In 1729, Bach took up the musical directorship of a
series of concerts in Leipzig known as the Collegium
Musicum, a generic term employed in Germany for
(generally) semiprofessional and often informal
concerts normally founded on student music making. Two
such organizations existed in Leipzig in Bach's day,
the one he became involved with having been founded by
Telemann in 1702. Such concerts generally involved the
performance of instrumental works (Bach's keyboard
concertos were intended for pe...(+)
In 1729, Bach took up the musical directorship of a
series of concerts in Leipzig known as the Collegium
Musicum, a generic term employed in Germany for
(generally) semiprofessional and often informal
concerts normally founded on student music making. Two
such organizations existed in Leipzig in Bach's day,
the one he became involved with having been founded by
Telemann in 1702. Such concerts generally involved the
performance of instrumental works (Bach's keyboard
concertos were intended for performance at the
Collegium Musicum) and small-scale secular vocal works.
For the occasional special concert, larger works were
sometimes given; it is into this category that Bach's
secular Cantata No. 201, ("Haste, haste, you whirling
winds" or "The Dispute between Phoebus and Pan") falls.
It was composed in the same year that Bach took up the
directorship, a time when he would obviously want
something new for the Collegium. The text, an
adaptation of an episode in Ovid's Metamorphosis, is by
Picander, the pseudonym of the poet Christian Friedrich
Henrici.
Bach enjoyed a fruitful period of collaboration with
Picander around this time, the partnership producing
not only the St. Matthew and St. Mark Passions but also
both sacred and secular cantatas. The designation of
the work as a dramma per musica is revealing, since
that was a rubric frequently applied to operas during
the eighteenth century. Indeed, in common with a number
of Bach's other secular cantatas, "Phoebus and Pan"
might be regarded as a miniature opera, the closest the
composer came to a genre he otherwise never explored.
The plot, probably rich in contemporary allusions,
involves a thinly veiled satire on poor music making
and singing. Phoebus and Pan each anger the other with
claims of vocal superiority. Their quarrel is
interrupted by Momus (soprano), who pokes fun at Pan.
Eventually Mercurius (alto) suggests a singing contest,
which is opened with a beautiful aria for Phoebus. Pan,
in contrast, makes a fool of himself thanks to Bach's
employment of stock clichés and popular, low style
that alludes to the simple galant music gaining
popularity at the time. The two judges who have
seconded the contestants (Tmolus for Phoebus, Midas for
Pan) both find in favor of their principals. Midas'
obviously absurd decision earns him a pair of asses'
ears (and a wonderful bray in the accompaniment!) to
join his champion's fools' cap. The work opens and
closes with large da capo choruses. Sharply
characterized and wittily inventive, "Phoebus and Pan"
reveals a side of Bach too little familiar to those who
know him only by his instrumental and sacred vocal
works.
Although the fourth aria: "Tmolus" (Phoebus, deine
Melodei hat die Anmut selbst) was originally written
for voice, oboe and continuo, I created this
arrangement for Brass Trio (Bb Trumpet, French Horn & F
Tuba).
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