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==Recordings== ==Recordings==
{{external media {{external media
| audio1 = {{efn|name=fn1| Abbreviated version: only first 81 ] (out of 184): the recording stops a few bars before the middle section of the ].<ref>{{cite book
| audio1 =
|translator-last1 = Broadwood
| audio2 =
|translator-first1 = Lucy
|translator-link1 = Lucy Broadwood
|date = 2002
|orig-year = 1933
|editor1-last = Raphael
|editor1-first = Günter
|editor1-link = Günter Raphael
|title = Melchior Hoffmann (1679–1715): "Sound your knell, blest hour of parting" – Funeral Music – formerly attributed to J.&nbsp;S. Bach (BWV 53)
|url = https://www.breitkopf.com/work/559/schlage-doch-gewunschte-stunde
|language = de, en
|edition = vocal score
|location = Leipzig
|publisher = Breitkopf & Härtel
|ismn = 979-0-004-17207-0
|id = EB 7053
}}</ref><ref name="Leisner1924">{{cite AV media
| people = {{ill|Emmi Leisner|de|lt=Leisner, Emmi}}; ]
| date = 1924
| title = Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde: Kantate für Alt / von Bach
| trans-title =
| medium = 78rpm schellack disk
| language = de
| url = https://www.deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de/item/EL2GISTAWYSYCM5TANQNWPQ3EPUUH5D7
| publisher = ]
| id = 73020 (matrix: 404 1/2 bg; catalogue: B 24311)
| oclc = 1186382449
| via = Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek
| postscript =. at ]
}}</ref>}}
<!--| audio2 = -->
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}} }}
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| ] | ]
| ] Orchestra | ] Orchestra
| <ref name=elste/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.preiserrecords.at/en/the-art-of-emmi-leisner.html |title=The Art of Emmi Leisner|publisher=]|access-date=29 January 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de/item/EL2GISTAWYSYCM5TANQNWPQ3EPUUH5D7|title=Schlag doch, gewünchte Stunde : Kantate für Alt / von Bach|publisher=]|access-date=15 March 2021}}</ref> | {{efn|name=fn1}}<ref name=elste/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.preiserrecords.at/en/the-art-of-emmi-leisner.html |title=The Art of Emmi Leisner|publisher=]|access-date=29 January 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de/item/EL2GISTAWYSYCM5TANQNWPQ3EPUUH5D7|title=Schlag doch, gewünchte Stunde : Kantate für Alt / von Bach|publisher=]|access-date=15 March 2021}}</ref>
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In his book "Death, Society and Human Experience", describing the field of ], Robert J. In his book "Death, Society and Human Experience", describing the field of ], Robert J.
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== Gallery ==
]'' (13th century)<ref>Ms.&nbsp;B.I.2 ({{lang|es|códice de los músicos}}) of {{ill|Library of El Escorial|commons|Category:Library of the Monastery of El Escorial}}, .</ref>]]
{{clear}}
== Notes ==
{{notelist}}


== References == == References ==

Revision as of 20:27, 16 March 2021

Pages 3–4 of the aria "Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde". Manuscript copy, 1780, Berlin State Library. The campanella bells are marked on the top stave.

Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde (Haste to strike, oh longed for hour), BWV 53, is an aria for alto, bells, strings and continuo. It was likely composed in the early 18th century, although its date of first performance is unknown. From the second half of the 18th century until the early 1950s the aria was attributed to Johann Sebastian Bach. In 1955, it was suggested in Bach scholarship that the aria's composer was more likely to be found in Melchior Hoffmann's circle.

The aria was likely part of an otherwise lost church cantata for a funeral. The aria was first published in 1863, by the Bach Gesellschaft. It is one of three works to have been attributed to Bach before being attributed to Hoffmann, the others being the German Magnificats BWV 189 and BWV Anh. 21. It is the oldest known composition in which bells are used as a musical instrument.

History and attribution

The cantata has often been attributed to Johann Sebastian Bach. However, Alfred Dürr did not include it in his 1971 book Die Kantaten von Johann Sebastian Bach, based on the Bach-Jahrbuch 1955. In the Appendix of the subsequent English version of the 2006 book on Bach's cantatas with Richard D. P. Jones, BWV 53 appears amongst the spurious cantatas. In that Appendix, the entry for 'composer' is listed as Melchior Hoffmann, accompanied by a question mark.

According to Johann Nikolaus Forkel, the aria was composed by a young Bach, which would mean around the first decade of the 18th century. Philipp Spitta, in his multi-volume Bach biography in the second half of the 19th century, thought that Bach wrote the aria in his middle Leipzig period, that is around the middle of the 1723–1750 period, when he would also have written other chamber cantatas for private performance, most of them solo cantatas. According to Charles Sanford Terry, Bach composed the aria between 1723 and 1734. Biographers in the late 19th and early 20th century attributing the work to Bach include Bitter and Schweitzer. In 1950, Wolfgang Schmieder listed the aria as No. 53 in the first edition of the Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis (BWV).

In the Bach-Jahrbuch of 1955 (published 1956), Karl Anton [de] described the aria as being extracted from a multi-movement cantata which originated in the circle around Hoffmann. A year later, Dürr confirmed that BWV 53 was likely composed by Hoffmann. In 1994 the musicologist Peter Wollny conjectured that the aria BWV 53 might have been part of the funeral music by Hoffmann, commissioned for the memorial service at Halle on 1 May 1713, to mark the death of Frederick I of Prussia in February 1713. In the 1998 revision of the BWV, by Dürr and Yoshitake Kobayashi [d], Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde was moved to the second Anhang, that is the Anhang of works doubtfully attributed to Bach, naming Hoffmann as its possible composer. If composed by Hoffmann, it must have originated from around the first decade of the 18th century: Hoffmann died in October 1715, ten years after becoming organist and director musices (music director) of the Neukirche in Leipzig.

While current Bach scholarship has ruled out Bach as its possible composer, Hoffmann cannot yet be confirmed as composer of the piece. The date of the first performance is unknown.

Text

The author of the text is unknown. It is sometimes attributed to Salomon Franck; Spitta believed that Franck's style can be recognized in the text.

As the work was likely composed for a funeral service, the text reflects the hour of death as desired. Translations have included "Haste to strike, oh longed for hour", "Strike my hour, so long awaited", and "Strike then thou, O blessed hour". The title of the cantata is rendered In English as "Strike, O Bell" in the Oxford Orchestral Series, as "Strike thou ear" in the edition of Novello & Co and as "Sound your knell" in the editions of Breitkopf & Härtel and Augener & Co.

In a middle section, the angels are asked to open heavenly meadows, to see Jesus soon ("Kommt, ihr Engel, … Öffnet mir die Himmelsauen, meinen Jesum bald zu schauen").

The German text of the aria and its English translation by Lucy Broadwood are as follows:

Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde
brich doch an, du schöne tag!
Kommt, ihr Engel, auf mich zu,
öffnet mir die Himmels auen,
meinen Jesum bald zu schauen
in vergnüter Seelen ruh!
Ich begehr'vom Herzen Grunde,
nur den letzten Stundenschlag.

Sound your knell, blest hour of parting,
Quickly dawn o happy day!
Angels! haste to my release!
Waft me to the realms supernal,
Where in Jesu's arms eternal
I shall rest in perfect peace.
Let me hear the last hour tolling,
That shall call my soul away.

Salomon Franck? Lucy Broadwood

Music and scoring

A Carillon operated by a keyboard in Aarschot, Flanders, Belgium

The aria is composed in the key of E major and has a time signature of
2. It is scored for alto, two bells (respectively playing E and B), two violins, viola, and continuo (cello, organ). It is the oldest known composition in which bells are used as a musical instrument. According to musicologist Jeremy Montagu, it is possible that originally the bells might have been activated by the manuals or pedals in the organ register. In modern editions the bells sound as the E above middle C and the B as a fifth higher; the marking Campanella could signify bells in the treble range, as marked, or in the tenor or bass register one or two octaves below. The aria could not have been performed using conventional church bells, because of their size and the problem of coordinating players in the church and the belfry.

When Bach redesigned the organ of the Blasius church in Mühlhausen in 1708, he added a novelty: a register with bells (chimes) in the pedalboard. This mechanism—Glockenspiel in German—was one of Bach's own devising and constructed in collaboration with the organ-builder Johann Friedrich Wender, who had previously assisted Bach on a similar project in Arnstadt.

According to W. Gillies Whittaker, the musical style of the cantata is "somewhat unusual", with questionable scoring for the violas. He states, however, that the principal theme "is so lovely and the charm of the whole so great that one questions whether any other composer of the day could have written it". In the aria, the tolling bells and continuo play in concert, echoed in the bell-like accompaniment of the crotchets in the violins. The Campanella scoring for the two bells was originally notated in the bass clef with the standard conventions for transposing instruments (so that B and E are scored as D and G respectively). No clear indication is given of the pitch of bells (high or deep).

The aria is characterized by an obbligato bell duet. Clifford Bartlett calls the bell knell "memorable and powerful". Simon Crouch notes that "some of thematic material is suggestive of Bach but the accompanying bells would be unique amongst Bach's surviving output". Forkel considers the usage of bells of doubtful taste.

Publication history

In 1761, Johann Gottlob Immanuel Breitkopf offered manuscript copies of the mourning aria (Template:Lang-de) Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde in a catalogue printed for the Michaelmas fair in Leipzig. This catalogue does not name the composer. A copy was manufactured in the second half of the 18th century (likely before 1787) by a scribe of the Breitkopf firm, attributing the composition to Bach. Johann Kirnberger added this copy to the Amalienbibliothek – the library of his employer Princess Anna Amalia of Prussia. Wilhelm Rust's edition of Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde, as Cantata No. 53 in Vol. 12.2 of the Bach-Gesellschaft Ausgabe (BGA), published in 1863, was based on the Amalienbibliothek copy.

Many modern full scores or vocal scores, such as the editions of Breitkopf & Härtel and Eulenburg, name the composer of "Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde" as "M. Hoffmann" or "Melchior Hoffmann".

Recordings

External audio
audio icon BWV 53 sung by Emmi Leisner
audio icon BWV 53 sung by Hilde Rössel-Majdan
audio icon BWV 53 sung by Charles Humphries
Emmi Leisner [de] painted by Carl Bantzer (1912)
René Jacobs in 2011
Andreas Scholl in 2013

Recordings of Cantata No. 106, the so-called "actus tragicus", remain the most popular, with the funeral music of Cantata no. 53, scored for alto, bells, strings and continuo, coming up second (with Hoffmann now attributed as composer). The latter work was first recorded by Emmi Leisner [de] in 1926; this was the first time a cantata was recorded. The discographer Martin Elste singles out the recordings of Leisner and of Hildegard Hennecke [de], conducted by August Wenzinger in 1951, as being noteworthy. A 1955 review preferred Hilde Rössel-Majdan's recording of the aria over Hennecke's. After Hoffmann had been suggested as composer of the aria in scholarship of the second half of the 1950s, other publications started to mention him as possible composer, which affected the popularity of the work negatively.

In the table below, voice types in the third column adopt the terminology as rendered on the issued recording.

Significant recordings
Year Singer Voice type Instrumental Conductor
1926 Leisner [de] alto Berlin State Opera Orchestra
1936 Falk [d] contralto String orchestra & bells Cellier
1951 Hennecke [de] alto Schola Cantorum Basiliensis Wenzinger
1952 Rössel-Majdan contralto Vienna State Opera Orchestra Scherchen
1958 Watts contralto Philomusica of London Dart
1963 Hellmann alto Pforzheim Chamber Orchestra Werner
1964 Forrester alto I Solisti di Zagreb Janigro
1984 Love mezzo-soprano Amor Artis Somary [d]
1987 Jacobs countertenor Ensemble 415 [fr] Banchini
1993 Kowalski altus Academy of St Martin in the Fields Sillito [d]
1998 Blaze countertenor The Parley of Instruments Holman
2000 Laurens mezzo-soprano I Barocchisti [de] Fasolis
2000 Mena countertenor Ricercar Consort Pierlot
2001 Taylor countertenor Theatre of Early Music Taylor
2001 Lesne alto Il Seminario Musicale Cohën-Akenine
2004 Kielland mezzo-soprano Cologne Chamber Orchestra Müller-Brühl
2011 Scholl countertenor Kammerorchester Basel Schröder
2012 Humphries countertenor Kontrabande Humphries
2012 Guillon alto il Gardellino Ponseele
2015 Blaze alto Bach Collegium Japan Suzuki
2017 Mehta countertenor Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin Forck [de]

Notable performances

The cantata was performed in the Gewandhaus in Leipzig in 1867 and 1873. Martin Elste's history of Bach performances and discography from 1750 to 2000 documents statistics for concert performances in Germany in the early twentieth century: between 1904 and 1907 in Germany, the most performed work was the St Matthew Passion, 49 times, with second place taken by the ever-popular BWV 53, 20 times (even though the cantata now has been acknowledged as the work of Melchior Hoffmann). The Bach-Jahrbuch of 1906 lists 20 public performances of Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde, in various European cities, in the period from late 1904 to early 1907, which makes it, among the cantatas listed for that period, the most often performed one; by the 1930s, Actus tragicus (BWV 106) became the most often performed cantata. Albert Schweitzer called Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde "he best known of the solo cantatas for alto".

In 1992 the choreographer Mark Morris set the "Bell Cantata," BWV 53 as a pas de deux for a female and male dancer. Titled "Beautiful Day", it was an explicit reference to Morris's previous pas de deux, dating back to seven years earlier, "One Charming Night". Morris' biographer, Joan Acolella, has described "Beautiful Dance", sung in German with bells, strings and continuo, as one of his most sublime dances—"intimate" with no vestiges of the earlier perversity in his 1985 set piece. According to Acolella, the Bell Cantata evokes not "romantic love but ... divine love ... In the final moment of the dance, the man lifts the air into the air—and she lies back in peace, facing heaven. She is looking at God, and his friend has helped her." In the dance review from the New York Times, the duet "Beautiful Day" was danced by Clarice Marshall and Keith Sabado and was described as "a ravishingly beautiful piece filled with the tolling of bells." The words of the "Bell Cantata" for this reason "express a soul's longing to be with God." The dance critic Jack Anderson, however, felt that the piece was "choreographically rigid" with too much adherence to the musical score. For most of the piece, the dancers "looked and moved as if they were carved from wood... nothing they did matched—or served as a convincing contrast to—the ecstasy of the cantata, which was beautifully sung by Mary Westbrook-Geha, a mezzo-soprano."

Gallery

Bell player in Codex E of the Cantigas de Santa Maria (13th century)

Notes

  1. ^ Abbreviated version: only first 81 bars (out of 184): the recording stops a few bars before the middle section of the da capo aria.

References

  1. ^ Anton, Karl (1956). "Neue Erkenntnisse zur Geschichte der Bachbewegung". In Dürr, Alfred; Neumann, Werner (eds.). Bach-Jahrbuch 1955. Bach-Jahrbuch (in German). Vol. 42. Neue Bachgesellschaft. Evangelische Verlagsanstalt. p. 15 (footnote 9). doi:10.13141/bjb.v1955.
  2. Dürr, Alfred; Jones, Richard D. P. (2006). "Appendix: dubious and spurious cantatas". The Cantatas of J. S. Bach and Their Librettos in German–English Parallel Text. Oxford University Press. p. 926. ISBN 0199297762.
  3. ^ Forkel, Johann Nikolaus (1802). Ueber Johann Sebastian Bachs Leben, Kunst und Kunstwerke: Für patriotische Verehrer echter musikalischer Kunst  (in German). Hoffmeister & Kühnel. pp. 6162.
  4. ^ Forkel, Johann Nikolaus; Terry, Charles Sanford (1920). Johann Sebastian Bach: His Life, Art and Work – translated from the German, with notes and appendices. Harcourt, Brace and Howe. p. 140.
  5. ^ Spitta, Philipp (1884). "Book V: Leipzig, 1723–1734". Johann Sebastian Bach: his work and influence on the music of Germany, 1685–1750. Vol. II. Translated by Bell, Clara; Fuller Maitland, John Alexander. Novello & Co. pp. 474477.
  6. ^ Spitta, Philipp (1921) . "Fünftes Buch. Leipziger Jahre von 1723–1734". Johann Sebastian Bach (in German). Vol. II (3rd ed.). Breitkopf & Härtel. pp. 303–306.
  7. Bitter, Karl Hermann (1865). Johann Sebastian Bach (in German). Vol. II. Schneider. p. XCVI.
  8. ^ Schweitzer, Albert (1935). J. S. Bach. Vol. II. Translated by Newman, Ernest (Reprint ed.). A. & C. Black. p. 253.
  9. ^ Dürr, Alfred; Kobayashi, Yoshitake, eds. (1998). Bach Werke Verzeichnis: Kleine Ausgabe – Nach der von Wolfgang Schmieder vorgelegten 2. Ausgabe [Bach Works Catalogue: Small Edition – After Wolfgang Schmieder's 2nd edition] (in German). Kirsten Beißwenger (collaborator) (BWV ed.). Breitkopf & Härtel. ISBN 9783765102493. Preface in English and German.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  10. Dürr, Alfred (1957). "Zur Echtheit der Kantate 'Meine Seele rühmt und preist'". In Dürr, Alfred; Neumann, Werner (eds.). Bach-Jahrbuch 1956. Bach-Jahrbuch (in German). Vol. 43. Neue Bachgesellschaft. Evangelische Verlagsanstalt. p. 155. doi:10.13141/bjb.v1956.
  11. Wollny, Peter (1994). "Bachs Bewerbung um die Organistenstelle an der Marienkirche in Halle und ihr Kontext" [Bach's candidature for the position as organist at the St. Mary's Church in Halle, and its context]. In Schulze, Hans-Joachim; Wolff, Christoph (eds.). Bach-Jahrbuch 1994 [Bach-Yearbook 1994]. Bach-Jahrbuch (in German). Vol. 80. Neue Bachgesellschaft. Evangelische Verlagsanstalt. pp. 25–39. doi:10.13141/bjb.v1994. ISBN 3-374-01550-6. ISSN 0084-7682.
  12. "Hoffmann, Georg Melchior". Bach Digital. 27 May 2019.
  13. ^ "Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde (Aria) BWV 53 / Anh. II 23‑>". Bach Digital. 11 March 2019.
  14. ^ "BWV 53 Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde". University of Vermont. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
  15. Dürr, Alfred (1971). Die Kantaten von Johann Sebastian Bach. Vol. 2 (3rd ed.). Bärenreiter (published 1979). pp. 723724. ISBN 0761802274.
  16. ^ Wolff, Christoph; Emery, Walter (2001). "Bach, Johann Sebastian". Grove Music Online. Oxford University Press. "Doubtful and spurious". doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.6002278195.
  17. "[Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde. BWV 53 Anh II 23 ->]" (in French). BnF. Retrieved 11 January 2021.
  18. "Cantata BWV 53". Bach Cantatas Website. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
  19. ^ Crouch, Simon (1999). Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde (Haste to strike, oh longed for hour). classical.net. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
  20. ^ Whittaker, W. Gillies (1978). "Cantata No. 53". The Cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach: Sacred and Secular. Vol. I (Reprint ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 366–367. ISBN 019315238X.
  21. ^ Hofmann, Georg Melchior (1961). Raphael, Günther (ed.). Kantate Nr. 53 : "Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde" : für Alt-Solo [Cantata No. 53 : "Sound your knell, blest hour of parting"] (in German). Translated by Lucy Broadwood. Breitkopf & Härtel. ISMN 979-0-004-17207-0.
  22. "Trauer Arie: Schlage doch gewünschte Stunde". Berlin State Library. Retrieved 11 January 2021.
  23. Glöckner, Andreas (2001). "Hoffmann, Melchior". Grove Music Online. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.13159.
  24. Price, Percival; Rae, Charles Bodman; Blades, James (2001). Bell(i). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.42837. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |work= ignored (help)
  25. Montagu, Jeremy (2002). Timpani and percussion. Yale University Press. p. 92. ISBN 978-0-300-09337-7.
  26. ^ Wolff, Christoph (2002). "At the Blasius Church in Mühlhausen". Johann Sebastian Bach: The Learned Musician. Norton. p. 109. ISBN 9780199248841.
  27. ^ Eidam, Klaus (2001). "V". The True Life of Johann Sebastian Bach. Translated by Rogers, Hoyt. Basic Books. ISBN 0-465-01861-0.
  28. Wolff, Christoph; Zepf, Markus (2012). The organs of Johann Sebastian Bach: a handbook. Translated by Butler, Lynn Edwards. University of Illinois Press. p. 141. ISBN 9780252078453.
  29. Lessner, Joanne Sydney. "Andreas Scholl: Bach Cantatas". Opera News. 76 (10): 69–70.
  30. Bartlett, Clifford. "Andreas Scholl: Bach Cantatas". Decca Classics. Archived from the original on 23 December 2012. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
  31. Ebata, Nobuaki, ed. (9 September 2018). "Lost source: BWV 53, Breitkopf". Bach Digital.
  32. ^ Breitkopf, Johann Gottlob Immanuel (1761). Verzeichniß Musicalischer Werke, allein zur Praxis, sowohl zum Singen, als für alle Instrumente, welche nicht durch den Druck bekannt gemacht worden; in ihre gehörige Classen ordentlich eingetheilet; welche in richtigen Abschriften bey Joh. Gottlob Immanuel Breitkopf in Leipzig ... zu bekommen sind (in German). Breitkopf. p. 23.
  33. ^ Ebata, Nobuaki, ed. (16 July 2019). "D-B Am.B 43, Fascicle 2". Bach Digital.
  34. "Trauer Arie: Schlage doch gewünschte Stunde". Berlin State Library. Retrieved 11 January 2021.
  35. Rust, Wilhelm, ed. (1863). Joh. Seb. Bach's Kirchencantaten: Sechster Band, No 51–60 [Joh. Seb. Bach's church cantatas: Sixth volume, Nos. 51–60]. Bach-Gesellschaft Ausgabe (in German). Vol. 12.2. Bach Gesellschaft. Breitkopf & Härtel. p. X.
  36. Raphael, Günter, ed. (2002) . Melchior Hoffmann (1679–1715): "Sound your knell, blest hour of parting" – Funeral Music – formerly attributed to J. S. Bach (BWV 53) (in German and English). Translated by Broadwood, Lucy (vocal score ed.). Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel. ISMN 979-0-004-17207-0. EB 7053.
  37. Leisner, Emmi [de]; Staats-Oper Berlin (1924). Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde: Kantate für Alt / von Bach (78rpm schellack disk) (in German). Deutsche Grammophon. OCLC 1186382449. 73020 (matrix: 404 1/2 bg; catalogue: B 24311) – via Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek. Fon-SNP-A 8089 at SLUB Dresden {{cite AV media}}: External link in |postscript= (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  38. ^ Elste, Martin (2016) . Meilensteine der Bach-Interpretation 1750–2000: Eine Werkgeschichte im Wandel (in German). Springer. pp. 90, 154155. ISBN 9783476037923.
  39. ^ Miller, Philip L. (1955). The Guide to Long-Playing Music: Vocal Music. Alfred A. Knopf. p. 8.
  40. Raphael, Günter, ed. (1961) . Bach: Kantate Nr. 53 – Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde – Sound your knell, blest hour of parting (BWV 53). Bachs Kantatenwerk: sämtliche 199 Kirchenkantaten (in German and English). Translated by Broadwood, Lucy (vocal score ed.). Breitkopf & Härtel. OCLC 11581328. Edition Breitkopf Nr. 7053.
  41. "The Art of Emmi Leisner". Preiser Records. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  42. "Schlag doch, gewünchte Stunde : Kantate für Alt / von Bach". Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek. Retrieved 15 March 2021.
  43. Darrell, R. D. (1936). The Gramophone Shop Encyclopedia Of Recorded Music. The Gramophone Shop. p. 34.
  44. "Bach: Cantata No. 189 – Bach: Cantata No. 53 – Bach: Cantata No. 200". The New Records. Vol. 20, no. 10. December 1952. pp. 8–9.
  45. Siebert, F. Mark (1953). "Review of Records". The Musical Quarterly. 39 (3): 471–473. JSTOR 740011.
  46. Rössel-Majdan, Hilde; Scherchen, Hermann; Vienna State Opera Orchestra (1952). Cantates Nos. 170, 53, 54 (LP). Ducretet Thomson. 320CW086.
  47. "Helen Watts – Songs For Courtiers And Cavaliers". jpc. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  48. "Songs for courtiers and cavaliers / Helen Watts, Desmond Dupre, Thurston Dart". Trove. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  49. Pursglove, Glyn (January 2020). "Songs for Courtiers and Cavaliers". MusicWeb International.
  50. Quinn, John (5 May 2005). "Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750): The Cantatas – Volume 2". MusicWeb International.
  51. Hellmann, Claudia; Werner, Fritz; Pforzheim Chamber Orchestra (1969). Cantata no. 68 Also hat Gott die Welt geliebt. Cantata no. 98, Was Gott tut, das ist wohlgetan. Cantata no. 53, Schlage doch, gewünschte Stunde (LP). Musical Heritage Society. OCLC 4357209.
  52. "Bach: Cantatas; Handel / Maureen Forrester, Janigro, Et Al". ArkivMusic. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
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  54. Forrester, Maureen; Janigro, Antonio; I Solisti di Zagreb (2000). Cantata BWV 170, "Vergnügte Ruh', beliebte Seelenlust" Cantata BWV 53, "Schlage doch" ; Mass in B minor, Agnus Dei (CD). Amadeus. 7010.
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External links

Compositions spuriously attributed to Johann Sebastian Bach
by Antonio Caldara
by Johann Ernst Bach II
by Johann Ludwig Bach
by Melchior Hoffmann
by Christian Petzold
by Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel
by Georg Philipp Telemann
by Pietro Torri
by Daniel Vetter
by unknown composer
Church cantatas by Johann Sebastian Bach
Before
Leipzig
First cycle
(1723–24)
Second cycle
(and chorale
cantatas
)
Third cycle
Later
and other
Cantatas by Johann Sebastian Bach by BWV number
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