Bach's Dawn Shines: Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern Premieres
Bach wrote his cantata "Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern" for a calendar collision that happened once in a lifetime. When the Feast of the Annunciation fell on Palm Sunday in 1725, the Lutheran church needed music that could honor both the angel Gabriel's visit to Mary and Christ's entry into Jerusalem. Bach composed BWV 1 for this astronomical rarity—a double feast day that wouldn't recur for decades. He wove the "morning star" hymn through elaborate choruses and paired it with trumpet fanfares that blazed through Leipzig's Nikolaikirche. The congregation heard something they'd never experience again in their lifetimes: liturgical lightning striking twice. Sometimes genius isn't about making the ordinary extraordinary—it's about recognizing when the calendar itself demands the impossible.
March 25, 1725
301 years ago
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