The so-called Peasant Cantata, "Mer hahn en neue Oberkeet," BWV 212, of Bach is a bit less often performed that his other major comic secular piece, the Coffee Cantata, BWV 211. It's unlike anything else Bach ever wrote, with a text in Saxon dialect by Bach's frequent collaborator Picander poking fun at the region's new governor and painting various satirical genre scenes in the form of a dialogue commentary between two peasants. Bach responded with a unique tableau of little scenes that, with the exception of the soprano ...
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The so-called Peasant Cantata, "Mer hahn en neue Oberkeet," BWV 212, of Bach is a bit less often performed that his other major comic secular piece, the Coffee Cantata, BWV 211. It's unlike anything else Bach ever wrote, with a text in Saxon dialect by Bach's frequent collaborator Picander poking fun at the region's new governor and painting various satirical genre scenes in the form of a dialogue commentary between two peasants. Bach responded with a unique tableau of little scenes that, with the exception of the soprano aria "Kleine-Zoscher müsse," consists of little bursts of music that put the emphasis on the text rather than conventional aria forms. The work is a unique product of Bach's old age, one with broad, and even raunchy, comic components that you might not think suited to the super-smooth talents of the Bach Collegium Japan and its conductor, Masaaki Suzuki, who are approaching the end of their magisterial Bach cantata cycle. But Suzuki strikes the right balance here, leaving the comedy...
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