This music surely came from the heavens...it´s not from Earth... and may be J.S.Bach himself was not quite human but the Word incarnate in form of music.
An awesome work by an awesome composer, especially how the familiar choral, "Now Thank We All Our God (familiar to mainline church Protestants at least)," is woven into all the complicated and interwoven musical expressions of joy, like the trumpets, the drums and the bass/cello parts that move like a dance.If Bach wasn't having a good day when he started composing this, it must have become one. Thanks.
@KisaVal The tune is attributed to Johann Crüger. (If you don't have umlauts on your keyboard, spell it "Crueger'.) But the original (German) text is by Martin Rinckart.
@barromoussa Except the tune of "Now thank we all our God" ("Nun danket alle Gott") is not the same as the tune of the chorale "Gelobet sei der Herr, mein Gott" ("Praised be the Lord, my God") used in this opening chorus of BWV 129. Both chorale tunes are attributed to Johann Crueger, which may account for the similarity.
Compare with BWV 192 here: /watch?v=xO7FfIE9CAY&feature=related
I heard it for the first time...Well,It's JSB...Music that replaced words
Ekel90 10 months ago
One word Magnificient
ShermanM36 11 months ago
you've got to year the suzuki (bach collegium japan) version of this
theonion7 1 year ago
wowowow richter brillante!!!! majestuosa y gloriosa version!!
javierpe9103 2 years ago
This music surely came from the heavens...it´s not from Earth... and may be J.S.Bach himself was not quite human but the Word incarnate in form of music.
harpsinth 2 years ago
This music is the result of a genius master. If we could see the Heaven, this music would be nothing for all of us.
sosamuera 2 years ago
Very clever...I really can´t imagine such a place where Bach´s music became meaningless....I really can´t !
I think what we call "genius masters" just came from God. This is one of many ways He choose to operate in our world.
harpsinth 2 years ago 2
Another gem from the master, J.S. Bach! Thank you for posting this!
ceciliagaerlan 2 years ago
An awesome work by an awesome composer, especially how the familiar choral, "Now Thank We All Our God (familiar to mainline church Protestants at least)," is woven into all the complicated and interwoven musical expressions of joy, like the trumpets, the drums and the bass/cello parts that move like a dance.If Bach wasn't having a good day when he started composing this, it must have become one. Thanks.
barromoussa 2 years ago
@barromoussa
According to my Episcopal hymnal "Now thank we all our God" is by is by Johann Cruger.
KisaVal 11 months ago
@KisaVal The tune is attributed to Johann Crüger. (If you don't have umlauts on your keyboard, spell it "Crueger'.) But the original (German) text is by Martin Rinckart.
wcbroccoli 8 months ago
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wcbroccoli 8 months ago
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@barromoussa Except the tune of "Now thank we all our God" ("Nun danket alle Gott") is not the same as the tune of the chorale "Gelobet sei der Herr, mein Gott" ("Praised be the Lord, my God") used in this opening chorus of BWV 129. Both chorale tunes are attributed to Johann Crueger, which may account for the similarity.
Compare with BWV 192 here: /watch?v=xO7FfIE9CAY&feature=related
wcbroccoli 8 months ago
Excelente.
anzdf 3 years ago
¡Brillante.!
debartzen 3 years ago
thank you so much for all the masterpices you are posting here...
arthvr34 3 years ago 2
you welcome
plutarco7890 3 years ago