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Sheet music $1.95

Original

Sobs and sighing, tears and crying. Johann Sebastian Bach. Voice sheet music. Choir sheet music. Piano and Keyboard sheet music. Recorder sheet music.

Translation

Sobs and sighing, tears and crying. Johann Sebastian Bach. Voice sheet music. Choir sheet music. Piano and Keyboard sheet music. Recorder sheet music.

Original

Sobs and sighing, tears and crying. Cantata for the 2nd Sunday after Epiphany. Composed by Johann Sebastian Bach. 1685-1750. Edited by Julia Doht. For SATB vocal soli, SATB choir, 2 recorders f1, oboe d'caccia, 2 violins, viola, basso continuo. Stuttgart Urtext Edition. German title. Meine Seufzer, meine Tranen. Epiphany. Choral score. Language. German. English. Composed 1726. BWV 13. 2 pages. Duration 21 minutes. Published by Carus Verlag. CA.3101305. ISBN M-007-10294-4. With Language. German. English. Epiphany. Bach's cantata BWV 13. from the third cycle of Leipzig cantatas. was first performed on the 2nd Sunday after Epiphany in 1726. This work is marked especially by its scoring, unusual in Bach's church music, in which the strings are joined by two recorders and an oboe da caccia. these wind instruments are used to convey the dominant affections of "sighing" and "pain" in the individual arias. In accordance with the intimate character of this cantata the four-part vocal ensemble is used only in the chorale at the end of the work. Score available separately - see item CA.3101300.

Translation

Sobs and sighing, tears and crying. Cantata for the 2nd Sunday after Epiphany. Composed by Johann Sebastian Bach. 1685-1750. Edited by Julia Doht. For SATB vocal alone, SATB choir, two recorders f1, oboe d'hunting, two violins, viola, continuo. Stuttgart Urtext Edition. German title. My sighs, my tears. Epiphany. Choral score. Language. German. English. Composed 1726. BWV 13. 2 pages. Duration 21 minutes. Published by Carus Verlag. CA.3101305. ISBN M-007-10294-4. With Language. German. English. Epiphany. Bach's cantata BWV 13. from the third cycle of Leipzig cantatas. was first performed on the 2nd Sunday after Epiphany in 1726. This work is marked especially by its scoring, unusual in Bach's church music, in which the strings are joined by two recorders and an oboe da caccia. these wind instruments are used to convey the dominant affections of "sighing" and "pain" in the individual arias. In accordance with the intimate character of this cantata the four-part vocal ensemble is used only in the chorale at the end of the work. Score available separately - see item CA.3101300.