Johann Sebastian Bach composed the church cantataEs reißet euch ein schrecklich Ende (A horrible end will carry you off),[1]BWV90, in Leipzig for the 25th Sunday after Trinity and first performed it on 14 November 1723.
Recitative (alto): Des Höchsten Güte wird von Tag zu Tage neu
Aria (bass): So löschet im Eifer der rächende Richter
Recitative (tenor): Doch Gottes Auge sieht auf uns
Chorale: Leit uns mit deiner rechten Hand
Music
The cantata's two arias "paint a dismal picture", as Klaus Hofmann remarks. The opening tenor aria is "expressively highly intense" for both the singer and the violins, illustrating "reißet" (tears).[5]John Eliot Gardiner, who calls the cantata "magnificently theatrical and terse", notes: "Bach seems, in fact, to be taking on his entire generation of Italian opera composers and beating them at their own game. The unflagging energy of his melodic invention and rhythmic propulsion is always directed towards giving truthful expression to the text, and here it is as matchless as it is exciting".[6] The following recitative first states in great contrast that "God's goodness is renewed every day", but then reflects "despair at human failings".[7] The second aria, "So löschet im Eifer der rächende Richter" (Extinguish with haste will the judge in his vengeance) is sung by the bass, with "added emphasis by the presence of the trumpet."[8] The instrument is meant to be the one calling for the Last Judgement, as mentioned in the epistle reading.[5] The last recitative finally turns to the thought that "God's eye looks upon us as the chosen ones".[7] The closing chorale is a four-part setting.[5]