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Brockes Passion (Telemann) : ウィキペディア英語版
Passions (Telemann)

Between 1716 and 1767, Georg Philipp Telemann wrote a series of ''Passions'', musical compositions reflecting on Christ's Passion – the physical, spiritual and mental suffering of Jesus from the hours prior to his trial through to his crucifixion. The works were written for performance in German churches in the days before Easter. A prolific composer, Telemann wrote over 40 ''Passions'' for the churches of Hamburg alone, of which 22 have survived according to the present state of research.〔Jason Benjamin Grant, (''The rise of lyricism and the decline of Biblical narration in the late liturgical Passions of Georg Philipp Telemann'' ), Doctoral Thesis, University of Pittsburgh, 2005. PDF file retrieved 17 February 2008.〕 He also wrote several Passion oratorios. Unlike the ''Passions'' intended for liturgical performance, they were not closely set to the literal text of the Gospels. His 1716 Passion oratorio ''Der für die Sünde der Welt gemarterte Jesus'' ("Jesus Who was martyred for the Sins of the World", TWV 5:1), used a poetic meditation on the passion story by Barthold Heinrich Brockes. Telemann himself wrote the text for his second Passion oratorio, ''Seliges Erwägen des bittern Leidens und Sterbens Jesu Christi'' ("Blessed Contemplation of the Bitter Suffering and Dying of Jesus Christ", TWV 5:2). The latter work, written in 1763 and first performed in that year at the Berlin court, was one of the most beloved and frequently performed ''Passions'' in eighteenth-century Germany, although today the work is much less known than his later ''Passions''.〔Jeanne Roberta Swack, (Georg Philipp Telemann, ''Seliges Erwägen des bittern Leidens und Sterbens Jesu Christi'' ) Review of the critical edition of the score by Ute Poetzsch (Kassel: Barenreiter, 2001), ''Notes: Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association'' Volume 59, Number 3, March 2003, pp. 755–758. Retrieved via subscription 17 February 2008.〕
In actuality, there were 6 total Passion Oratorios by Telemann (all of which were not used in the liturgy proper, but were still used in the church (in the lesser churches or during the period between Judica Sunday and Good Friday, when it was traditional to have virtually non-stop Passion performances in the churches )).
In Telemann's Passions, one sees many changes occurring and also many deviations from those that today have been deemed the "standard" and benchmark works of the genre (namely, those of Telemann's friend and father of his godson and successor Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Johann Sebastian Bach). In his dissertation ''"The Rise of Lyricism and the Decline of Biblical Narration in the Late Liturgical Passions of Georg Philipp Telemann"'' (University of Pittsburgh, 2005), Jason Benjamin Grant describes the three basic periods of Telemann's Passion composition as follows:
::
Stylistically, there are many differences between these works by Telemann and those of the "standard" model (the works of Bach), and in some ways they have much in common with Emanuel Bach's works (for a detailed look at these works, see The Passions of C.P.E. Bach).

One element was in context used. The Telemann Passions were (unlike his Leipzig associate Bach) ''not'' written for and used in the context of a separate Good Friday Vespers liturgical service, but rather in the regular church services for the five main churches in Hamburg for the Sundays of Lent (except for Oculi Sunday). In deference to Ulrich Leisinger, who states in the Passions Preface in the Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach Complete Works edition:
and quotes (he states) pages 656–657 of the 4th Vorrath (Volume) of Johann Mattheson's ''Plus Ultra, ein Stückwerk von neuer und mancherley Art.'' Hamburg never really adapted the bipartite division of Passion settings (Part 1 being before the Sermon and Part 2 after it). What ''had'' changed was that after 1736, the narration of the Last Supper and the Entombment were eliminated (although in some cases, even before 1736 the Last Supper was never used, i.e., the St Mark Passion now attributed to Friedrich Nicolaus Bruhns). These Hamburg Passions were whole entities performed in succession. Unlike those in Leipzig, where the division before and after the Sermon was retained. The other issue with Leising's statement is that he quotes from a volume by Mattheson that is now lost (according to the German WikiSource, the 4th Volume of the ''Plus Ultra, ein Stückwerk von neuer und mancherley Art'' is lost).
Another element that is different between Telemann's and Sebastian Bach's works is viewpoint. Telemann was not a "preacher" like Bach was, although he did have a theological background and education. Telemann's viewpoint was that of the Enlightenment, which placed less emphasis on Christ's divinity and more on his humanity (to the extent that in many arias in both Telemann's and Emanuel Bach's works, Christ is referred to as "Menschenfreund" ("Friend of Man")). They emphasize less Christ as the revelation of God's will for the world and revelation of prophecy and divine grace, less Christ the Word incarnate, less Christ the Lamb of God, and more Christ the man, the healer, the sufferer. In opposition to this is Bach the Fifth Evangelist, Bach the Mystic, Bach the Orthodox Lutheran. One way that this difference is evidenced is the way Telemann and Sebastian Bach approach the word of Scripture. Bach does not alter one iota of the scriptural word, he writes the words of
Scripture in red ink, and generally his whole attitude is that Scripture is supreme. In opposition to this is Telemann, who treats Scripture in his own manner. He does not hold it as sacred (as evidenced by two facts: in the St Matthew Passion of 1738, a whole Gospel verse is replaced by an aria,〔Schroeder, Felix. "Georg Philipp Telemann: Lukas-Passion 1744". CD Liner Notes to 1973 recording.〕 and in the 1744 St Luke Passion, he changes the order of Scripture verses (specifically Luke 22:43–44) in Movement 2).
Finally, Telemann employs a more lyric style than Bach does. While there are places in Bach's Passions where he ''does'' employ more flourishes in the recitatives, these are usually few and far between. Bach usually uses a word-and-music form where the music is made to fit the words. Telemann, however, fits the words to the music that he writes, to the extent that many parts of recitatives are either elongated or repeated verbatim.
The following is a list of these works:
==List of Telemann's Passion Oratorios==


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