist, zurücke" | V Bc | 432: 52 39: 310 |
V/4: 128 | 00580 | ||
| 510 | 6. | 1725–1733 | Notebook A. M. Bach (1725) No. 12: song "Gib dich zufrieden und sei stille" | F maj. | V Bc | 432: 30 39: 311 |
V/4: 91 | 00581 | |
| 511 | 6. | 1725–1733 | Notebook A. M. Bach (1725) No. 13a: song "Gib dich zufrieden und sei stille" | G min. | V Bc | 432: 31 39: 287 |
V/4: 91 | text by Gerhardt; → BWV 512 | 00582 |
| 512 | 6. | 1725–1733 | Notebook A. M. Bach (1725) No. 13b: song "Gib dich zufrieden und sei stille" | E min. | V Bc | 432: 31 39: 287 |
V/4: 91 | after BWV 511; ↔ BWV 315, Z 7417a; text by Gerhardt | 00583 |
| 513 | 6. | 1725–1733 (AMB) | Notebook A. M. Bach (1725) No. 42: song "O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort" | V Bc | 432: 52 39: 301 |
V/4: 129 | ↔ BWV 397; text by Rist | 00584 | |
| 514 | 6. | 1725–1733 (AMB) | Notebook A. M. Bach (1725) No. 35: song "Schaffs mit mir, Gott" | V Bc | 432: 48 39: 303 |
V/4: 125 | text by Schmolck | 00585 | |
| 515 | 6. | after 1733–1734 | Notebook A. M. Bach (1725) No. 20a: aria "So oft ich meine Tobackspfeife" | D min. | V Bc | 432: 34 | V/4: 98 | by Bach, G. H.?; → BWV 515a | 00586 |
| 515a | 6. | after 1733–1734 | Notebook A. M. Bach (1725) No. 20b: aria "So oft ich meine Tobackspfeife" | G min. | V Bc | 432: 34 39: 309 |
V/4: 98 | after BWV 515 | 00587 |
| 516 | 6. | after 1733–1734 (AMB) | Notebook A. M. Bach (1725) No. 33: aria "Warum betrübst du dich" | V Bc | 432: 46 39: 307 |
V/4: 121 | 00588 | ||
| 517 | 6. | after 1733–1734 (AMB) | Notebook A. M. Bach (1725) No. 40: song "Wie wohl ist mir, o Freund der Seelen" | V Bc | 432: 51 39: 307 |
V/4: 128 | text by Deßler | 00589 | |
| 518 | 6. | after 1725 | Notebook A. M. Bach (1725) No. 37: aria "Willst du dein Herz mir schenken" a.k.a. "Aria di G(i)ovannini" | V Bc | 432: 49 39: 311 |
V/4: 126 | 00590 | ||
| 519 | 6. | c.1736? | Five Hymns from SBB Bach P 802 No. 1: "Hier lieg ich nun, o Vater aller Gnaden" | V Bc | by Krebs, J. L.?; in Spitta III, pp. 401–403 | 00591 | |||
| 520 | 6. | c.1736? | Five Hymns from SBB Bach P 802 No. 2: "Das walt mein Gott, Gott Vater, Sohn und heilger Geist" | V Bc | by Krebs, J. L.?; in Spitta III, pp. 401–403 | 00592 | |||
| 521 | 6. | c.1736? | Five Hymns from SBB Bach P 802 No. 3: "Gott, mein Herz dir Dank zusendet" | V | III/3 | by Krebs, J. L.?; in Spitta III, pp. 401–403 | 00593 | ||
| 522 | 6. | c.1736? | Five Hymns from SBB Bach P 802 No. 4: "Meine Seele, lass es gehen, wie es in der Welt jetzt geht" | V | by Krebs, J. L.?; in Spitta III, pp. 401–403 | 00594 | |||
| 523 | 6. | c.1736? | Five Hymns from SBB Bach P 802 No. 5: "Ich gnüge mich an meinem Stande" | V | by Krebs, J. L.?; in Spitta III, pp. 401–403 | 00595 | |||
| 524 | 6. | 1707 – July 1708 | Quodlibet (incomplete; wedding?) | SATB (SBBB) Bc | NBG 322 | I/41: 69 | 00596 |
Sacred songs and arias from Schemelli's Songbook (BWV 439–507)
[edit]

The hymnal or song book known as Schemellis Gesangbuch, published 1736 in Leipzig by Georg Christian Schemelli, contained 954 hymns;[7] 69 of these, listed here, were accompanied by a melody and a figured bass.
- BWV 439 – Ach, dass nicht die letzte Stunde
- BWV 440 – Auf, auf! die rechte Zeit ist hier
- BWV 441 – Auf! auf! mein Herz, mit Freuden
- BWV 442 – Beglückter Stand getreuer Seelen
- BWV 443 – Beschränkt, ihr Weisen dieser Welt
- BWV 444 – Brich entzwei, mein armes Herze
- BWV 445 – Brunnquell aller Güter
- BWV 446 – Der lieben Sonnen Licht und Pracht
- BWV 447 – Der Tag ist hin, die Sonne gehet nieder
- BWV 448 – Der Tag mit seinem Lichte
- BWV 449 – Dich bet' ich an, mein höchster Gott
- BWV 450 – Die bittre Leidenszeit beginnet abermal
- BWV 451 – Die güldne Sonne voll Freud und Wonne
- BWV 452 – Dir, dir Jehovah, will ich singen
- BWV 453 – Eins ist Not! ach Herr, dies Eine
- BWV 454 – Ermuntre dich, mein schwacher Geist
- BWV 455 – Erwürgtes Lamm, das die verwahrten Siegel
- BWV 456 – Es glänzet der Christen
- BWV 457 – Es ist nun aus mit meinem Leben
- BWV 458 – Es ist vollbracht! vergiss ja nicht
- BWV 459 – Es kostet viel, ein Christ zu sein
- BWV 460 – Gib dich zufrieden und sei stille
- BWV 461 – Gott lebet noch; Seele, was verzagst du doch?
- BWV 462 – Gott, wie groß ist deine Güte
- BWV 463 – Herr, nicht schicke deine Rache
- BWV 464 – Ich bin ja, Herr, in deiner Macht
- BWV 465 – Ich freue mich in dir
- BWV 466 – Ich halte treulich still und liebe
- BWV 467 – Ich lass' dich nicht
- BWV 468 – Ich liebe Jesum alle Stund'
- BWV 469 – Ich steh' an deiner Krippen hier
- BWV 470 – Jesu, Jesu, du bist mein
- BWV 471 – Jesu, deine Liebeswunden
- BWV 472 – Jesu, meines Glaubens Zier
- BWV 473 – Jesu, meines Herzens Freud
- BWV 474 – Jesus ist das schönste Licht
- BWV 475 – Jesus, unser Trost und Leben
- BWV 476 – Ihr Gestirn', ihr hohen Lufte
- BWV 477 – Kein Stündlein geht dahin
- BWV 478 – Komm, süßer Tod, komm, selge Ruh
- BWV 479 – Kommt, Seelen, dieser Tag
- BWV 480 – Kommt wieder aus der finstern Gruft
- BWV 481 – Lasset uns mit Jesu ziehen
- BWV 482 – Liebes Herz, bedenke doch
- BWV 483 – Liebster Gott, wann werd' ich sterben?
- BWV 484 – Liebster Herr Jesu! wo bleibest du so lange?
- BWV 485 – Liebster Immanuel, Herzog der Frommen
- BWV 486 – Mein Jesu, dem die Seraphinen
- BWV 487 – Mein Jesu! was für Seelenweh
- BWV 488 – Meines Lebens letzte Zeit
- BWV 489 – Nicht so traurig, nicht so sehr
- BWV 490 – Nur mein Jesus ist mein Leben
- BWV 491 – O du Liebe meiner Liebe
- BWV 492 – O finstre Nacht
- BWV 493 – O Jesulein süß, o Jesulein mild
- BWV 494 – O liebe Seele, zieh' die Sinnen
- BWV 495 – O wie selig seid ihr doch, ihr Frommen
- BWV 496 – Seelen-Bräutigam, Jesu, Gottes Lamm
- BWV 497 – Seelenweide, meine Freude
- BWV 498 – Selig, wer an Jesum denkt
- BWV 499 – Sei gegrüßet, Jesu gütig
- BWV 500 – So gehst du nun, mein Jesu, hin
- BWV 501 – So giebst du nun, mein Jesu, gute Nacht
- BWV 502 – So wünsch' ich mir zu guter Letzt
- BWV 503 – Steh' ich bei meinem Gott
- BWV 504 – Vergiss mein nicht, dass ich dein nicht
- BWV 505 – Vergiss mein nicht, vergiss mein nicht
- BWV 506 – Was bist du doch, o Seele, so betrübet
- BWV 507 – Wo ist mein Schäflein, das ich liebe
Songs and arias from the second Notebook for Anna Magdalena Bach (BWV 508–518)
[edit]- BWV 508 – Bist du bei mir (on a melody by Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel; doubtful)[8]
- BWV 509 – Gedenke doch, mein Geist, aria
- BWV 510 – Gib dich zufrieden, chorale (doubtful)[8]
- BWV 511 – Gib dich zufrieden, chorale
- BWV 512 – Gib dich zufrieden, chorale
- BWV 513 – O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, chorale
- BWV 514 – Schaffs mit mir, Gott, chorale
- BWV 515 – So oft ich meine Tobackspfeife, aria (doubtful)[8]
- BWV 515a – So oft ich meine Tobackspfeife
- BWV 516 – Warum betrübst du dich, aria
- BWV 517 – Wie wohl ist mir, o Freund der Seelen
- BWV 518 – Willst du dein Herz mir schenken
Five hymns from a manuscript by Johann Ludwig Krebs (BWV 519–523)
[edit]Fünf geistliche Lieder are five hymns as collected by Johann Ludwig Krebs (1713–1780) and published by Breitkopf & Härtel in 1917.
- BWV 519 – Hier lieg ich nun (doubtful)[8]
- BWV 520 – Das walt' mein Gott (doubtful)[8]
- BWV 521 – Gott mein Herz dir Dank (doubtful)[8]
- BWV 522 – Meine Seele, lass es gehen (doubtful)[8]
- BWV 523 – Ich gnüge mich an meinem Stande (doubtful)[8]
Quodlibet (BWV 524)
[edit]- BWV 524 – Wedding Quodlibet (fragment)
Added to the BWV catalogue in the 21st century (BWV 1127)
[edit]- BWV 1127 – "Alles mit Gott und nichts ohn' ihn" (strophic aria composed in Weimar in 1713, rediscovered in 2005)[9]
Doubtful works from BWV Anh. II (BWV Anh. 32–41)
[edit]BWV Anh. II lists eight songs in Christian Hofmann von Hofmannswaldau's Deutsche Übersetzungen und Gedichte and two in Sperontes' Singende Muse an der Pleiße as possibly composed by Bach.
From Deutsche Übersetzungen und Gedichte
[edit]- BWV Anh. 32 – Sacred Song "Getrost mein Geist, wenn Wind und Wetter krachen" (doubtful)
- BWV Anh. 33 – Sacred song "Mein Jesus, spare nicht" (doubtful)
- BWV Anh. 34 – Sacred Song "Kann ich mit einem Tone" (doubtful)
- BWV Anh. 35 – Sacred Song "Meine Seele lass die Flügel" (doubtful)
- BWV Anh. 36 – Sacred song "Ich stimm' itzund ein Straff-Lied an" (doubtful)
- BWV Anh. 37 – Sacred song "Der schwarze Flügel trüber Nacht" (doubtful)
- BWV Anh. 38 – Sacred song "Das Finsterniß tritt ein" (doubtful)
- BWV Anh. 39 – Song "Ach was wollt ihr trüben Sinnen" (doubtful)
From Singende Muse an der Pleiße
[edit]- BWV Anh. 40 – Song "Ich bin nun wie ich bin" (Text lost; doubtful)
- BWV Anh. 41 – Song "Dir zu Liebe, wertes Herze" (doubtful)
Spurious work from BWV Anh. III (BWV Anh. 158)
[edit]- BWV Anh. 158 – Aria "Andro dall' colle al prato", by Johann Christian Bach
Other BWV numbers referring to a single aria
[edit]In the church cantata range of BWV numbers (BWV 1–200):
- BWV 53 – "Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde" (probably spurious, by Melchior Hoffmann)
- BWV 200 – "Bekennen will ich seinen Namen" (based on an aria included in Ein Lämmlein geht und trägt die Schuld, a passion-oratorio by Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel)
References
[edit]- ^ (BWV2a) Alfred Dürr, Yoshitake Kobayashi (eds.), Kirsten Beißwenger. Bach Werke Verzeichnis: Kleine Ausgabe, nach der von Wolfgang Schmieder vorgelegten 2. Ausgabe. Preface in English and German. Wiesbaden: Breitkopf & Härtel, 1998. ISBN 3765102490 - ISBN 978-3765102493, pp. 304–310
- ^ Bach Digital Work 01307 at www
.bachdigital .de - ^ Bach-Gesellschaft Ausgabe, .../Prefaces, .../Thematic Catalogue: documentation and facsimiles at the International Music Score Library Project
- ^ Neue Bach-Ausgabe: documentation at the International Music Score Library Project
- ^ Leaver, Robin A., ed. (2016). The Routledge Research Companion to Johann Sebastian Bach. Taylor & Francis. pp. 153–154. ISBN 9781315452807.
- ^ Pietrzak, Ewa (2014). "Schlesier in den deutschen Sprachgesellschaften des 17. Jahrhunderts" [Silesians in the German-speaking communities of the 17th century]. In Garber, Klaus; Wismann, Heinz; Siebers, Winfried (eds.). Europäische Sozietätsbewegung und demokratische Tradition: Die europäischen Akademien der Frühen Neuzeit zwischen Frührenaissance und Spätaufklärung. Frühe Neuzeit (in German). Vol. 26–27. Walter de Gruyter. p. 1296. ISBN 9783110963243.
- ^ Georg Christian Schemelli, editor; Johann Sebastian Bach, composer and arranger. Musicalisches Gesang-Buch, darinnen 954 geistreiche, sowohl alte als neue Lieder und Arien, mit wohlgesetzten Melodien, in Discont und Baß, befindlich sind: Vornehmlich denen Evangelischen Gemeinen im Stifte, Naumburg-Zeitz gewidmet. Leipzig: Bernhard Christoph Breitkopf, 1736
- ^ a b c d e f g h Wolff, Christoph; Emery, Walter (2001). "Bach, Johann Sebastian". Grove Music Online. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.6002278195. (subscription, Wikilibrary access, or UK public library membership required)
- ^ "Alles mit Gott und nichts ohn' ihn (aria) BWV 1127". Bach Digital. Leipzig: Bach Archive; et al. 30 March 2020.
External links
[edit]- Songs and Arias (BWV 439–518), Sacred songs (BWV 519–523), Quodlibet (BWV 524): Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
- Schemellis Gesangbuch BWV 439–507 with scores and videos for each song
- (MP3) Bach Solo Songs, 27 November 2016: Devotional songs, as well as their counterparts in chorus, and classic Bach instrumentals at lottelehmannleague.org/singing-sins-archive (Hawaii Public Radio broadcast)
List of songs and arias by Johann Sebastian Bach
View on GrokipediaBackground and Catalogue Overview
Scope and Definition of Bach's Songs and Arias
In Johann Sebastian Bach's compositional output, songs and arias encompass standalone vocal works that differ from the more extensive forms such as cantatas, passions, and oratorios. Songs, often termed Lieder in the German tradition, are generally simple strophic or through-composed pieces for solo voice accompanied by keyboard, emphasizing melodic clarity and textual devotion suitable for personal or familial settings. Arias, by contrast, represent more structured compositions, frequently employing da capo or binary forms with a solo voice and continuo or instrumental support, extracted or composed independently rather than as integral components of larger dramatic or liturgical structures. These distinctions highlight Bach's versatility in vocal writing, adapting operatic and sacred influences to concise formats.[5][6] Historically, Bach produced a limited number of such standalone songs and arias, a scarcity attributable to his primary roles in church and court positions, where the demands of composing over 200 surviving church cantatas and numerous secular cantatas took precedence. These smaller vocal pieces emerged mainly during his Leipzig period (1723–1750), serving personal, devotional, or recreational purposes rather than public performance, and reflecting the intimate musical life of his household. Unlike the elaborate polyphony of his cantatas, these works prioritize accessibility, often featuring homophonic textures that underscore the poetic or spiritual content without complex orchestration.[7][8][9] Bach's songs and arias are characterized by their use of German texts, with sacred themes prevailing to align with Lutheran piety, and straightforward harmonizations via figured bass that facilitate domestic keyboard performance. The sacred songs from Schemelli's Musicalisches Gesang-Buch (BWV 439–507) comprise approximately 69 entries, including chorale melodies and bass realizations attributed to or involving Bach, intended for private devotional singing. Complementing these are 11 songs and arias from the Second Notebook for Anna Magdalena Bach (BWV 508–518), which include light arias and minuets evoking domestic affection. Further additions, such as five hymns (BWV 519–523) and a quodlibet (BWV 524), yield a core total of around 86 works, expanded to approximately 100 with 20th-century discoveries and attributions.[2][10]Role in the BWV Catalogue
The Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis (BWV), the thematic-systematic catalogue of Johann Sebastian Bach's musical works, assigns Chapter 6 to songs, arias, and the quodlibet, covering BWV 439–524. This organizational framework was introduced in the catalogue's inaugural edition, compiled by Wolfgang Schmieder and published in 1950 by Breitkopf & Härtel in Leipzig.[11] The 1950 edition provided the foundational numbering for Bach's output, grouping vocal works of this type based on their genres and primary sources, though it initially overlooked some lesser-known or disputed compositions due to incomplete source documentation at the time.[12] Within Chapter 6, the numbering follows a structured sequence reflecting key manuscript sources: BWV 439–507 encompasses the sacred songs and arias drawn from Georg Christian Schemelli's Musicalisches Gesang-Buch (1736); BWV 508–518 includes songs and arias from the second Clavier-Büchlein für Anna Magdalena Bach (1725); BWV 519–523 comprises hymns preserved in the Johann Ludwig Krebs manuscript; and BWV 524 designates the quodlibet. These assignments prioritize the works' origins in printed and handwritten collections, emphasizing Bach's contributions to both sacred and domestic vocal music. The catalogue's appendices address doubtful and spurious works, with Anh. II cataloguing attributed songs (BWV Anh. II 32–41) and Anh. III listing spurious ones (such as BWV Anh. III 158). Subsequent revisions expanded the BWV's scope; the 1998 edition, edited by Alfred Dürr, Yoshitake Kobayashi, and Wolfgang Schmieder, incorporated findings from ongoing Bach scholarship, including refined attributions and source analyses. A third edition, published in 2022 in collaboration with the Bach-Archiv Leipzig, further updated the catalogue to reflect 21st-century research. In the 21st century, newly rediscovered pieces like the aria BWV 1127—unearthed in 2005 from a Weimar library manuscript—have been assimilated into the main BWV sequence, reflecting the catalogue's evolving nature as research uncovers additional primary materials.[13]Canonical Songs and Arias (BWV 439–524)
Sacred Songs from Schemelli's Songbook (BWV 439–507)
The Sacred Songs from Schemelli's Songbook (BWV 439–507) comprise 69 four-part chorale harmonizations contributed by Johann Sebastian Bach to Musicalisches Gesang-Buch, a collection of 954 sacred songs and arias published in Leipzig in 1736 by Bernhard Christoph Breitkopf.[3] Georg Christian Schemelli, the court's cantor in Zeitz and former pupil at Leipzig's Thomasschule, compiled the volume and solicited Bach's assistance, advertising his involvement on the title page for the figured bass realizations and harmonizations.[2] These pieces draw from Lutheran hymn texts, some authored by Schemelli himself, and were designed for private devotional singing in evangelical communities around Naumburg and Zeitz, emphasizing simplicity and accessibility with chordal textures supported by organ continuo.[3][2] Bach's contributions primarily involve adapting existing melodies into four-voice settings, though research identifies about 21 as potentially original tunes by him, such as BWV 452, BWV 478, and BWV 505; the remainder revise tunes from earlier hymnals like those of Johann Crüger or Adam Drese.[2] The 69 works are included in the BWV catalogue, but modern scholarship attributes only a few unequivocally to Bach as original compositions, with the majority involving his revisions or figured bass contributions; debates persist on the extent of his authorship.[2] The settings reflect a blend of Pietistic introspection and galant lightness, unsuitable for robust congregational use but ideal for personal meditation, often featuring expressive melodic lines over straightforward harmonic progressions.[2] They stem directly from the 1736 first edition preserved in sources like the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin.[3] The following table presents representative examples, highlighting the German incipit, English translation, and notes on style or authorship:| BWV | German Incipit | English Translation | Notes on Authorship and Style |
|---|---|---|---|
| 439 | Ach, dass nicht die letzte Stunde | Ah, that not the last hour | Simple chordal harmonization of an anonymous text; adapted melody, emphasizing solemn reflection on mortality.[14] |
| 450 | Die bittre Leidenszeit beginnet abermal | Now is the mournful time | Figured bass for organ; text by Johann Wolfgang Franck, melody possibly revised from earlier sources for Lenten devotion.[15] |
| 452 | Dir, dir, Jehova, will ich singen | To Thee, to Thee, Jehovah, will I sing | Confirmed original melody by Bach; joyful praise setting with flowing lines suitable for solo voice and continuo.[2] |
| 478 | Komm, süßer Tod, komm selge Ruh | Come, sweet death, come blessed rest | Confirmed original melody by Bach; poignant, lyrical aria-like structure evoking serene acceptance of death.[2] |
| 505 | Vergiss mein nicht, mein allerliebster Gott | Forget me not, my dearest God | Explicitly credited to Bach; intimate prayer with delicate harmonization, original tune.[2] |
Secular Songs from the Second Notebook for Anna Magdalena Bach (BWV 508–518)
The Second Clavier-Büchlein, presented by Johann Sebastian Bach to his second wife Anna Magdalena in 1725, serves as a personal music album for domestic use, featuring a mix of keyboard compositions, dances, and vocal works intended for family performance and instruction. The vocal section, catalogued as BWV 508–518, consists of 11 short songs and arias, mostly for soprano or alto voice with basso continuo, emphasizing melodic simplicity and galant elegance suitable for amateur singers like Anna Magdalena and the Bach children. These pieces blend Bach's originals with arrangements of works by contemporaries, incorporating French stylistic elements such as graceful phrasing and light ornamentation, and were likely used for evening music-making in the Leipzig household.[16][17] Of the 11 entries, eight are attributed to Bach, while three draw from other composers: BWV 508 uses a melody by Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel, BWV 510 is by Johann Sebastian Bach, and BWV 518 adapts an aria by Giuseppe Maria Orlandini (known as "Giovannini"). The secular character of these songs—despite some sharing devotional texts—lies in their intimate, non-liturgical setting, contrasting with the more formal sacred harmonizations in Schemelli's Songbook. Notable examples include the tender love duet "Bist du bei mir" (BWV 508) and the humorous "So oft ich meine Tobackspfeife" (BWV 515), which reflect the playful side of Bach family life. The notebook's survival, preserved in the Berlin State Library, offers rare insight into 18th-century musical pedagogy and spousal affection through shared repertoire.[18][19] The following table lists the pieces, with incipits, attributed composers, voice types, and brief performance notes:| BWV | Incipit | Composer | Voice Type | Performance Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 508 | Bist du bei mir | G.H. Stölzel (melody), J.S. Bach (harmony) | Soprano/alto, continuo | Intimate love aria; simple accompaniment for voice practice; often performed as a duet in modern recordings.[19] |
| 509 | Gedenke doch, mein Geist, zurücke | J.S. Bach | Soprano/alto, continuo | Reflective aria on Psalm 77; suited for expressive singing in family settings. |
| 510 | Gib dich zufrieden und sei stille (F major) | J.S. Bach | Soprano/alto, continuo | Devotional song; keyboard-friendly for sight-reading exercises.[17] |
| 511 | Gib dich zufrieden und sei stille (G minor) | J.S. Bach | Soprano/alto, continuo | Variant setting; emphasizes emotional depth through minor key. |
| 512 | Gib dich zufrieden und sei stille (E minor) | J.S. Bach | Soprano/alto, continuo | Third variant; demonstrates harmonic variation for teaching purposes. |
| 513 | O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort | J.S. Bach | Soprano/alto, continuo | Hymn-like song on eternity; French-influenced phrasing for melodic flow. |
| 514 | Schaff’s mit mir, Gott | J.S. Bach | Soprano/alto, continuo | Prayerful aria; short and accessible for daily devotionals. |
| 515 | So oft ich meine Tobackspfeife | J.S. Bach | Soprano/alto, continuo | Humorous secular ode to pipe-smoking; light, buffo style for entertainment.[18] |
| 516 | Warum betrübst du dich, mein Herz | J.S. Bach | Soprano/alto, continuo | Consolatory song from Psalm 42; gentle tempo for vocal warm-ups. |
| 517 | Wie wohl ist mir, o Freund der Seelen | J.S. Bach | Soprano/alto, continuo | Joyful devotional; upbeat for group singing. |
| 518 | Willst du dein Herz mir schenken (Aria di Giovannini) | G.M. Orlandini (after), J.S. Bach (arr.) | Soprano/alto, continuo | Charming love song in strophic form; Italianate melody with galant ornamentation.[20] |
Hymns from Johann Ludwig Krebs Manuscript (BWV 519–523)
The five hymns catalogued as BWV 519–523 are preserved in a collective manuscript (D-B Mus. ms. Bach P 802) held by the Berlin State Library, primarily copied by Johann Ludwig Krebs (1713–1780), a student of Bach who served as his copyist and keyboard player from 1726 until 1737 or 1738.[21] This autograph also includes contributions from Krebs's father, Johann Tobias Krebs (1690–1762), and the organist Johann Gottfried Walther (1685–1748), reflecting a collaborative pedagogical tradition in Weimar and Leipzig circles around the 1710s to 1740s.[22] The hymns appear as a cohesive group of sacred songs within this volume, set to devotional Lutheran texts emphasizing repentance, gratitude, and contentment. These settings are of doubtful authenticity, often classified as spurious in modern catalogues, though attributed to Bach based on stylistic similarities and Krebs's association; they may represent Krebs's compositions or copies.[1] They were first published in a modern edition by Breitkopf & Härtel in 1917 and formally incorporated into the BWV catalogue in its inaugural 1950 edition by Wolfgang Schmieder, placing them in Chapter 6 alongside other vocal works. Krebs's close association with Bach supports the attribution, as he completed family manuscripts begun under Bach's influence, preserving these pieces as exemplars of intimate vocal instruction. Musically, the hymns are concise two-part compositions for solo voice and basso continuo, featuring the chorale melody in the upper voice against a contrapuntal bass line with figured bass indications for realization.[22] They draw on pietistic Lutheran hymnody, with expressive yet restrained counterpoint that highlights the texts' emotional depth, such as pleas for mercy or serene acceptance of divine will. The settings employ existing hymn melodies, adapted with subtle harmonic tensions and resolutions typical of Bach's chorale style.| BWV | Title | Text Author | Key | Structure and Melody Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 519 | Hier lieg ich nun, o Vater aller Gnaden | Johann Arndt (1555–1621) | F major | Two stanzas; melody original to text; simple dialogue between voice and bass. |
| 520 | Das walt' mein Gott | Unknown (morning blessing hymn) | Not specified | Single stanza; derived from Schemelli Songbook No. 8; homorhythmic with light counterpoint.[22] |
| 521 | Gott, mein Herz dir Dank zusendet | Emilie Juliane von Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt (1637–1706) | Not specified | Four stanzas abbreviated; original melody; bass provides supportive harmony.[22] |
| 522 | Meine Seele, lass es gehen | Unknown (patience hymn) | Not specified | Six stanzas excerpted from Schemelli No. 667; gentle, flowing counterpoint.[22] |
| 523 | Ich gnüge mich an meinem Stande | Paul Gerhardt (1607–1676) | G major | Eleven stanzas summarized; melody "Wer nur den lieben Gott lässt walten" by Georg Neumark; ornate bass line.[22] |
Quodlibet (BWV 524)
The Quodlibet BWV 524, also known as the Wedding Quodlibet, is an unfinished vocal work by Johann Sebastian Bach composed around 1708 for soprano, alto, tenor, bass, and continuo.[23] It survives as a fragmentary autograph manuscript on three large sheets totaling twelve pages, with the outer sheet containing the title page now lost, indicating it was likely a clear copy from an earlier draft.[24] The piece exemplifies the quodlibet genre through its humorous integration of multiple popular folk tunes and textual fragments into a single composition, creating a parodic, catalog-style narrative that lists absurd or whimsical items in a homophonic texture with occasional polyphonic overlaps.[24] Musically, BWV 524 employs a lighthearted, improvisatory style that contrasts sharply with the solemnity of Bach's sacred songs, such as those in Schemelli's Songbook, by quoting recognizable melodies simultaneously across voices to form musical puzzles for listeners.[25] Examples include interwoven folk fragments that evoke student songs and proverbs, accompanied by word painting—such as descending lines for references to downfall or rising motifs for elevation—in measures like 19–20 and 37–38.[24] The German text, possibly a collaborative effort by Bach or his circle, features dialectal elements, Latin quotations, and local allusions (e.g., to Texel and biblical figures like Salome), alongside references to solar eclipses from 1705 or 1706, underscoring its parodic intent.[24] The manuscript's provenance traces to a 1932 acquisition by collector Manfred Gorke, later purchased by the Leipzig city library in 1935, with possible origins linked to Count von Boineburg's collection via Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach.[24] Likely intended for a wedding celebration in Bach's early career locales like Erfurt, Arnstadt, or Mühlhausen—before his Weimar appointment in 1708—it reflects the Bach family's quodlibet tradition of blending tunes for festive, improvisatory entertainment, distinct from more structured works like the Peasant Cantata (BWV 212).[24] Authenticity is affirmed by scholars, as noted in Grove Music Online, classifying it as a genuine early Bach composition rather than doubtful or spurious.[23] Performances of BWV 524 remain rare due to its incomplete state, often requiring scholarly reconstruction for modern rendition, with notable recordings by ensembles like the Netherlands Bach Society under Shunske Sato and Musica Antiqua Köln under Reinhard Goebel.[26] First printed in 1932 by Max Schneider, the work highlights Bach's versatility in secular, humorous vocal forms during his formative years.[24]Later Discoveries and Additions
Rediscovered Aria (BWV 1127)
In May 2005, musicologist Michael Maul from the Bach-Archiv Leipzig discovered the autograph score of an unknown aria by Johann Sebastian Bach while examining materials in the Herzogin Anna Amalia Bibliothek in Weimar, Germany, as part of a systematic archival survey in central Germany.[27] The manuscript, in Bach's own hand, was identified as a previously unknown vocal work composed in October 1713 to celebrate the 53rd birthday of Duke Wilhelm Ernst of Saxe-Weimar, Bach's employer during his tenure as court organist from 1708 to 1717.[27][28] This discovery marked the first major addition to Bach's known vocal oeuvre since 1935 and was publicly announced later that year.[29] The aria, titled Alles mit Gott und nichts ohn' ihn, sets a 12-stanza poem by Johann Anton Mylius, a contemporary poet, which translates and expands on the duke's personal Latin motto, "Omnia cum Deo et nihil sine eo" (Everything with God and nothing without him).[27] Scored for solo soprano, two violins, viola, and basso continuo, it follows a strophic form where the same vocal melody accompanies each stanza over continuo, followed by an instrumental ritornello played by the full string ensemble.[27][28] The elaborate opening ritornello incorporates lively string writing that evokes the celebratory and courtly atmosphere of the Weimar period, structurally resembling elements of Bach's contemporaneous Hunting Cantata (BWV 208), also composed for the same occasion.[30] The complete performance of all 12 stanzas lasts approximately 48 minutes, making it a substantial occasional piece.[31] Authenticity was swiftly confirmed through analysis of the handwriting, paper, and musical style consistent with Bach's early Weimar output, leading to its assignment as BWV 1127 in the revised Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis catalogue that year.[27][28] The first complete recording, featuring all 12 stanzas, was made by John Eliot Gardiner with the English Baroque Soloists and soprano Katharine Fuge in 2005, released on the Soli Deo Gloria label in 2006.[32] As Bach's only surviving complete strophic aria, BWV 1127 holds significant scholarly value for illuminating his early compositional techniques in secular, celebratory music, bridging his organist duties and emerging vocal style at the Weimar court.[27] It exemplifies Bach's adaptation of Italianate forms like the strophic aria with ritornello, tailored to a courtly context, and remains a rare intact example of his occasional works from this period.Other 20th-Century Additions to BWV for Vocal Works
In the second half of the 20th century, the BWV catalogue was expanded through revisions that incorporated newly identified or reattributed works, including a small number of vocal pieces assigned BWV numbers 1081–1126 based on manuscript discoveries and scholarly reevaluations post-1950. These additions, primarily fragments or excerpts from larger sacred compositions, were formally integrated into the revised edition BWV²a published in 1998 by the Johann Sebastian Bach Institute and the Bach-Archiv Leipzig. Among them, vocal works with song-like or aria characteristics are limited, often incomplete, and derived from cantatas, passions, or masses rather than standalone songs; authenticity varies, with some confirmed by autographs and others debated due to stylistic similarities to Bach's output or potential attributions to contemporaries. Unlike the canonical songs in BWV 439–524, these pieces emphasize chorale settings or brief solo/duet movements, reflecting Bach's practice of adapting or incorporating material into liturgical contexts. A prominent example is BWV 1083, Tilge, Höchster, meine Sünden ("Efface, Highest One, my sins"), a duet cantata for two sopranos and strings, composed circa 1743–1746 as a contrafactum of Giovanni Battista Pergolesi's Stabat Mater (1736) using a German paraphrase of Psalm 51. The work's five movements feature aria-like structures, including expressive duets that highlight penitential themes, and its authenticity is undisputed, supported by Bach's autograph score discovered in the 19th century but catalogued under BWV in the 20th-century revision.[33] Similarly, BWV 1088, an arioso for bass soloist titled So heb ich denn mein Auge sehnlich auf ("Thus I now lift my eyes longingly"), survives as a single-movement fragment from a lost Passion pastiche, likely dating to the 1730s; it exhibits Bach's characteristic lyrical style in a recitative-arioso form, with authenticity affirmed by the manuscript's provenance, though no complete context remains.[34] BWV 1081, Credo in unum Deum, represents a choral movement for voices and basso continuo in F major, possibly extracted from a lost mass or cantata; its addition stems from a 20th-century reevaluation of sources linking it stylistically to Bach, though authenticity is contested, as it may originate from a Missa brevis by Giovanni Battista Bassani with Bach's modifications. The piece's homophonic texture aligns with Bach's chorale practices but lacks the elaborate aria development of his mature vocal output. Other relevant additions include BWV 1122–1126, a series of four-part chorales from newly sourced manuscripts, such as Denket doch, ihr Menschenkinder (BWV 1122); these are authentic vocal settings but fragmentary and chorale-focused rather than aria-oriented. Overall, these works underscore the ongoing scholarly efforts to reconstruct Bach's oeuvre, with no major new vocal additions beyond BWV 1127 reported by the Bach-Archiv Leipzig as of 2025.Doubtful and Attributed Works (BWV Anh. II)
Selections from Deutsche Übersetzungen und Gedichte (BWV Anh. 32–39)
The selections catalogued as BWV Anh. 32–39 comprise eight strophic songs for voice and basso continuo, drawn from the anonymous musical settings in the 1704 edition of Christian Hofmann von Hofmannswaldau's Deutsche Übersetzungen und Gedichte, a collection of German translations of psalms and other poetic texts. These works were attributed to Johann Sebastian Bach in early 20th-century catalogues, possibly reflecting his early compositional activity around 1704 in Weimar or Mühlhausen, but modern scholarship regards the attribution as doubtful due to stylistic discrepancies, including simpler harmonic progressions and less contrapuntal density than characteristic of Bach's mature vocal output. The songs' sacred themes derive from psalm-inspired texts emphasizing spiritual consolation, yet they lack the intricate theological depth and Lutheran chorale influences typical of Bach's confirmed sacred songs.[35] Included in the appendices of the original 1950 Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis (BWV) as doubtful compositions, these pieces were retained in the 1998 revised edition under Anhang II for spurious and attributed vocal works, primarily owing to the absence of any autograph or contemporary manuscript evidence associating them with Bach. Their strophic form, with repeated melodies over multiple verses and minimal variation, suits domestic or devotional performance but contrasts with Bach's preference for more elaborate aria structures in similar sacred contexts. Attributions to contemporaries like Georg Philipp Telemann have been proposed based on shared galant traits and simpler bass lines, though no definitive composer has been identified.[36] The specific songs are as follows, each with psalm-derived texts focusing on themes of faith, nature, and divine protection:- BWV Anh. 32: "Getrost mein Geist" – A consolatory ode invoking resilience amid "wind and weather," set in a straightforward strophic melody; doubts arise from its rudimentary phrasing, lacking Bach's rhythmic complexity.[35]
- BWV Anh. 33: "Mein Jesus, spare nicht" – Plea for Christ's mercy, with repetitive bass support; the harmonic simplicity and absence of fugal elements deviate from Bach's style.[36]
- BWV Anh. 34: "Kann ich mit einem Tone" – Reflection on praising God through song, emphasizing vocal expression; stylistic mismatches include limited melodic development.[35]
- BWV Anh. 35: "Meine Seele, lass die Flügel" – Exhortation to elevate the soul, using light, ascending lines; the work's brevity and plain continuo undermine Bach attribution.[36]
- BWV Anh. 36: "Ich stimm' itzund ein Straff-Lied an" – Sabbath celebration song, with jubilant text; doubts stem from its folksong-like simplicity, unlike Bach's chorale adaptations.[35]
- BWV Anh. 37: "Der schwarze Flügel trüber Nacht" – Evening prayer against darkness, evoking peace; the modal inflections and sparse texture suggest a non-Bach hand.[36]
- BWV Anh. 38: "Das Finsterniß tritt ein" – Evening song depicting the onset of darkness, with contemplative melody; its simple structure and lack of contrapuntal elements contribute to doubts about Bach's authorship.[35]
- BWV Anh. 39: "Ach was wollt ihr trüben Sinnen" – Admonition against melancholy thoughts, set to an upbeat strophic tune; the repetitive motifs and harmonic plainness deviate from Bach's expressive style.[36]
Selections from Singende Muse an der Pleiße (BWV Anh. 40–41)
The Singende Muse an der Pleiße is a popular collection of secular songs published in Leipzig, with the first edition appearing in 1736 under the editorship of Johann Sigismund Scholze (pseudonym Sperontes), though later editions and continuations extended into the 1740s. The anthology features strophic odes with melodies adapted from contemporary instrumental works, set for voice and basso continuo, aimed at amateur musicians and reflecting the emerging galant style in German song literature. Two pieces from this collection have been questionably attributed to Johann Sebastian Bach in some historical editions and catalogues, catalogued as BWV Anh. 40–41 in the BWV annex for doubtful vocal works, but no direct manuscript evidence or contemporary documentation links them to Bach's hand. These simple arias, with celebratory and amorous texts, exhibit a light, homophonic texture and melodic simplicity that diverge from Bach's characteristic contrapuntal complexity and depth, particularly in his later Leipzig period. Scholars suggest possible authorship by other contemporaries such as Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel or members of the local musical circle, given the collection's collaborative nature involving composers like Georg Philipp Telemann and Johann Joachim Quantz.[37][38] The attributed pieces include:- BWV Anh. 40: "Ich bin nun wie ich bin" – A soprano or tenor aria expressing contentment in one's state, with a lost text in some sources but preserved melody in strophic form; the piece's straightforward harmonic progression and absence of Bach's signature motivic development contribute to skepticism regarding attribution.[39][37]
- BWV Anh. 41: "Dir zu Liebe, wertes Herze" – An affectionate aria for voice, praising a beloved heart, in a gentle minuet-like tempo; its sentimental tone and simple accompaniment reflect the collection's domestic appeal, but stylistic analysis post-1998, including comparisons to verified Bach secular works, leans against his authorship owing to insufficient complexity and provenance gaps.[40][36]
Spurious and Miscellaneous Single Arias
Spurious Work from BWV Anh. III (BWV Anh. 158)
BWV Anh. 158 is an Italian aria titled "Andro dall' colle al prato" (I go from the hill to the meadow), composed for soprano solo with two flutes, two violins, viola, and continuo.[42] The text is secular, drawn from pastoral imagery, and the style reflects mid-18th-century Italian opera conventions with lyrical melody and light accompaniment.[42] The work survives in an 18th-century manuscript, the Warb G 4 collection held at the Leipzig University Library, where it was erroneously ascribed to Johann Sebastian Bach.[43] In reality, the aria originates from Johann Christian Bach's opera Orione ossia Diana vendicata, premiered in 1763, marking it as a product of the younger Bach's galant style rather than J.S. Bach's. Authenticity was questioned soon after its initial attribution, with its inclusion in the Breitkopf & Härtel thematic catalog of 1767 already noting ambiguity by listing it under "Bach nell' Opera, Orione." It appeared in the 19th-century Bach-Gesellschaft edition (BG XI/2) as a purported aria from a lost Bach cantata, perpetuating the error until scholarly scrutiny rejected it due to stylistic mismatches, such as the absence of J.S. Bach's characteristic counterpoint and complexity.[44] Wolfgang Schmieder's Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis (1950) formally placed it in Anh. III as spurious, a classification reaffirmed in the 1990 revision.[42] Today, BWV Anh. 158 is definitively attributed to Johann Christian Bach and excluded from J.S. Bach's oeuvre, illustrating common misattributions in Baroque vocal music stemming from familial naming conventions and incomplete manuscript documentation.Isolated Arias Assigned Individual BWV Numbers
Isolated arias assigned individual BWV numbers encompass a select group of standalone vocal compositions by Johann Sebastian Bach, primarily concert arias and solo cantatas designed for a single singer accompanied by orchestra or continuo. These works, composed during Bach's Weimar, Köthen, and Leipzig periods, demonstrate his skill in crafting concise, expressive pieces for concert performance or special occasions, often blending sacred and secular elements without integration into larger multi-movement structures like full cantatas or passions. Unlike arias embedded within extended vocal works, these pieces survived and were catalogued independently due to their self-contained nature and occasional rediscovery in manuscripts, allowing them unique BWV designations outside the primary cantata sequences (BWV 1–224). They highlight Bach's versatility in Italianate and German styles, with elaborate obbligato parts for instruments such as trumpet, flute, or oboe enhancing the soloist's virtuosity. Representative examples include the following, selected for their distinctiveness and historical significance. Each is a complete work in one or two movements, typically comprising recitative and aria, performed by a solo voice.| BWV | Title | Voice | Key | Occasion/Year | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 51 | Jauchzet Gott in allen Landen! | Soprano | G major | 18th Sunday after Trinity / ca. 1730 | Virtuosic sacred concert aria with trumpet obbligato; opens with a jubilant aria praising God, followed by recitative and closing alleluia; composed in Leipzig for liturgical use but suitable for concert. |
| 82 | Ich habe genug | Bass | C minor | Feast of Purification / 1727 | Iconic sacred solo cantata expressing longing for death as release; features a poignant opening aria with obbligato oboe; multiple versions exist, including soprano adaptation in Anna Magdalena's notebook (BWV 82 variant). |
| 84 | Ich bin vergnügt mit meinem Glücke | Soprano | E minor | Feast of Purification / 1727 | Parody of BWV 208 aria; secular-tinged sacred work with flute obbligato, celebrating contentment; brief recitative leads to a lively closing chorale. |
| 202 | Weichet nur, betrübte Schatten | Soprano | A major | Possible wedding / ca. 1718 | Weimar-era secular concert aria on love and spring renewal; violin obbligato adds pastoral charm; structure includes recitatives framing two da capo arias. |
| 209 | Non sa che sia dolore | Soprano | D minor | Farewell for departing scholar / ca. 1734 | Rare Italian-text secular cantata; sinfonia precedes recitatives and arias on sorrow and constancy; flute and strings provide elegant support. |
| 210 | O holder Tag, erwünschte Zeit | Soprano | C major | Birthday or anniversary / ca. 1740 | Parody of BWV 30a; secular praise with festive trumpet and oboe d'amore; later adaptation of BWV 209 elements, emphasizing joy and gratitude.[45] |

