Jones Dis
Jones Dis
Jones Dis
A Monograph
in
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS......................................................................................iv
LIST OF TABLES.........................................................................................................v
LIST OF SCORES.......................................................................................................viii
ABSTRACT..................................................................................................................ix
CHAPTER:
1. BACKGROUND INFORMATION...............................................................1
History of The Neumeister Collection, 1
Content & Importance, 2
Purpose of Writing, 7
ii
Contrapuntal Techniques, 44
Rules of Performing Polyphonic Music, 45
Pedagogical Presentations...................................................................55
BWV 957: Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt...................55
BWV 1093: Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen...........64
Conclusion..........................................................................................72
BIBLIOGRAPHY.....................................................................................................75
APPENDICES:
ABSTRACT.............................................................................................................ix
VITA.......................................................................................................................89
iii
List of Abbreviations
iv
OB: Orgelbüchlein
Ph.: Phrase
Vs.: Verse
List of Tables
v
Table 11. Principles Guiding the Playing of Polyphonic Music on the Organ..............48
Example 3 BWV 1096, Christ, der du bist Tag und Licht, Mm. 38-39...................49
Example 5 BWV 1096, Christ, der du bist Tag und Licht, Mm. 38-39....................49
Example 6 BWV 1099, Aus tiefer Not, schrei ich zu dir, Mm. 23-24......................50
Example 7 BWV 1120, Christ, der du bist der helle Tag, Mm. 1-2.........................50
Example 9 BWV 1099, Aus tiefer Not, schrei ich zu dir, Mm. 23-24......................51
Example 12 BWV 957, Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, Mm. 1-2..................52
Example 14 BWV 1099, Aus tiefer Not, schrei ich zu dir, Mm. 23-24......................52
vi
Example 15 BWV 957, Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, Mm. 4-6..................53
Example 19 BWV 957, Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, Mm. 20-22..............63
Example 20 BWV 957, Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt,Mm. 13-15...............63
Example 21 BWV 957, Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, Mm. 4-6..................65
Example 22 BWV 1093, Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen, Mm. 23-26......65
vii
List of Musical Scores
Score I: Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, BWV 957.......................................58
Score I. A.: Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, BWV 957
Chorale...............................................................................................60
Score I. B.: Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, BWV 957
Chorale...............................................................................................61
Score I. C.: Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, BWV 957
Chorale...............................................................................................62
Score II. A.: Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen, BWV 1093.........................68
Score II. B.: Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen, BWV 1093.........................70
viii
Abstract
One of the most significant discoveries of the twentieth century was the finding of an
unpublished compendium of German Baroque keyboard music in 1982 in the archives of the
John Herrick Music Library, Yale University, by musicologists Christoph Wolff and Hans-
Joachim Schmidt and Yale University librarian Harold E. Samuel. The collection, which was
entitled LM 4708: The Neumeister Collection of Chorale Preludes of the Bach Circle,
German organists including Johann Pachelbel (1653-1706), Johann Michael Bach (1648-
1694), Johann Christoph Bach (1642-1703), and Johann Sebastian Bach (1658-1750).
compositions by these composers. But its primary importance is the thirty-eight J. S. Bach
chorale preludes, thirty-three of which were unknown. The collection also serves as a link to
ix
the Orgelbüchlein, perhaps even suggesting a prototype for the later collection.
The collection also inclues three J. S. Bach chorale preludes which can be found in
virtually identical settings elsewhere in the chorale literature of Bach. This is unique occurrence
has changed the dating of Bach’s works, resetting early dating parameters.
It is the purpose of this study to examine the J. S. Bach chorale preludes in The
Neumeister Collection as a worthy collection of service and teaching music. These works
offer a wide variety of music for the Liturgy and are categorized liturgically and topically,
allowing organists a detailed and complete index. They are also accessible to all levels of
playing, require little or no pedaling, and are short and sectional making them highly flexible.
Tables classifying these chorale preludes according to form, other settings of the same chorale,
and estimated playing times have been included for the church organist.
These chorale preludes are also excellent teaching pieces, exemplifying an array of
forms, contrapuntal techniques, styles, and harmonies. Also, many adapt easily to different
voicings, giving the organ student additional training in the independence of hands and feet. A
table of the rules of playing polyphonic music and scores presenting the original and edited
x
Chapter One
Background Information
One of the most significant musical discoveries of the twentieth century was the
of the John Herrick Music Library at Yale University in 1982. Musicologists Christoph
Wolff, a renowned Bach scholar, and Hans-Joachim Schultz of Harvard University, as well
as Yale University librarian Harold E. Samuel, discovered the collection while cataloging
manuscripts bequeathed to the university by former Yale professor Lowell Mason (1792-
1873). This collection was entitled Yale University LM 4708-The Neumeister Collection
of Chorale Preludes of the Bach Circle, and will hereafter be referred to as The
German composers spanning several generations, such as Johann Pachelbel and Johann
Michael Bach, the collection also included thirty-three unknown works by Johann
(1757-1840) compiled what is believed to be an anthology of service music for the active
church organist while he was serving as the second organist, sexton, and bell ringer at the
1
Steven Westrop, CD jacket notes for Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750): The
Neumeister Chorales, performed by Christopher Herrick, organ (Hyperion CDA 67215,
2000), 1.
1
2
Georg Andreas Sorge (1703-1778); however, his primary livelihood was teaching
requirements included accessible, functional, and versatile service music with little or no
pedal and few technical difficulties. Based on the watermark of the manuscript, notational
characteristics, and Neumeister’s arrival in Frieberg in the early 1790s, it is probable that
Johann Gottfried Neumeister retired from active church service in 1831 and died at
the age of eighty-three in Homburg, near Frankfurt am Main. The manuscript then passed
to Christian Heinrich Rinck (1770-1846), although the exact date of its passing is
unknown. Rinck was a Darmstadt court organist who studied in Erfurt from 1786-1789
with Johann C. Kittle, one of Johann Sebastian Bach's most famous pupils. Rinck was a
well-known collector of manuscripts, and his estate, which was purchased by Lowell
Mason in 1852, contained many keyboard works from the Bach Circle. Mason, a Yale
University professor, bequeathed his collection of manuscripts to that university upon his
death in 1873. Since 1873, The Neumeister Collection has resided among the archival
2
Christoph Wolff, “The Neumeister Collection of Chorale Preludes from the Bach
Circle,” in Bach: Essays on His Life and Music (Cambridge: Harvard University Press,
1991), 109-111.
3
Christoph Wolff, ed., Organ Chorales from the Neumeister Collection: Yale
University Manuscript LM 4708 (London: Bärenreiter Kassel, 1985), VI.
3
Christoph Bach (1642-1703), brother of Johann Michael and uncle of Johann Sebastian
four works; Johann Pachelbel (1653-1706), teacher of Johann Christoph Bach (1671-
1721), who in turn was the brother and teacher of J. S. Bach, one work; Daniel Erich
(1646-1712), one work; Georg Andreas Sorge, teacher of Johann Gottfried Neumeister,
five works; and J. S. Bach (1685-1750), thirty-eight works. The collection also contains
five anonymous chorale preludes.5 A complete listing of the contents of the collection can
presents the chorale preludes in the order in which they appear in the autograph.
two works, sixty-six are written by members of the Bach family. The compendium has
revealed twenty-five works by Johann Michael Bach which were previously unknown,
quadrupling the number of chorale compositions by this composer, and making The
Neumeister Collection the most extensive source of his works today.6 Appendix C
and F. W. Zachow also increase their known chorale output. Authorship of several of the
4
Wolff, Christoph, The Neumeister Collection of Chorale Preludes from the Bach
Circle: Facsimile Edition of the Yale Manuscript LM 4708 (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1985), 5.
5
Wolff, Organ Chorales, VI.
6
Joseph Payne, CD jacket notes for J. S. Bach Chorale Preludes (Yale
Manuscript), performed by Joseph Payne, organ (Harmonia Mundi 905158, 1985), 19-20.
4
as doubtful works has been credited to the correct composer because of the Neumeister
________________________________________________________________________
Table 1.
Corrections in Authorship of Chorales due to The Neumeister Collection
________________________________________________________________________
Number in The Composer Chorale
Neumeister Collection
But the most significant contribution of The Neumeister Collection was the
composers. These thirty-three works augment the number of known organ chorale
preludes by J. S. Bach by one-fifth; they also provide an insight into Bach’s earliest work,
dating from approximately 1702 to1708, before the Weimar years when Bach became
active as a teacher.7 The Neumeister Collection also serves as a link between the early
years and the Orgelbüchlein, even suggesting a prototype for the genre of chorale prelude
contained in the later collection. Most importantly, The Neumeister Collection has
changed the criteria used in dating the chorale preludes of J. S. Bach, providing evidence
that existing time frames should encompass a much earlier period than previously
thought.8
The Neumeister Collection also provides the first concordances for three of the
previously known chorale preludes written by J. S. Bach: BWV 719, Der Tag, der ist so
freudenreich; BWV 742, Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder; BWV 957, Machs mit mir,
Gott, nach deiner Güt. These chorale preludes were transmitted individually and classified
as doubtful works. The discovery of copies which pre-date existing sources enabled
scholars to use the Neumeister chorale preludes as models for authorship of these
writings.9
7
Payne, 19.
8
Wolff, The Neumeister Collection, 10.
9
Wolff, Organ Chorales, VII-VIII.
6
these chorale preludes have been virtually ignored by organists and teachers since their
studies verifying their authenticity, and involve only a few of the most eminent
musicologists, such as Christoph Wolff, who authenticated the collection, Hans Joachim-
Schultz, colleague of Dr. Wolff and co-discoverer of the manuscript, Russell Stinson,
Peter Williams, as well as several artists who recorded the collection, including
Christopher Herrick and Joseph Payne. The pieces themselves are rarely performed,
three of the chorale preludes originally contained in The Neumeister Collection are not
published today with this collection; these three works represent the only overlap of two
virtually identical settings (i.e., having little or no discrepancies between copies) of the
same chorale prelude contained in more than one collection. This is a unique occurrence:
BWV 601, Herr Christ, der einig Gottes Sohn, and BWV 639, Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu
Christ, are contained in both The Neumeister Collection and the Orgelbüchlein, with
identical BWV numbers; BWV 737, Vater unser im Himmelreich, can be found in The
counterpoint, full pedal lines, and advanced keyboard techniques not found in the other
Bach works contained in The Neumeister Collection. They are associated with a more
complex style of writing which was previously thought to originate during the Weimar
years and the beginning of the Orgelbüchlein. It is to be expected that these three chorale
7
preludes represent the latest compositions in The Neumeister Collection; their placement
in a collection of such early Baroque music changes the criteria used to date Bach’s
systematize and simplify the classification of the works of J. S. Bach, have omitted these
The overall purpose of this study is to familiarize readers with the early chorale
overlooked by musicians because of their recent appearance and apparent simplicity. This
offer a variety of forms, styles, and techniques to students, and the diversity of chorales
chosen by Bach affords the practicing church organist an accessible and functional
repertoire. This study will offer general background information about The Neumeister
usage, chart their occurrences within other collections of Bach, and present these chorale
preludes as teaching pieces which clearly demonstrate many styles, forms, contrapuntal
techniques, and keyboard and pedal techniques. In addition, this study will focus on the
9
Wolff, Organ Chorales, VII.
8
pedagogical aspects of two works: BWV 1093, Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du
verbrochen and BWV 957, Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt. These two chorale
techniques, making them ideal teaching pieces for Baroque organ music.
The chorale preludes in The Neumeister Collection offer a beginning time frame to
chorale composition by J. S. Bach; the ending chorales, namely the Leipzig Chorales or
the Eighteen Great Chorales, are already well known and accepted as Bach’s final and
most complex efforts in the genre. The collection was authenticated in 1985 by Christoph
Wolff, and this study will neither attempt to confirm nor deny this authentication. Other
parameters of this monograph will include limiting the subject matter to only those chorale
preludes by J. S. Bach contained in other collections are outside the scope of this project
and may be used only as a point of reference if necessary to enhance the understanding of
registration, the secular and “free”compositions of J. S. Bach, and genres unrelated to the
approximately one hundred and fifty pages containing eighty-two chorale preludes by
several prominent German organists. Its neat, consistent writing suggests that a single
scribe was responsible for its writing, probably Johann Gottfried Neumeister himself. The
notation conforms to the standards of the time; a “C” clef is used in the treble to avoid the
use of ledger lines and to facilitate reading. Occasionally, a sharp is used to cancel a flat,
and, in general, there are many errors in writing, primarily concerning the use of
accidentals. All of the pieces in the collection are short, usually two pages or less in
length, and involve a short playing time.10 The works use all styles of organ chorale
composition, including cantus firmus and cantus planus treatments, and a wide variety of
forms such as chorale motet, chorale canon, chorale fugue, etc. Techniques of the day are
also employed, including echo effects, gigue rhythms, and various contrapuntal devices.11
These will be discussed in greater depth later in this writing. The inscription on the inside
10
Payne, 18.
11
Payne, 20.
12
Wolff, The Neumeister Collection, 2-3.
9
10
The link between J. S. Bach and Gottfried Sorge has been crucial in dating this
collection. Bach and Sorge both belonged to the elite Leipzig musical society Sozietät der
Neumeister became acquainted with Bach’s music. The five chorale preludes of Sorge’s
contained in The Neumeister Collection are the only works in this collection derived from
a printed source; they were clearly appended to the collection upon its completion. The
presence of the music of both Bach and Sorge in the compendium, coupled with an
explanation by Sorge in the Preface to his Erster Theil der Vorspiele concerning the
difficulty of Bach’s later works signifies that the music was written much earlier than
complete understanding of these works. Russell Stinson, in his article Some Thoughts on
Bach’s Neumeister Collection, divides the factors determining dating into two areas:
stylistic evidence, which he suggests is strongly influenced by the chorale fantasy and
13
Wolff, The Neumeister Collection, 6.
11
other existing copies of these works, either complete, as in BWV 601, 639, and 737, or
incomplete, as in the case of five others, BWV 714, BWV 719, BWV 957, BWV 1096,
and BWV 742. The three virtually identical chorale preludes contained in more than one
collection, BWV 601, BWV 639, BWV 737, which were discussed in the previous
chapter, offer the strongest proof of Bach’s authorship of these works; they exist as
complete works, and there are few discrepancies between the copies. BWV 601 and
BWV 737 have very minor changes between the versions found in The Neumeister
Collection and settings found elsewhere; the two versions of BWV 639 are identical.14
The five chorale preludes by J. S. Bach in The Neumeister Collection which exist
in variants or partial concordances are: BWV 1096, Christe, der du bist Tag und Licht;
BWV 957, Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt; BWV 714, Ach, Gott und Herr;
BWV 742, Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder; BWV 719, Der Tag, der ist so
freudenreich. The chorale preludes BWV 719, BWV 1096, and BWV 742 were
previously known but incorrectly attributed to J. C. Bach, Johann Pachelbel, and Georg
three chorale preludes and provided the first known concordances of them. The preludes
Ach, Gott und Herr, BWV 714 and Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, BWV 957,
were only partially known prior to the discovery of the Neumeister manuscript. They
were, however, correctly identified as works of J. S. Bach. BWV 714 existed as a chorale
14
Russell Stinson, “Some Thoughts on Bach’s Neumeister Collection,” in The
Journal of Musicology 11, No. 4 (1993), 456-458.
12
canon between the soprano and tenor voices at the octave; The Neumeister Collection
provided an additional thirty-seven measures which opened the work with a homophonic
setting of the chorale tune. Likewise, Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, BWV 957,
was previously known as a keyboard fugue until The Neumeister Collection revealed
another twenty-five measures containing the chorale, thus identifying the work as a
chorale fugue.15 Table 2 on page thirteen lists the degree of completeness of the
While the strongest external evidence used in authenticating and dating these
works was previously existing copies, whether complete or incomplete, other factors also
watermarks provided visible clues; biographical data helped to establish a time frame for
the compilation of the compendium. The most convincing proof that these J. S. Bach
works are pre-Weimar, according to Christoph Wolff, was their stylistic evidence.16 The
Bach works in The Neumeister Collection are amazingly varied; they display evolving
forms and harmonies, a variety of motives within a work, passages of virtuosic writing,
and monothematic fugues and fughettas. The almost complete lack of pedal also suggests
that these chorale preludes are early Bach works. In addition to this, they exhibit features
counterpoint. Thus, Wolff proposed that these chorale preludes were most assuredly
15
Westrop, 2.
16
Stinson, 456-457.
13
________________________________________________________________________
Table 2.
J. S. Bach Chorales in The Neumeister Collection: Concordances & their Locations
________________________________________________________________________
BWV 957: Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt compositional section
Mozart-Stiftung, Frankfurt (Mm. 25-34 missing)
MS. “140 varürte Chorale von Joh. Sebastian Bach”
Source: J. N. Schelble, 1789-1837
Scribe: F. X. Gleichauf
BWV 742: Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder attr. to Georg Böhm
Berlin (West) Staatsbibliothek
Mus. MS.: 40037
Scribe: J. S. Sasse (1721-1794)
BWV 1096: Christe, der du bist Tag und Licht attr.to Pachelbel
Königsberg Universtaatsbibliothek partial concordance
Mus. MS.: 15839 (Mm. 1-25 vary)
________________________________________________________________________
Source: Christoph Wolff, The Neumeister Collection of Chorale Preludes from the Bach
Circle: Facsilile Edition of the Yale Manuscript LM 4708 (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1985), 12-14.
14
pre-Weimar, encompassing the Arnstadt and Mühlhausen years, and perhaps extending as
far back as 1700 to 1708, into Bach’s Orhdruf years with his brother Johann Christoph
Bach.17
Wolff further proposes that the chorale preludes of J. S. Bach in The Neumeister
Collection not only predate the Orgelbüchlein, but provide a prototype for the compact,
highly expressive writings in the latter work. Bold harmonic progressions, increasingly dense
changing motivic material are features found in the chorale preludes of both of these
collections.18 The two collections are also similar in concept and design. Wolff states that
the inclusion of BWV 601 and BWV 639 in both The Neumeister Collection and the
further organization of service music with “alio modo” or alternate settings of chorale
preludes previously set in The Neumeister Collection. Whatever the intent, both The
Neumeister Collection and the Orgelbüchlein are alike in their function, which is to provide
a variety of usable service music for the entire church year, and in their sequence, or order,
of chorales.19 The following chapter will elaborate on the similarities between these two
collections, and will provide information relevant to their usage as effective service music.
17
Wolff, “The Neumeister Collection,” 118-119.
18
Christoph Wolff, “Chronology and Style in the Early Works: A Background for
the Orgelbüchlein,” in Bach: Essays on His Life and Music (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 1991), 303.
19
Wolff, “The Neumeister Collection,” 120-121.
Chapter Three
The Neumeister Collection as Liturgical Music
German organists during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries were expected
to perform a number of functions in the worship service, and a collection of service music
such as The Neumeister Collection represented a practical solution to meeting the musical
composer, and theorist, states in his Orgelprobe (1698) that organists should be able to
and dances, and be capable of tuning the organ and repairing mechanical malfunctions. He
further states in his 1702 treatise, Harmonologia musica, that churches should require
their organists to be able to improvise fugues, vary a chorale in several ways to avoid
monotony, transpose a chorale into every key, be able to read both tabulature and figured
The more important services of the German Lutheran Church during the Baroque
Era were the Hauptgottesdienst, the main worship service on Sunday morning, Besteinde,
the Monday morning prayer service, Frühgottesdienst, the early midweek service,
occurring on Thursday mornings, and the Sunday evening Vespers services. The function
of the organ during these and other services was not always clear. According to the Ordo
20
Peter Williams, The Organ Music of J. S. Bach, vol. III (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1980), 32-33.
15
16
Cantionum at Halle and the Tabulatura Nova of Samuel Scheidt, 1624, also of Halle, the
statements between organ and choir, cantor, or congregation, was not standardized,
however, and varied from city to city. Peter Williams, in The Organ Music of J. S. Bach,
states various methods which could have been used by organists during the Lutheran
service:
The Vespers services were also musically important and were included in the
duties of organists of large churches; it was at these that the Magnificat was sung. In
Leipzig, there were two types of Vespers using organ music: those on feast-days and
those on Sunday evening. Ensemble music was included in the service music for these
21
Williams, III, 13.
22
Williams, III, 13.
17
occasions except during times of mourning, Advent, and Lent. The use of postludes
varied from city to city. Existing orders of worship dating from 1710 show the listing of a
Psalm, followed by a motet, then the sermon, and finally a setting of the Magnificat.23
was expected to provide interludes between stanzas of hymns or chorales and to fill any
noticeably long silences during the Liturgy with music, such as a short improvisation on a
Lutheran Liturgy can be summarized thus: to supply solo music at appropriate points
either before, during, or after the Liturgy; accompany the singing of hymns and other
music sung by cantors, choirs, and/or congregation; provide interludes between sung
musical verses; and improvise music to fill the silent portions of the Liturgy. Jacob
introduce the key and melody of the upcoming hymn to the congregation; and to
“...delight them through edifying thought.”24 In addition to these functions, the organ was
expected to supply the appropriate music for each liturgical season or category and to
ensure that the music adequately conveyed the mood of the text. The use of a single
chorale melody in various contexts and forms during the Liturgy was a unifying element;
the more recognizable the melody, the more unified the service.
23
Williams, III, 14.
24
Payne, 21.
18
Table 3.
Suggested Techniques for Improvisation as Written by Christoph Raupach in His Essay Veritophili deutliche Beweis-
Gründe, worauf der rechte Gebrauch der Music beydes in den Kirchen und ausser denselben beruhet
1. Short theme, fugal, simple, slow 1. A strong stop or full organ for a joyful Symphonia oder Sonatina; if time, a gross
Sonata with fugue (4 parts) and simple Choral at the close
2. C.f. in pedal, manual with syncopations 2. Strong stop, 4 parts, little fugue on the chorale, allegro
& suspensions; in 4 parts
3. Simple Choral in rh, lh in 2 parts with 3. C.f. in rh, lh on second manual; total= 2 parts
suspensions, short Tiraten, Groppi; total=3 parts
4. Simple Choral in lh, bass in ped., rf as 4. C.f. in lh, rh with moving Contrapunctus floridus; total= 2 parts
in no. 3, but 1 part only; total=3 parts
5. Lamento with quiet stops on which the simple Choral 5. C.f. in ped., lh/rh on one manual with Variation; total= 3 parts
6. C.f. in lh, rh on other manual with Variation, 6. C.f. in rh, bass in ped., lh on 2nd manual with Variation; 3 parts
adagio; 2 parts
8. 2 manuals in alternation: first an inventive Fantasia showing Affekt of each line (or
2-3 lines), alternating with simple Choral on 2nd man.(with pedal)
25
Williams, III, 56-57.
19
The Orgelbüchlein, which has long been considered J. S. Bach’s first effort to
liturgical year, shares many striking similarities with The Neumeister Collection. So
closely related are these two collections with regard to concept, design, and function, that
Christoph Wolff has suggested that The Neumeister Collection may have served as a
prototype for the Orgelbüchlein, perhaps even beginning the liturgical cycle of chorale
preludes which the Orgelbüchlein later continued. He further states that the inclusion of
BWV 601 and BWV 639 in both collections is not a coincidence, but a deliberate attempt
by Bach to continue the composition of service music and provide “alio modo” or
alternate settings of chorales previously set in The Neumeister Collection.26 Because the
layout of the chorale preludes in the Orgelbüchlein was detailed in the autograph before
the music was actually written, musicologists have access to Bach’s intentions regarding
thirty-five are also set by Bach in the Orgelbüchlein: twenty-five in the planned but
unwritten portion, and twelve completed settings. Two chorale preludes, Alle Menschen
müssen Sterben, BWV 1117, and Christe, der du bist Tag und Licht, BWV 1096, are
found in The Neumeister Collection and both the written and planned portions of the
Orgelbüchlein. Again, two chorale preludes occur almost identically in both collections,
BWV 601, Herr Christ, der einig Gottes Sohn, and BWV 639, Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu
Christ. Table 4 contains a listing of the chorales shared by The Neumeister Collection
(abbreviated NC ) and both the written and unwritten portion of the Orgelbüchlein (OB).
26
Wolff, “The Neumeister Collection,” 120-121.
20
Table 4.
Chorales Set by J. S. Bach in The Neumeister Collection & the Orgelbüchlein
______________________________________________________________________________________________________
Source: J. S. Bach, The Liturgical Year (Orgelbüchlein), ed. by Albert Riemenschneider (Bryn Mawr: Oliver Ditson
Company,1933), XIII-XVI.
22
The Index of the Orgelbüchlein categorizes its content into two general
classifications: de tempore, or with regard to a specific time or season of the Church Year,
such as Advent, Easter, etc., and omne tempore, meaning topically, covering such areas as
the Catechism, funerals, evening, etc. Of the one hundred and sixty-four intended chorale
preludes in the Orgelbüchlein, the first sixty are arranged according to de tempore and the
remaining one hundred and four chorale preludes are arranged topically, or omne
tempore.27 The Neumeister Collection is similarly arranged: the first part contains
chorales suitable for the seasons of the Church Year, and the second part is arranged
appropriate service music for any part of the Church Year. The omne tempore categories
aid in the choosing of music for various occasions, aspects of Christian life, etc. It is of
note that the two collections have little overlap of categories; together, they complement
each other without having an excess of chorale tunes in any one area. Table 5 illustrates
the liturgical classifications of chorales in both The Neumeister Collection and the
Orgelbüchlein according to their layout in the autograph, the number of chorales each
collection contains or was intended to contain in each liturgical category, and the BWV
number of the chorale prelude (or in the case of the unwritten portion of the
titles.
27
Russell Stinson, “The Compositional History of Bach’s Orgelbüchlein
Reconsidered,” in Bach Perspectives, ed. Russell Stinson, vol. 1 (Lincoln: University of
Nebraska Press, 1995), 2-3.
28
Wolff, “The Neumeister Collection,” 111-112.
23
Table 5.
Liturgical Classifications of Chorales Shared by The Neumeister Collection and the Orgelbüchlein
Advent: 1 4
Herr Christ, der einig Gottes Sohn 601 601
Christmas: 3 11
(10 written; 1 unwritten)
Der Tag, der ist so freudenreich 719 605
Jesu, meine Freude 1105 610
Wir Christenleut 1090 612
Old/New Year: 1 3
Das alte Jahr vergangen ist 1091 614
Nunc Dimittis: 1 2
Herr Gott, nun schleuss den Himmel auf 1092 617
Passion: 4 13
(7 written; 6 unwritten)
O Lamm Gottes, unschuldig 1095 618
*Wir danken dir, Herr Jesu Christ 1096 623
O Jesu, wie ist dein Gestalt 1094 (28)
Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen 1093 (32)
Easter: 0 6
Ascension: 0 (2 unwritten)
Table 5. Continued 24
Pentecost: 0 7
(1 written; 6 unwritten)
Word of God: 0 3
Trinity: 0 (3 unwritten)
Praise: 0 (5 unwritten)
Faith: 3 6
(2 written; 4 unwritten)
O Herre Gott dein göttlich Wort 1110 (60)
Wir glauben all’ an einen Gott 1098 (64)
Vater unser im Himmelreich 737 636
Baptism: 0 (1 unwritten)
Confession: 6 10
(1 written; 9 unwritten)
Aus tiefer Not, schrei ich zu dir 1099 (67)
Allein zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ 1100 (70)
Ach, Gott und Herr 714 (71)
Herr Jesu Christ, du höchstes Gut 1114 (72)
Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder 742 (73)
Durch Adams Fall ist ganz verderbt 1101 637
Salvation: 0 1
Communion: 1 (7 unwritten)
*Wir danken dir, Herr Jesu Christ 1096 (83)
Table 5. Continued 25
Thanks: 0 (2 unwritten)
Christian: 1 10
Life (1 written; 9 unwritten)
Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ 639 639
Trust: 3 17
(3 written; 14 unwritten)
Wenn dich Unglück tut greifen an 1104 (108)
Gott ist mein Heil, mein Hilf und Trost 1106 (110)
Was Gott tut, das ist wolhgetan 1116 (111)
(112)
The Church: 3 (13 unwritten)
Wie nach einer Wasserquelle 1119 (121)
Erhalt uns Herr, bei deinem Wort 1103 (122)
Du Friedefürst, Herr Jesu Christ 1102 (125)
Funeral: 6 16
(1 written; 15 unwritten)
Alle Menschen müssen Sterben 1117 643 (130)
Nun lasst uns den Leib begraben 1111 (133)
Christus, der ist mein Leben 1112 (134)
Herzlich lieb hab’ ich dich o Herr 1115 (135)
Machs mit mir Gott, nach deiner Güt 957 (138)
Ach Gott, tu dich erbarmen 1109 (142)
Morning: 0 (5 unwritten)
Table 5. Continued 26
Evening: 3 (4 unwritten)
Christe, der du bist der helle Tag 1120 (148)
*Christe, der du bist Tag und Licht 1096 (149)
Werde munter, mein Gemüte 1118 (150)
Miscellaneous: 0 13
(1 written; 12 unwritten)
______________________________________________________________________________________________________
Source: J. S. Bach, The Orgelbüchlein, ed. A. Riemenschneider (Bryn Mawr: Oliver Ditson Co., 1933), XIII-XVI.
27
provide an available, useable, and versatile selection of sacred music for use in the Liturgy
throughout the Church Year, the grouping of chorale preludes in the Index of the
collection is helpful to the church organist in selecting music for a particular occasion,
function, aspect of Christian Life, etc. A listing of alternate settings of particular chorales
is also helpful; Table 6 on the following page shows the occurrences of shared chorales
Bach (excepting the unwritten portion of the Orgelbüchlein). It also indicates the use of
will be discussed in more depth in the upcoming chapter, they are included here with the
chorales in collections to illustrate the many different settings used by Bach and to offer a
variety of choices to the liturgical organist. Those forms which show elements of several
sectional, the appropriate section (i.e., “A,” “B,” ...) will also be included. The following
abbreviations are used in all further charts and tables: CU for Clavierübung, III; 18 for
the Eighteen Great or Leipzig Chorales; Misc. for miscellaneous manuscripts (i.e., those
which are not included in chorale collections). Asterisks indicate the use of an alternate
title for the same chorale; abbreviations can be found in the List of Abbreviations,
page v.
28
Table 6.
Chorales in The Neumeister Collection Shared by Other Organ Collections of J. S. Bach
Chorale NC OB CU 18 Misc.
Name BWV BWV BWV BWV BWV
______________________________________________________________________________________________________
Ach, Gott und Herr
714 692, 692a, 693
Chorale Canon
*Christe, der du bist Tag und Licht (Wir danken dir, Herr Jesu Christ)
1096 623
Comb. Form: Mel. Chor.
“A”: Chorale Fughetta
“B”: Mel.Chor.
Das Alte Jahr vergangen ist
1091 614
(CF Chor.) Orn. Mel.Chor.
Table 6. Continued 29
Wir Christenleut
1090 612 710
(Mel. Chor.) Mel. Chor.
music, a summary of the salient points made in this chapter would be helpful. The thirty-
eight chorale preludes by J. S. Bach contained in this compilation offer a wide variety of
liturgical music which is technically accessible to organists of any playing ability. They are
catalogued liturgically in the Index of The Neumeister Collection and in that of the
Orgelbüchlein; this grouping of chorales is extremely helpful to the organist. All of the
works in The Neumeister Collection are short, most are under two minutes in playing
time, and could be used at any point in the Liturgy where music is required. Furthermore,
many of these chorale preludes are sectional, allowing the musician greater flexibility in
ending the piece. For a listing of the estimated playing times of these chorale preludes
and a table of sectional forms and their cadences, see Appendix D and Appendix E.
Chapter Four
Pedagogical Aspects of the J. S. Bach Chorales in The Neumeister Collection
discussion of chorale forms by comparing his analytical classifications with those of two
of his predecessors, Spitta and Schweitzer. Spitta classified chorale preludes into three
chorales; chorale fantasias. Schweitzer, on the other hand, used stylistic traits from
three totally different types: those using the “motivistic method” of Pachelbel in which the
entire prelude is constructed from a series of motives derived from the chorale melody;
the “coloristic method” of Böhm, featuring fragmentation of the melody and manipulation
of melodic material around a simple harmonic framework; and lastly, the “chorale
fantasia style” of Buxtehude, featuring bravura writing, fragmentation of the melody and
sectional form.29
Tussler himself uses the chorale melody as the primary factor determining form.
He divides chorale preludes into two broad categories: those bound by the chorale
melody and the “free” types, or those not bound by melodic restrictions. His criteria for
chorale preludes bound by the melody include the presence of the chorale tune in its
entirety, and can be seen in the forms melody chorale, ornamented melody chorale,
cantus firmus chorale, chorale motet, and chorale canon. The chorale forms which
29
Tussler, 25.
32
33
Tussler classifies as “free” present only a portion of the melody and include chorale
fugues and chorale fantasias. He further adds that in this latter classification, the melody
may be treated in various ways: a single phrase or part of a phrase may furnish the
thematic material for part or all of the composition (chorale fugue); the phrases may be
formal designs found in chorale preludes and the characteristics of each form is a good
starting point for teaching these chorale preludes. The most commonly found form and
perhaps the most easily identifiable, is the melody chorale. This is essentially a four-part
harmonization of the chorale in which the melody is presented intact and unadorned in a
single voice, usually the soprano, with all phrases stated in order. Melody chorales are
therefore short, consisting only of a single strophe, and because of their limitations, they
are not virtuosic. Although their texture is polyphonic, they appear homophonic; the
The second most frequently found type of chorale prelude is the cantus firmus
chorale prelude. In this form, the chorale melody is usually presented unadorned in
longer note values, quite frequently in the bass voice. The chorale phrases are generally
30
Tussler, 25-26.
31
Oswald Ragatz, Organ Techniques: A Basic Course of Study (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1979), 71.
34
separated by interludes of one to ten measures in length and there are fewer restrictions
The ornamented melody chorale is essentially a melody chorale with the chorale
tune embellished; the melody is almost always in the soprano voice, but may be almost
unrecognizable because of the ornamentation. This is the most expressive of the chorale
forms, with accompanimental material often based on motives and rhythmic patterns
found in the chorale.33 There are only two of this type of chorale prelude in The
Neumeister Collection, but both are excellent representations of the form: BWV 742,
Ach Herr, mich Armen Sünder, and BWV 639, Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ.
The chorale canon is the form most bound by the chorale melody according to
Tussler. Its distinctive feature is the canonic presentation of the chorale, usually by the
two outer voices, at intervals of fifths and octaves. Motivic material found in the
The chorale fugue (or fughetta, if the composition is under thirty-five measures
in length) resembles fugues of secular compositions, but differs in two important ways:
the subject is a portion of the chorale melody, usually the first phrase; the fugal writing is
considerably more relaxed and may vary greatly from textbook formats. Oswald Ragatz
states that the chorale fugue is found very infrequently among the music of Baroque
32
Ragatz, 71.
33
Tussler, 36.
34
Tussler, 35.
35
composers. However, the chorale fughetta was used many times by J. S. Bach.35 It
featured a section of thematic material, called the Exposition, in which the subject
(usually the first chorale phrase) is stated by all the voices in the tonic and dominant key
areas. This Exposition is followed by a developmental section which may be lengthy and
highly complex. The chorale fughetta differs in that its development is short, frequently
the same length as the Exposition, and embryonic in its contrapuntal writing. Secondary
thematic material is called the countersubject, and may assume a role equal in importance
and complexity to the subject. Chorale fugues or fughettas which use two subjects,
commonly called double fugues, usually derive the second fugal subject from the last
phrase of the chorale.36 BWV 1097, Ehre sei dir, Christe, der du leidest Not, illustrates
both of the two aforementioned forms: mm. 1-27 is a chorale fughetta based on the first
chorale phrase; mm. 28-53 is written as a chorale canon with the melody occurring
The last form of chorale prelude which Tussler classifies as “bound by the chorale
melody” is the chorale motet. This is the form which Schweitzer labeled the “Pachelbel-
style” and Spitta, the “pure organ chorale prelude.” Its distinguishing feature is that all
chorale phrases are treated imitatively and that these chorale phrases are treated in the
order in which they occur. This imitative treatment often extends to accompanimental
voices in interludes preceding each chorale phrase entry. This technique of imitative
35
Ragatz, 140.
36
Ragatz, 140-141.
36
it systematically preceeds and finally extends into each chorale phrase. The melody in
chorale motets usually occurs as a cantus firmus treatment in the soprano voice; the
writing resembles a series of fugal expositions based on each chorale phrase.37 It may be
noted that the chorale motet resembles a combination of two forms: the melody chorale
and the chorale fugue. Like the melody chorale, the melody is presented in its entirety in
the top voice, with all chorale phrases intact and in order; like the chorale fugue, a fugal
subject derived from the chorale phrases serves as the basic unit of construction,
including the accompanimental voices. However, there are two major differences
between the chorale fugue and the chorale motet: each chorale phrase is present in the
chorale motet, while only one, or at most two, is present in the chorale fugue.
confined to imitation of only the first chorale phrase.38 A valuable insight into the chorale
preludes exhibiting Vorimitation at the beginning, but later discarding it and proceeding
preludes, is offered by Ragatz; he states that quite frequently Baroque composers began
their works with imitative writing using thematic material, but later conformed to the
subsequent cataloging of this type of chorale prelude will include the formal
37
Tussler, 30-34.
38
Tussler, 31-34.
39
Ragatz, 72.
37
classification of “melody chorale,” and the label “chorale motet” will be listed in
The two forms which Tussler describes as “free” are those not under melodic
restrictions and include the chorale fugue and the chorale fantasy. The chorale fugue
was discussed above as a basis of comparison to the chorale motet; the second of these
types is the chorale fantasy, which exhibits the most freedom of all the forms of the
chorale prelude. This freedom is perhaps its only consistent characteristic; the writing
may use the entire chorale melody or only a portion of it, phrases may be presented in any
order, and a multiplicity of forms, textures, and contrapuntal techniques may occur in any
voice. The chorale fantasy has an improvisatory quality due to its lack of restrictions. It
is perhaps the most experimental and complex of all the forms.40 The chorale prelude Ich
hab’ mein Sach Gott heimgestellt, BWV 1113, illustrates an evolving form of the chorale
fantasy; the writing is less complex than in standardized forms, but the chorale phrases
The final form which will be mentioned here is the chorale partita. It is not
included in either those forms restricted by the melody or the “free” classifications of
Tussler. This type of chorale prelude is usually a chorale setting consisting of one or
more short paraphrases of the chorale melody and can display any of the forms discussed
here.41 The various forms of the chorale prelude are compared in the following table.
40
Ragatz, 72.
41
Ragatz, 72.
38
Table 7.
Chorale Prelude Forms and Their Characteristics
Form Chorale Phrases Melodic voice Rhythm Accompaniment/Motives
Cantus Firmus entire chorale all phrases usually Bass long note values may exhibit independent
(usually interludes) in order forms without presence of CF.
Chorale Motet entire chorale all phrases usually Sop. retains original fugal writing based on
(always interludes) in order rhythm chorale:1. in phrases.
2. Vorimitation.
Chorale Canon entire chorale all phrases usually two retains original ctp. based on chor. melody.
(with/without interludes) in order outer voices rhythm canonic voices at P5, P8.
Melody Chorale entire chorale all phrases usually Sop. retains original varies
(usually without interludes) in order rhythm
Ornamented entire chorale all phrases always Sop. based on patterns based on patterns in melody
Melody Chorale (with/without interludes) in order in orn. mel.
Chorale Fugue 1-2 phrases all voices varies ctp. based on subject/
countersubject.
Chorale Fantasy 1 or more phrases any order any voice varies varies
(whole or fragmented)
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Source: Kent Kennan, Counterpoint: Based on Eighteenth-Century Practice, 3rd ed. (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall,
Inc., 1987), 250-256.
39
however, do not conform solely to one form or style of chorale prelude. This is further
evidence of the early chronology of these works in Bach’s compositional output; many
are clearly evolving styles displaying elements of more than one form and/or technique.
Of these works, a dichotomy can be ascertained: those whose formal design indicates
clearly the use of a composite or two-part form; and those which exhibit elements of one
or more chorale forms, but no consistent usage of these elements. The first category is
the easier of the two to determine; in the Neumeister Collection, these works are all two-
part compositions with each part (“A” or “B”) having its own form.42 Table 8 lists the
Bach chorale preludes exhibiting composite or two-part forms. A wide variety can be
seen here, with the exception of the ornamented melody chorale. It is interesting to note
that the forms occurring most frequently within this group are the melody chorale and the
chorale fugue. Again, several melody chorales here begin with Vorimitation, only to
abandon it later.
Table 9 lists the chorale preludes which do not conform, even in part, to a
standardized or composite form. These works are clearly experimental with regard to
form, and cannot be categorized easily. Parentheses are used here to indicate the forms
standardized format. Note: These tables represent only a portion of the Bach Neumeister
42
Westrop, II-III.
40
Table 8
1099 Aus tiefer Not schrei ich zu dir Chorale Canon (“A”)
Melody Chorale(“B”)
1120 Christ, der du bist der helle Tag Chorale Motet (“A”)
CF Chorale (“B”)
1096 Christ, der du bist Tag uns Licht Chorale Fughetta (“A”)
Chorale Motet(“B”)
1097 Ehre sie dir, Christe, der du leidest Not Chorale Fughetta (“A”)
Chorale Canon (“B”)
957 Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt Chorale Fughetta (“A”)
Melody Chorale (“B”)
Although many excellent books have been written on the subject of Bach’s
harmonic style, the approach taken by Tussler is the most pertinent to this study. He
begins with a statement that Bach’s harmonic language is richer and more complex than
church modes, in which many chorales were written, with major/minor modes. His
discussion of the uniqueness of Bach’s harmonic syle is very succinct and valuable as
pedagogical material. Tussler lists the limitations of this style as threefold: standard
41
Table 9
J. S. Bach Chorale Preludes in The Neumeister Collection Exhibiting Elements of
One or More Forms
1106 Gott ist mein Heil, mein Hilf und Trost (CF Chorale)
1092 Herr Gott, nun schleuss den Himmel auf (CF Chorale)
43
Westrop, II.
42
Table 10
639 Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ Orn. Mel. Chor.
chorale preludes; limited key usage. The constant changing of chords can be seen most
clearly in the melody chorale, cantus firmus chorale, ornamented melody chorale,
chorale canon, and chorale motet (i.e., the chorale forms under melodic restrictions).
But it is in the chorale fantasy and the chorale fughetta or fugue that Bach begins his use
of longer harmonic rhythms resulting in fewer chord changes. In these forms, changing
harmonies are much more systematic and attuned to the basic rhythm of the chorale.44
one reflects upon the organs of the time. In the early Baroque Era, pedalboards were
not as accommodating as those of the late Baroque and subsequent periods; the majority
had a straight, flat symmetry in which the heel was difficult to use. But more
importantly, tuning systems used at that time were not of equal temperament, so
intervals between scale tones were not consistent in the amount of consonance or
dissonance they possessed.45 Bach exhibits a preference for those keys containing fewer
than four sharps or flats.46 Likewise, his usage of contrasting key areas within a
subdominant. However, the distinction between Bach’s use of harmonies and keys and
that of other composers of the time is that Bach uses these elements to support the
counterpoint, not to obscure it. In addition, they also provide a foundation of support
44
Tussler, 40-44.
45
Sandra Soderland, Organ Technique: An Historical Approach, 2nd ed. (Chapel
Hill, NC: Hinshaw Music, 1986), 25.
46
Tussler, 40-41.
44
for the melody without the homophonic treatment so often found in chorales.47 Cadence
types can be discussed with the student in conjunction with the topic of harmonies found
in Bach’s music. The thirty-eight chorale preludes contain all of the standard cadences
including perfect and imperfect authentic cadences, half cadences, plagal cadences, and
deceptive cadences.
The chorale preludes in The Neumeister Collection offer many opportunities for
instruction in non-harmonic tones. One of the major innovations of Bach’s style is his
as other Baroque composers, he employs dissonance much more frequently and treats it
differently from others. The two types of non-harmonic tones which are ideally suited to
the organ are the suspension and the pedal point, both of which rely upon prolongation
of pitch to effect the dissonance. Chains of suspensions occur frequently in the works of
J. S. Bach, however, Bach differs from his contemporaries by using suspensions in inner
voices and resolving them much more freely than other composers of the time.48 An
example of this occurrence can be found in BWV 1091, Das alte Jahr vergangen ist, m.
3, where the suspension in the alto voice on beat three descends to an “a” before
resolving on beat four. Another instance of this in the same chorale prelude can be seen
in m.7; the suspension in the tenor voice on beat one resolves upward to the octave,
rather than downward as expected. Another device Bach uses frequently with
suspensions is the insertion of escape tones and appoggiaturas before the resolutions.
47
Tussler, 41-43.
48
Tussler, 42.
45
Pedal points are used sparingly here; however, their usage is also innovative.
Unlike his predecessors, Bach employs pedal points in voices other than the bass voice.
This seems to occur most frequently at final cadences.49 The culmination of this
technique can be seen in the later chorale preludes; in The Neumeister Collection, he
experiments with the placement of pedal points by putting them in the soprano.
Tussler also states that the usage of sequence and repetition are important
elements in Bach’s style. In the “bound” category of chorale prelude forms, one can
expect to find many melodic sequences; harmonic sequences occur more frequently in
the “free” forms, particularly in the interludes between chorale phrases in chorale
fantasies and the episodes and codettas of chorale fughettas. Bach uses repetition to
create unity, especially in large segments of music. Two types of repetition which he
uses are short, repeated motives approximately one to two measures in length, and
repetitions which involve long separations between statements, generally one or more
chorale phrases in length. In both of these instances, the repetition may vary from its
Finally, this study will present a general overview for the playing of polyphonic
music on the organ, which may serve as a guide for the student who wishes to achieve a
applications of these principles will accompany the pedagogical presentation later in this
chapter. Because the organ sustains tones as long as a key is depressed, attack and
49
Tussler, 42.
50
Tussler, 43-44.
46
release of keys (and pedals) is extremely important in correct organ technique. Also, the
organ offers no variance in dynamics with the depression of the keys, so the primary
method of achieving loudness or emphasis on a note in Baroque music is through the use
of articulation and touch. Other factors such as thickening texture and registration also
affect loudness. In addition to this, a detached style of playing due to the grouping of
notes and early fingering practices is used to execute music of this era on the organ.
The organ method book by George Richie and George Stauffer entitled Organ
Technique: Modern and Early offers excellent insight into the historical perspective of
playing early to late-Baroque music. It refers to the touch required in executing this
...the sound that results from connecting two adjacent white notes as
smoothly as possible with one finger or one toe.51
This technique utilizes modern finger action, but the lateral hand movements are very
different from those used today; in these chorale preludes, the hand physically shifts
Approach, by Sandra Soderland. Richie and Stauffer’s method book, on the other hand,
gives more specific information on hand shifting, “ordinary touch,” and articulation of
51
Richie, George and George Stauffer, Organ Technique: Modern and Early
(Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1992), 172.
52
Richie & Stauffer, 172-255.
47
which they state affects all notes and rests including repeated and adjacent notes. They
further add that meter is the determining factor in articulation, both of individual notes
and of the entire work. In the case of hymns (or chorales), the text dictates the strong
late-Baroque music uses an articulation that is aligned vertically, rather than the
horizontal orientation of later music. This vertical alignment is predicated upon the
theory that all notes and rests are equal in terms of articulation.53
as repeated notes, adjacent notes, convergent voices, and melodic notes is very
important in organ music. Factors affecting the amount of separation between notes are
tempo, acoustics, registration, and context. In faster tempi, more space is needed
between notes; also, in resonant rooms the separation needs to be greater than in non-
resonant ones. Registrations which are clear and bright, as well as those using fast-
speaking pipes provide separation between notes. Context is another very important
aspect of articulation of notes; factors such as primary and secondary accents, heirarchy
of voice parts, rhythmic considerations, contour and phrasing of the melodic line,
consonance and dissonance, and converging parts also play an important role. Table 11
lists some of the various principles involved in determining articulation and offers to the
student specific musical examples; in each case, the first example shows the notation as
written and the second example illustrates how the passage is actually played.
53
Richie & Stauffer, 189.
48
Table 11
Principles Guiding the Articulation of Baroque Organ Music
I. Repeated Notes:
A. General Rule: All repeated notes, adjacent notes, and rests are to be
played with an articulated legato style.54
2. Rest units between repeated notes often (but not always) equal one-
half the value of the preceeding note.
Example 2. BWV 1120, Christ, der du bist der helle Tag, Mm. 1-2
54
Richie & Stauffer, 177-178.
49
3. Consideration is given for melodic lines; in these, the rest unit should
be shorter than those in accompanimental voices.
Example 3: BWV 1096, Christ, der du bist Tag und Licht, Mm. 38-39
Example 5: BWV 1096, Christ, der du bist Tag und Licht, Mm. 38-39
50
6. In ternary meters, the rest unit is usually equal to one-half the longer
note value.55
Example 6: BWV 1099, Aus tiefer Not schrei ich zu dir, Mm.23-24
B. Converging Parts:
7. If the two voices are of equal importance, the common tone is broken
in both voices.
Example 7: BWV 1120, Christ, der du bist der helle Tag, Mm. 1-2
9. In the case of a moving part converging with a stationary part, the moving
part is given precedence and the stationary part is broken.57
Example 9: BWV 1099, Aus tiefer Not, schrei ich zu dir, Mm. 23-24
Example 12: BWV 957, Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, Mm. 1-2
14. Octaves: Octave skips, particularly in the bass voice, are detached.
This is especially true at cadences.
Example 14: BWV 1099, Aus tiefer Not, schrei ich zu dir, Mm. 23-24
53
Example 15: BWV 957, Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, Mm. 4-5
Suspensions:
16. Suspensions which resolve immediately are played with an
articulated legato touch.
17. Suspensions which are interrupted by one note before resolving are
played by detaching both the suspended note and the note of interruption.
Accents:
20. Accents in hymn playing are dependent upon meter, stressed and
unstressed syllables, phrases, cadences, and formal elements.59 Although
the J. S. Bach chorale preludes under discussion are not hymns, they are
based on hymn tunes and the melody must be given special
considerations.
58
Davis, 50-51.
59
Richie & Stauffer, 189-195.
55
BWV 957, Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, and BWV 1093, Herzliebster Jesu,
was hast du verbrochen. Both of these works were chosen for representation in this study
because of a particular structural element or organ technique: BWV 957 is in the form of
a chorale fughetta followed by the chorale itself in a four-voice setting, offering excellent
teaching material on the articulation of figurations and the playing of chorales, with
suggestions for alternate voicings; the chorale prelude Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du
verbrochen, BWV 1093, is a melody chorale which offers a wide representation of the
articulation principles contained in Table 11. These two chorale preludes also differ greatly
in tempo; BWV 957 is a lively composition, with the “A” section containing rapid
passagework, while BWV 1093 is more somber and stately, affording the student an
Table 12, which is inserted before the musical scores, is a key to the articulation
markings included in the edited scores. The student should be aware that these are academic;
performance also includs artistic nuances which can only be managed successfully after the
The first of the two J. S. Bach chorale preludes to be examined is BWV 957, Machs
mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt. The work was originally classified as a keyboard fugue
until the discovery of The Neumeister Collection revealed another nine measures which
contained the chorale. It was then reclassified as a chorale fughetta and The Neumeister
60
Westrop, 2-3.
56
with the “A” section consisting of a chorale fughetta and the second part, “B,” written as a
melody chorale with the melody located in the soprano voice. A copy of the Urtext
Edition61 is included; the only difference in notation is the changing of stem directions for
notes has been included in the score. Numbers of the articulation principles stated earlier
Score I.B. is a variant of Score I.A. In this edited version of the chorale, the bass
voice is played by the pedals with the soprano, alto, and tenor voices played by the hands
on a single manual. The following pedal markings have been inserted as a guide:
The student should note that the pedal is marked for toes only; it is doubtful that at this
time organ pedalboards facilitated the use of the heel. In addition to this, the pedal notes
are played with the same articulated legato touch used in the manuals, so that any
techniques used to connect pedal notes, such as use of the heel, substitutions, and
This chorale offers several possibilities for variety using different voice placements.
A common practice on organs with a variety of pedal ranks is to play the melody in the
pedals using an 8', 4', or 2' stop with a softer accompaniment played in the manuals. Score
61
Wolff, Organ Chorales, 64-65.
57
Table 12.
Key to Articulation Markings in Scores
10 Conjunct/Disjunct Motion
11 Chords
12 Figurations
13 Pick-up Notes
14 Octaves
15 Syncopated Notes
Score I.A.
Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt
BWV 957
Ed. Ann E. Jones J. S. Bach
61
Score I.B.
Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt
BWV 957
Score I.C.
Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt
BWV 957
Example 19: BWV 957, Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, Mm. 1-2
Example 20: BWV 957, Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt, Mm. 13-15
The chorale prelude Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen, is the only organ
setting J. S. Bach wrote of this beautiful Passion chorale. It is ideal for the beginning
organist because it is in the form of a CF melody chorale, with the melody clearly audible
in the soprano voice. Also, this composition requires a minimum of sharing between the
hands and is played entirely on the manuals. Scores included are as follows:
Score II. is a rewriting of the Urtext Edition. The markings are reproduced as
possible to the manuscript. Score II.A. is an edited version of the Urtext Edition with
suggestions for modern fingeringn; articulations have been written into the score and the
number of the articulation principle is inserted at the point of editing. Stem direction is
not necessarily an indication of voicing, but a suggestion for hand sharing of inner voices.
Score II.B. is a revoicing of BWV 1093, putting the cantus firmus melody in the pedals
and
accompanying voices in the manuals. This score has also been edited with regard to
61
Wolff, Organ Chorales, 10-11.
65
C. Cadences:
a. Mm. 7: HC
b. Mm. 17: IAC
c. Mm. 29: HC
d. Mm. 36: PC
D. Harmony:
a. Mm. 23-26: Retrograde. See Example 21.
B= g d F g6 g+6 F6/5 d g B=
Example 21. BWV 1093, Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen, Mm. 23-26
g6 A C6 G B=6 F d
Example 22: BWV 1093, Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen, Mm. 32-34
66
Score II.
Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen
BWV 1093
J. S. Bach
67
68
Score II.A.
Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen
BWV 1093
Ed. Ann E. Jones J. S. Bach
69
70
Score II.B.
Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen
BWV 1093
Ed. Ann E. Jones J. S. Bach
71
72
Christoph Wolff and Hans-Joachim Schultz, as well as Yale librarian Harold E. Samuel proved to
be one of the most significant discoveries of the twentieth century. The compendium was
compiled by Johann Gottfried Neumeister sometime after 1790, and at his death, was passed to
Johann C. Kittle, a favorite pupil of Johann Sebastian Bach. Lowell Mason, a Yale University
professor, purchased Kittle’s collection of manuscripts, and bequeathed it that university in 1873.
From 1873 to 1985, The Neumeister Collection has remained uncatalogued among the archival
The contents of the collection include a total of eighty-two chorale preludes by several
German Baroque organists and composers including Johann Pachelbel, Daniel Erich, Friederich
W. Zachow, Johann Christoph Bach, Johann Michael Bach, and, most importantly, Johann
Sebastian Bach. The Neumeister Collection has provided the first known concordances for
and correcting authorship, it also augments the number of known chorale compositions for all of
the above composers, with the largest amount belonging to Johann Michael Bach (twenty-five
works) and Johann Sebastian Bach (thirty-three works). Because of the similarities between The
Neumeister Collection and the later collection of chorale preludes by J. S. Bach, the
Orgelbüchlein, Christoph Wolff has proposed that The Neumeister Collection provided the
prototype for the later collection, and that the Orgelbüchlein was a continuation of a systematic,
liturgical, functional anthology of service music for the active church organist.
73
The inclusion of three of the J. S. Bach chorale preludes also contained in virtually
identical settings of other collections is a rare occurrence. These three works are BWV 601, Herr
Christ, der einig Gottes Sohn; BWV 639, Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ; BWV 737, Vater
unser im Himmelreich. The chorale preludes Herr Christ, der einig Gottes Sohn and Ich ruf zu
dir, Herr Jesu Christ and both contained in The Neumeister Collection and the Orgelbüchlein;
Vater unser im Himmelreich can also be found in the Miscellaneous works of J. S. Bach. The
inclusion of these three chorale preludes in such an early collection of Baroque service music has
changed the way in which musicologists date the works of J. S. Bach, resetting the parameters of
It has been the purpose of this study to examine the thirty-eight J. S. Bach chorale
accessible service music. With regard to their usefulness to church organists, they offer a wide
variety of liturgical classifications, and are short and sectional so that they fit easily into any time
requirements for music during the Liturgy. In addition to this, the melody is almost always
recognizable; in most of these works, the chorale tune can be found in the soprano voice.
These works are also excellent teaching pieces. They are accessible to all levels of
playing, and fit even the most modest organ specifications. Most use only one manual, and little
or no pedaling is required. This study has also presented an outline of forms found in the J. S.
Bach chorale preludes in The Neumeister Collection and has classified them accordingly: standard
forms; composite forms; evolving forms. A variety of contrapuntal techniques and harmonies also
harmonizations; in this study the chorale contained in Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen,
BWV 1093 has been arranged with the chorale in the soprano voice, with the bass line played on
the pedals, and again with the melody in the pedals as a cantus firmus with the three
accompanying voices on the manuals. Another such voicing could include the soprano voice on a
solo manual, alto and tenor voices on an accompanimental manual, and the bass line in the pedals.
After practice, the student may become proficient enough to attempt this at sight.
It is hoped that this monograph, along with the various tables and scores presented along
with it will provide a starting point for the inclusion of the J. S. Bach chorale preludes in The
77
78
Source: Wolff, The Neumeister Collection of Chorale Preludes from the Bach Circle, 15.
Appendix B
Autograph Index of The Neumeister Collection
80
81
Source: Wolff, The Neumeister Collection of Chorale Preludes from the Bach Circle,
12-14.
Appendix C
Source: Wolff, The Neumeister Collection of Chorale Preludes from the Bach Circle, 12-14.
83
Appendix D
Source: Wolff, The Neumeister Collection of Chorale Preludes from the Bach Circle,
12-14.
84
Appendix E
Note: Abbreviations used for cadences can be found in the preface material, page v.
85
Appendix F
86
87
1097 Ehre sie dir, Christe, der du leidest Not Composite Form:
A: Chorale Fughetta
B: Chorale Canon
1106 Gott ist mein Heil, mein Hilf und Trost (CF Chorale)
1092 Herr Gott, nun schleuss den Himmel auf (Melody Chorale)
639 Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ Ornamented Melody Chor.
957 Machs mit mir, Gott, nach deiner Güt Composite Form:
A: Chorale Fughetta
B: Melody Chorale
Note: Parentheses indicates that only elements of a particular form are present; the form
itself is not used consistently.
Vita
Ann Earl Jones received a Bachelor of Arts degree in organ performance from
McNeese State University, where she held the Brewer Organ Scholarship and was a
member of Alpha Psi Omega. She earned a Master of Music degree from Northwestern
State University and a Doctor of Musical Arts degree in organ performance from
assistantship and was awarded the Hatton Organ Scholarship, as well as joining the society
89