Series Editor Foreword
Robin A. Leaver
Preface
Mark A. Peters and Reginald L. Sanders
Paragram for Professor Dr. Don O. Franklin
Ruth Tatlow
Part I: Bach’s Vocal Music in Theological Context
1. In Honor of God and the City: Strategies of Theological and Symbolic Communication in Bach’s Cantata Gott ist mein König (BWV 71)
Markus Rathey
2. Two “Johannine” Cantatas: Darzu ist erschienen der Sohn Gottes (BWV 40) and Sehet, welch eine Liebe (BWV 64)
Eric Chafe
3. Death to Life, Sorrow to Joy: Martin Luther’s Theology of the Cross and J. S. Bach’s Eastertide Cantata Ihr werdet weinen und heulen (BWV 103)
Mark A. Peters
4. Toward an Understanding of J. S. Bach’s Use of Red Ink in the Autograph Score of the Matthew Passion
Mary Greer
5. The Theological in Bach Research (2007)
Martin Petzoldt
Part II: Analytical Perspectives
6. Formal and Motivic Design in the Opening Chorus of J. S. Bach’s Magnificat
Reginald L. Sanders
7. The Tonally Open Ritornello in J. S. Bach’s Church Cantatas
Kayoung Lee
8. The Christian Believer and the Sleep of Jesus: “Mache dich, mein Herze, rein” from J. S. Bach’s Matthew Passion
Wye J. Allanbrook
Part III: Bach’s Self-Modeling: Parody as Compositional Impetus
9. Parody and Text Quality in the Vocal Works of J. S. Bach
Hans-Joachim Schulze
10. J. S. Bach’s Parodies of Vocal Music: Conservation or Intensification?
Robin A. Leaver
11. J. S. Bach’s Dresden Trip and His Earliest Serenatas for Köthen
Gregory Butler
12. Bach’s Second Thoughts on the Christmas Oratorio: The Compositional Revisions to “Bereite dich, Zion,” BWV 248/4
Steven Saunders
13. The Passions as a Source of Inspiration? A Hypothesis on the Origin and Musical Aim of Well-Tempered Clavier II
Yo Tomita
Part IV: The Reception of Bach’s Vocal Works
14. The Leipzig Audiences of J. S. Bach’s Matthew Passion to 1750
Tanya Kevorkian
15. The Vocal Music of the Bach Family in Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach: The Complete Works
Jason B. Grant
16. The Need for a New Music: J. S. Bach in Contemporary Context (1946)
William H. Scheide
17. Bach at the Boundaries of Music History: Preliminary Thoughts on the B-minor Mass and the Late Style Paradigm
Robert L. Marshall
About the Authors