When Bach composed the cantata, he was in his second year as Thomaskantor (director of church music) in Leipzig. During his first year, beginning with the first Sunday after Trinity 1723, he had written a cycle of cantatas for the occasions of the liturgical year. In his second year he composed a second annual cycle of cantatas, which was planned to consist exclusively of chorale cantatas, each based on one Lutheran hymn. It included Was mein Gott will, das g'scheh allzeit.[2]
Recitative (alto): O Törichter! der sich von Gott entzieht
Aria (alto, tenor): So geh ich mit beherzten Schritten
Recitative (soprano): Drum wenn der Tod zuletzt den Geist
Chorale: Noch eins, Herr, will ich bitten dich
Music
In the opening chorus, the soprano sings the melody of the chorale[5] as a cantus firmus in long notes. The melody appears in an interesting combination of phrases of different length, two measures alternating with three measures. Bach used a simpler version of the melody, with all phrases of measures, when he used the first stanza in his St Matthew Passion as movement 25.[6] In the cantata, the lower voices prepare each entrance by imitation, sometimes repeating the line to the soprano's long final note. The vocal parts are embedded in an independent orchestral concerto of the oboes, the strings and at times even the continuo.[2][3]
In movement 2, a bass aria, the librettist kept the line from the hymn "Gott ist dein Trost und Zuversicht" unchanged, Bach treats it to quotation of the chorale tune for both the quotation and the free continuation "und deiner Seelen Leben" (and the life of your soul[7]).[3] Movement 4 is a duet of alto and tenor, "So geh ich mit beherzten Schritten" (Thus I walk with encouraged steps).[7] The steps are taken together in 3/4 time, in "a minuet of a strongly assertive and confident character. But this should not surprise us; we have seen how Bach often takes suite rhythms, particularly minuet and gavotte, to represent the civilized movements of souls progressing towards heaven", as Julian Mincham describes it.[6] Movement 5, a soprano recitative stresses the final words "O blessed, desired end!"[7] in an arioso. It leads to the closing chorale, a "simple but powerful four-part setting" of the last stanza.[3]
Recordings
The recordings are taken from the listing on the Bach Cantatas Website.[8]