St John Passion

St John Passion
BWV 245
Passion by J. S. Bach
First page of the autograph
Native namePassio secundum Joannem
OccasionGood Friday
Text
Performed
  • 7 April 1724 (1724-04-07): Leipzig (version 1)
  • 30 March 1725 (1725-03-30): Leipzig (version 2)
  • 1728 (1728)/1730?: Leipzig (version 3)
  • 1739/1749? (1739/1749?): Leipzig (version 4)
Scoring
  • SATB choir and solo
  • orchestra of woodwinds, strings and basso contiuo

The Passio secundum Joannem or St John Passion[a] (German: Johannes-Passion), BWV 245, is a Passion or oratorio by Johann Sebastian Bach, the earliest of the surviving Passions by Bach.[1] It was written during his first year as director of church music in Leipzig and was first performed on 7 April 1724, at Good Friday Vespers at the St. Nicholas Church.[2][3]

The structure of the work falls in two halves, intended to flank a sermon. The anonymous libretto draws on existing works (notably by Barthold Heinrich Brockes) and is compiled from recitatives and choruses narrating the Passion of Christ as told in the Gospel of John, ariosos and arias reflecting on the action, and chorales using hymn tunes and texts familiar to a congregation of Bach's contemporaries.[4] Compared with the St Matthew Passion, the St John Passion has been described as more extravagant, with an expressive immediacy, at times more unbridled and less "finished".[5]

The work is most often heard today in the 1739–1749 version (never performed during Bach's lifetime). Bach first performed the oratorio in 1724 and revised it in 1725, 1730,[6] and 1749, adding several numbers. "O Mensch, bewein dein Sünde groß", a 1725 replacement for the opening chorus, found a new home in the 1736 St Matthew Passion but several arias from the revisions are found only in the appendices to modern editions.


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  1. ^ Steinberg 2005, p. 19
  2. ^ Williams, Peter. The Life of Bach, 114. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2004.
  3. ^ Rathey 2016
  4. ^ Daw, Stephen. The Music of Johann Sebastian Bach: The Choral Works, 107. Canada: Associated University Presses, Inc. 1981.
  5. ^ Steinberg 2005, p. 22.
  6. ^ Wollny, Peter (2018-07-24). "Zwei Bach-Funde in Mügeln. C. P. E. Bach, Picander und die Leipziger Kirchenmusik in den 1730er Jahren". Bach-Jahrbuch (in German). 96: 111–131. doi:10.13141/bjb.v20101883. ISSN 0084-7682.

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