Aria: 'Kommt, ihr angefochtnen Sünder' (from Cantata No. 30 - 'Freue dich, erlöste Schar', BWV 30) (arr. Flavio Regis Cunha) by Johann Sebastian Bach Sheet Music for Chamber Group at Sheet Music Direct
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Aria: 'Kommt, ihr angefochtnen Sünder' (from Cantata No. 30 - 'Freue dich, erlöste Schar', BWV 30) (arr. Flavio Regis Cunha) Digital Sheet Music
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Aria: 'Kommt, ihr angefochtnen Sünder' (from Cantata No. 30 - 'Freue dich, erlöste Schar', BWV 30) (arr. Flavio Regis Cunha)by Johann Sebastian Bach Chamber Orchestra - Digital Sheet Music

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Product Description

New edition with clean ornament indications and Alto Solo part was written for Oboe Solo.

Freue dich, erlöste Schar (Rejoice, redeemed flock), BWV 30.2, BWV 30, is a church cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach. It is one of his later realisations in the genre: he composed it for the Feast of John the Baptist (24 June) in 1738, and based its music largely on Angenehmes Wiederau, a secular cantata which he had composed a year earlier. Christian Friedrich Henrici (Picander), the librettist of the secular model of the cantata, is likely also the author of the sacred cantata's version of the text.  

Composition


First page of Bach's autograph score of BWV 30.1, showing the parts for trumpets and timpani in the uppermost four staves, the parts which were omitted by the composer in the BWV 30.2 version of the same music.

Bach scored the cantata for four vocal soloists (soprano, alto, tenor, bass), a four-part choir, two traversos, two oboes, oboe d'amore, concertato violin, accompanying strings (two violin parts and one viola part) and basso continuo. The three trumpets and timpani that played in the outer movements of the cantata's secular model, were not copied in Bach's autograph of the sacred work, but could be added ad libitum to the respective movements of that version of the work, as the Bach-Gesellschaft did when they published the composition. In 1752, two years after Bach's death, his son Wilhelm Friedemann added reworked parts for two trumpets and timpani in these movements, and applied some other changes, for a performance in Halle.






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