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  2. Bach cantata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bach_cantata

    Bach's cantatas usually require four soloists and a four-part choir, but he also wrote solo cantatas (i.e. for one soloist singer) and dialogue cantatas for two singers. The words of Bach's cantatas, almost always entirely in German, consist mostly of 18th-century poetry, Lutheran hymns and dicta. Hymns were mostly set to their Lutheran chorale ...

  3. Cantata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantata

    The editors of the Bach Gesellschaft adopted "sacred cantata" as a convenient catchall for most of Bach's liturgical pieces. The term was then retroactively applied by Philipp Spitta to refer to comparable works by composers from Heinrich Schütz onwards. [5] Many secular cantatas were composed for events in the nobility.

  4. Church cantata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_cantata

    A church cantata or sacred cantata is a cantata intended to be performed during Christian liturgy. The genre was particularly popular in 18th-century Lutheran Germany, with many composers writing an extensive output: Stölzel , Telemann , Graupner and Krieger each wrote nearly or more than a thousand.

  5. Church cantata (Bach) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_cantata_(Bach)

    Bach's fourth (Leipzig) cantata cycle, known as the Picander cycle, consists of cantatas performed for the first time from 24 June 1728 (St. John's Day) to 10 July 1729 (fourth Sunday after Trinity), or later in 1729, to a libretto from the printed cycle of 70 cantata texts for 1728–29 by Picander. Later additions to this cycle and Picander ...

  6. List of secular cantatas by Johann Sebastian Bach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_secular_cantatas...

    Bach's earliest cantatas are church cantatas, although his early Wedding Quodlibet is sometimes grouped with the secular cantatas. [11] [12] The oldest extant secular cantata is from his Weimar period where he composed the Hunting Cantata (BWV 208, first version) for the birthday of Christian, Duke of Saxe-Weissenfels on 23 February 1713.

  7. Late church cantatas by Johann Sebastian Bach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Late_church_cantatas_by...

    The late church cantatas by Johann Sebastian Bach are sacred cantatas he composed after his fourth cycle of 1728–29. Whether Bach still composed a full cantata cycle in the last 20 years of his life is not known, but the extant cantatas of this period written for occasions of the liturgical year are sometimes referred to as his fifth cycle, as, according to his obituary, he would have ...

  8. List of Bach cantatas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Bach_cantatas

    The list includes both extant cantatas and, as far as known, lost cantatas. It is sortable by the cantata number which equals the number in the Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis (BWV), by title, by occasion during the liturgical year, the year of composition and date of first performance, as far as known. The scoring is provided, grouped by singers and ...

  9. Bach's church music in Latin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bach's_church_music_in_Latin

    The bulk of Bach's sacred music, many hundreds of compositions such as his church cantatas, motets, Passions, oratorios, four-part chorales and sacred songs, was set to a German text, or incorporated one or more melodies associated with the German words of a Lutheran hymn.