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The Christmas Oratorio,
by Johann Sebastian Bach (1685 - 1750)
J. S. Bach assembled six
cantatas on the theme of Christmas and Epiphany in 1734 and called the work his
“Weihnachtsoratorium” or Christmas Oratorio. His success with the St. Matthew
Passion and St. John Passion was behind this idea, and it is evident that he was
in a hurry to put it all together. Just as Handel had borrowed from himself (and
others!) to construct the 3-hour-long Messiah in 21 days, so Bach borrowed
extensively from his own secular cantatas (honoring his patrons) to put sacred
words to his best choruses and arias to create this oratorio.
Bach’s Christmas Oratorio was never performed in its entirety during his
lifetime. He did perform each of the separate cantatas on appropriate Sundays of
Advent, Christmas and Epiphany. The first performance of the entire work took
place in 1857 - over 100 years after Bach’s death - in Berlin.
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