The St Mark Passion—A completion of Bach's lost Passion setting (IV)

in #classical-music6 years ago (edited)

Composing a recitative—An explanation of the procedure using an example from the St Mark Passion

Part 2

This is the continuation of my explanation of the process of recitative composition, appendix to my articles about the completion of Bach's Mark Passion, Part 1 and Part 2.

3. Harmony

Before determining the harmonic structure of the recitative, I must determine in which key the preceding piece (in our case the preceding section of the recitative) ends and in which key the next piece begins. (It was customary not to compose the various movements of a (passion) cantata in the order they should be performed. Arias, chorales, and choirs were often fixed before the connecting recitatives were written.) In our case the preceding section of the recitative ends with a complete cadence in c# minor (“The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.“). The following aria is composed in b minor (the main key of the St Mark Passion). That means that the recitative needs to modulate from c# minor to b minor.
I also need to analyse the punctuation marks, since every one of them asks for its own harmonic treatment. i.e. a period requires cadence, either perfect or imperfect, depending on whether it is the end of a sentence or a whole section. A colon and some commas require a harmony that gives the listener the expectation that something else will follow (e.g. a dominant chord with or without 7th in 1st or 3rd inversion). A question mark can be expressed by a half-cadence (see bar 9 in my recitative). Depending on the number of cadences to be made, I have to make more or less ‘detours’ before ‘landing’ on the final cadence of the recitative. Besides, emphases require stronger harmonies than other syllables.
This is what I came up with in 2010:

16.3.1 (Text+Tact+Harmonie).jpg
16.3.2 (Text+Tact+Harmonie).jpg16.3.3 (Text+Tact+Harmonie).jpg

4. Melody

The next step is the composition of the melody. Care must be taken to ensure that the syllables are placed on the corresponding high or low notes, depending on the intensity of their emphasis. (An emphasis can be achieved by a relatively high as well as low note.)
Writers such as Scheibe and Marpurg also emphasize the importance of composing the recitative tune as much as possible according to the natural language melody. (It must be imagined that the words are declaimed in their respective affect.)
Incidentally, Bach was criticized by his contemporaries and later generations for failing to abide by it. An example of this is Bach's composition of the description of the tearing curtain (No. 63a) in the St. Matthew Passion. He lets the melody exhaust the entire vocal range of the tenor to portray the tearing of the curtain from top to bottom, the quivering earth, the rocks and the opening graves. This type of "painting" composition is contemptuously called “Pickelhering” (i.e. salted herring, the name of a popular coarse-comic figure of German-speaking comedy) in contemporary sources.
Incidentally, in order to make my baroque recitatives sound 'Bachisch’, it was very important for me to use the same compositional techniques as Bach in comparable passages in the text from the Gospel of Mark, and thus basically make the same "mistakes" as Bach did (at least in the eyes of his contemporaries).
16.4.1 (Text+Tact+Harmonie+Melodey).jpg16.4.2 (Text+Tact+Harmonie+Melodey).jpg
16.4.3 (Text+Tact+Harmonie+Melodey).jpg

5. Accompaniment of the words of Jesus

In principle, the recitative is finished. I had decided not to compose the words of Jesus as secco recitative, but to accompany them with string chords, as Bach did in his St Matthew Passion. Therefore I had one last step ahead of me: the composition of this accompaniment—in a certain way the cherry on the cake. (Note my “Pickelhering” in the accompaniment after the words “Stehet auf”.)
Here the score of the whole recitative:
16.5.1 (Text+Tact+Harmonie+Melodey+Geygen).jpg16.5.2 (Text+Tact+Harmonie+Melodey+Geygen).jpg16.5.3 (Text+Tact+Harmonie+Melodey+Geygen).jpg16.5.4 (Text+Tact+Harmonie+Melodey+Geygen).jpg16.5.5 (Text+Tact+Harmonie+Melodey+Geygen).jpg16.5.6 (Text+Tact+Harmonie+Melodey+Geygen).jpg16.5.7 (Text+Tact+Harmonie+Melodey+Geygen).jpg

I hope you enjoy listening to the result:

Jörn Boysen, revised in March 2018

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This, like all the earlier posts relating to this project, are true musicology - such a refreshing change from the (let's be honest) torrents of dross earning high rewards on Steemit. Your 'Pickelhering' point was new to me, although it's clear that blatant word-painting was shunned by earlier composers most of the time. Though I'm far from being an expert, the performance sounded utterly convincing to me. You must at times really feel as though you are walking in JSB's footsteps. Thanks, Jörn.

Hi gussiefinknottle,
Thanks for your messages.
I am happy, the recitatives turned out so well. And the best is, that they really work, also when it is not me performing, but other groups and directors playing the piece. When I first heard the passion (as part of the audience) performed by others, I was so happy, because the fact that it worked so well, means the accolade for a (Baroque) composer :-)
The ability to write real Baroque music, which I have taught myself from 18th cent. treatises during the last decades, opened up a whole world to me. It has happened that during a performance of a work by Bach, I laugh out loud (and gain incomprehensible glances) because I understood a 'Bachish' joke (a deliberate mistake in harmony for ex.) in the composition that nobody else noticed...
J:B:

Hi Jörn ... Yep, it must be very satisfying to HEAR that all your work has been worthwhile. Music can put us into the mind (fingers etc) of a person who lived so long ago in a way few other things can (maybe mathematicians know this feeling - I don't know). Though I'm not a musician I have even felt this myself in a tiny way while playing the recorder (very badly). I've also had a long-standing fantasy of a sort of social experiment in which a highly-talented musician refuses (or is denied) exposure to anything later than (say) Mozart and sets out to write piano concertos in that style. Of course the problem is the missing element - genius - but the mechanics would be perfectly possible to reproduce.

Keep doing what you are doing. Amazing to thing how things have changed in the past few decades. What would have been thought eccentric 100 years ago is now part of everyday practice and the whole history of music has been opened up to anyone who wants to explore it.

I will quickly reply for Jörn as I think he is busy, if he gets around to it, I guess he will write properly! I think he would be honoured that you thought the performance was convincing, he did put a lot of work into the researching of the style.

I myself have always enjoyed playing his compositions, in whichever style the are emulating.

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