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Chorales BWV 250-438: Details and Recordings
Individual Recordings: Hilliard - Morimur | Chorales - N. Matt | Chorales - H. Rilling | Preludi ai Corali - Quartetto Italiani di Viola Da Gamba
Discussions: Motets & Chorales for Events in the LCY / Chorales by Theme | General Discussions: Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Chorales in Bach Cantatas: Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Passion Chorale
References: Chorales BWV 250-300 | Chorales BWV 301-350 | Chorales BWV 351-400 | Chorales BWV 401-438 | 371 4-Part Chorales sorted by Breitkopf Number | Texts & Translations of Chorales BWV 250-438
Chorale Texts: Sorted by Title | Chorale Melodies: Sorted by Title | Explanation
MIDI files of the Chorales: Cantatas BWV 1-197 | Other Vocal Works BWV 225-248 | Chorales BWV 250-438
Articles: The Origin of the Texts of the Chorales [A. Schweitzer] | The Origin of the Melodies of the Chorales [A. Schweitzer] | The Chorale in the Church Service [A. Schweitzer] | Choral / Chorale [C.S. Terry] | Hidden Chorale Melody Allusions [T. Braatz] | The History of the Breitkopf Collection of J. S. Bach’s Four-Part Chorales [T. Braatz] | The World of the Bach Chorale Settings [W.L. Hoffman]
Hymnals: Hymnals used by Bach | Wagner Hymnal 1697 | Evangelisches Gesangbuch 1995 | Dietel Chorale List c1734
Abbreviations used for the Chorales | Links to other Sites about the Chorales


Chorale Melodies used in Bach's Vocal Works
Nun freut euch, lieben Christen gmein (I/II)

Melody & Text | Use of the CM by Bach | Use of the CM by other composers

 

Melody & Text:

"Nun freut euch, lieben Christen g'mein" ((Dear Christians, one and all rejoice) is a Lutheran hymn, whose lyrics and melody were both written in 1523 by Martin Luther. It his based on Rom. 3: 28.
For his first song, Ein neues Lied wir heben an war, M. Luther was inspired by the Martyrium of the two Augustinian monks Hendrik Vos and Johannes van Esschen who had converted to the Reformation. Both had been executed at the stake in Brussels on July 1, 1523. M. Luther's song is a ballad-like narrative song and was not intended for church and worship, but for market and street. In hymnological research, it is certain that Nun freut euch, lieben Christen g’mein immediately followed the martyr song. Like this, it is a narrative song without a literary model, now referring to the supertemporal-temporal salvation act of God, and like this it is not a hymn, but a Reformation folk song, which was sung by traders, craftsmen and maids and a large share in the spread of the Reformation thought.
One of M. Luther's early hymns, it was published as one of eight songs in 1524 in the first Lutheran hymnal, the Achtliederbuch (Etlich' christliche Lieder, Wittenberg, 1524), which contained four songs by M. Luther, three by Paul Speratus, and one by Justus Jonas. It appeared also in 1524 in the Erfurt Enchiridion, in second place of 26 songs It is considered one of his first and theologically most important poetry and belongs to this day to the core of German-speaking Protestant hymnals (EG 341, main song on Reformation).
Source: English Wikipedia (January 31, 2018); German Wikipedia (October 30, 2017)

Melody 1: Nun freut euch, lieben Christen gmein (II) (Zahn 4427)
Composer: Martin Luther (Nürnberg, 1523), after a 15th century melody

Martin Luther probably wrote the lively melody sung to this day with its eighth-note bars and quarter leaps in a timely manner with the lyrics.. It is attached to the song in the first edition, the Achtliederbuch. In Erfurt's Enchiridion, instead, the melody of a medieval Easter song is called (Freut euch, ihr Frauen und ihr Mann, dass Christ ist auferstanden, c1390), which remained connected to Es ist das Heil uns kommen her (EG 342). Johann Walter composed for his four-part Geistliches Gesangbüchlein his own melody for Nun freut euch, which never became a church song. Another, melody for Nun freut euch was composed by M. Luther himself, first appeared in Klugschen Gesangbuch (2nd edition of 1533; 1st edition of 1529 lost) and underlies most of the Baroque arrangements of the song. This tune was common to other texts (Es ist gewisslich an der Zeit; Ich steh an deiner Krippen hier); with M. Luther's's joyous song of salvation, his first melody is inextricably linked for today's singers.
In 2015, Michael Penkuhn-Wasserthal composed a modern melody foe Nun freut euch as part of a song contest organized by the Evangelischen Kirche in Deutschland and the Deutschen Evangelischen Kirchentags. Now, rejoice, dear Christians, whicj is included in the Liederbuch freiTöne des Deutschen Evangelischen Kirchentags 2017.
Source: German Wikipedia (October 30, 2017)

Melody 2: Nun freut euch, lieben Christen gmein (II) (Es ist gewisslich) (Zahn 4429a) | Composer: Martin Luther (?) (Wittenberg, 1529), based on a 15th century melody of secular origin

Text 1: Nun freut euch, lieben Christen gmein (NLGB 391; EG 341; Gemeindelieder 284; Jesus unsere Freude! 298; Sing mit 126; ELG 96)
Author: Martin Luther (1523)

Text 2: Ich steh an deiner Krippen hier
Author: Paul Gerhardt (1653)

Text 3: Es ist gewisslich an der Zeit (NLGB 232; ELG 685; EG 149)
Author: Bartholomäus Ringwaldt (c1565 / 1582 / 1586), based on an earlier Latin text

Hymnal versions Bach may have known:


Melody I & text of Nun freut euch, lieben Christen gmein (NLGB 391) from the Neu Leipziger Gesangbuch, pp 616-619

Text of Nun freut euch, lieben Christen gmein (NLGB) from the Neu Leipziger Gesangbuch, pp 996-997

 
 

Use of the Chorale Melody by Bach:

Melody 1:

Text 1: Nun freut euch, lieben Christen gmein

Chorale Nun freut euch, lieben Christen gmein, BWV 388
Ref: Ri 183; Br 183; Birnstiel 188; AmB 46II p.162; Penzel 113; BC F149.1

 

Melody 2:

Text 2: Ich steh an deiner Krippen hier

Chorale Ich steh an deiner Krippen hier (Mvt. 6 (59)) from Weihnachts-Oratorium BWV 248/6 (verse 1)

Text 3: Es ist gewisslich an der Zeit

Chorale Es ist gewisslich an der Zeit, BWV 307
Ref: RE 260; Br 260; KE 262; Dietel 22; AmB 46II p.232; BGA 54; BC F150.1; CST 270

Untexted:

Recitative for Bass with Instrumental Chorale Ach, soll nicht dieser große Tag (Mvt. 9) from Cantata BWV 70

 
 
 

Chorale Prelude Nun freut euch, lieben Christen (I), BWV 734

Chorale Prelude Nun freut euch, lieben Christen (II), BWV 734a

 

Chorale Prelude Nun freut euch, lieben Christen gmein (III), BWV 755 [Doubtful]

BWV 755 was not included in the BGA. According to Malcolm Boyd: Bach, the work is not by J.S. Bach.

 
 
 
 

Use of the Chorale Melody by other composers:

 
 

Sources: Bach Digital; BGA; Zahn; BCML discussions on BCW; Charles Sanford Terry's Bach Chorals books
Photos from Gottfried Vopelius: Neu Leipziger Gesangbuch (Vopelius 1682) & Christian Friedrich Witt: Psalmodia Sacra, Oder: Andächtige und schöne Gesänge… (Gotha Hymnal, 1715), were taken from digital copies of the books downloaded from Bayerische Staatsbibliothek München. These copies are Out of copyright - non commercial re-use (Europeana Rights).
Prepared by Aryeh Oron (October 2018)


Chorales BWV 250-438: Details and Recordings
Individual Recordings: Hilliard - Morimur | Chorales - N. Matt | Chorales - H. Rilling | Preludi ai Corali - Quartetto Italiani di Viola Da Gamba
Discussions: Motets & Chorales for Events in the LCY / Chorales by Theme | General Discussions: Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Chorales in Bach Cantatas: Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Passion Chorale
References: Chorales BWV 250-300 | Chorales BWV 301-350 | Chorales BWV 351-400 | Chorales BWV 401-438 | 371 4-Part Chorales sorted by Breitkopf Number | Texts & Translations of Chorales BWV 250-438
Chorale Texts: Sorted by Title | Chorale Melodies: Sorted by Title | Explanation
MIDI files of the Chorales: Cantatas BWV 1-197 | Other Vocal Works BWV 225-248 | Chorales BWV 250-438
Articles: The Origin of the Texts of the Chorales [A. Schweitzer] | The Origin of the Melodies of the Chorales [A. Schweitzer] | The Chorale in the Church Service [A. Schweitzer] | Choral / Chorale [C.S. Terry] | Hidden Chorale Melody Allusions [T. Braatz] | The History of the Breitkopf Collection of J. S. Bach’s Four-Part Chorales [T. Braatz] | The World of the Bach Chorale Settings [W.L. Hoffman]
Hymnals: Hymnals used by Bach | Wagner Hymnal 1697 | Evangelisches Gesangbuch 1995 | Dietel Chorale List c1734
Abbreviations used for the Chorales | Links to other Sites about the Chorales




 

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Last update: Saturday, January 04, 2020 13:35