Vor deinen Thron tret’ ich
| Arranger | Bishop, Andrew |
|---|---|
| Composer | Bach, Johann Sebastian |
| Duration | 5 |
| Ensemble | Trumpet and Organ |
| Genre | Classical |
| Grade | 4 |
| Model Number | TSSP-BVDT |
| Category | Solo Trumpet, Trumpet and Organ |
The Great Eighteen Chorale Preludes, BWV 651–668, are a set of chorale preludes for organ prepared by Johann Sebastian Bach in Leipzig in his final decade (1740–1750), from earlier works composed in Weimar, where he was court organist. The works form an encyclopedic collection of large-scale chorale preludes, in a variety of styles harking back to the previous century, that Bach gradually perfected during his career. Together with the Orgelbüchlein, the Schübler Chorales, the third book of the Clavier-Übung and the Canonic Variations, they represent the summit of Bach’s sacred music for solo organ.
The first thirteen chorale preludes (BWV 651–663) were added by Bach himself between 1739 and 1742, supplemented by BWV 664 and 665 in 1746–7. In 1750 when Bach began to suffer from blindness before his death in July, BWV 666 and 667 were dictated to his student and son-in-law Johann Christoph Altnikol and copied posthumously into the manuscript. Only the first page of this last choral prelude BWV 668, the so-called “deathbed chorale” has survived, recorded by an unknown copyist. The piece was posthumously published in 1751 as an appendix to the Art of the Fugue, with the title “Wenn wir in höchsten Nöthen sein” (BWV 668a), instead of the original title “Vor deinen Thron tret ich hiermit” (“Before your throne I now appear”).
There have been various accounts of the circumstances surrounding the composition of this chorale. The biographical account from 1802 of Johann Nicolaus Forkel that Altnikol was copying the work at the composer’s deathbed has since been discounted: in the second half of the eighteenth century, it had become an apocryphal legend, encouraged by Bach’s heirs, Carl Philipp Emmanuel Bach and Wilhelm Friedmann Bach. Regardless of the authenticity of this actually being Bach’s final gift to the world, this beautiful chorale certainly puts a poignant coda on the life and music of perhaps the greatest composer who ever lived.
This arrangement for solo trumpet in C and organ features the trumpet taking the choral melody, and aims to provide a more contemplative offering for trumpet and organ than the usual heroic fare.








