"Seid ihr nun mit Christo auferstanden" (aria for bass)
"Soll euch Christi Himmelfahrt" (aria for soprano)
"Zeuch Jesu uns zeuch uns nach dir" (chorale)
The cantata is in D major.[7][8] Around the middle of the 18th century, Christian Gotthilf Sensenschmidt made a copy of the cantata, consisting of a score and performance parts.[7][11] In that copy, the cantata is scored for SATB soloists and chorus, strings (two violin parts, one viola part and one cello part), two clarinos, timpani and continuo (figured part for organ, bassoon, and the cello part).[7] A version of the cantata with a somewhat different scoring (including two additional oboes) was performed in 1725 in Frankfurt am Main.[8] Sensenschmidt's copy of the cantata came in the possession of Carl Ferdinand Becker, and was later added to the collection of the Leipzig City Library.[7][10][12] A digital facsimile of the Becker manuscript was made available on the SLUB Dresden website.[10]
TWV 1:1344, for Easter
Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied, TWV 1:1344, is a church cantata for Easter by Georg Philipp Telemann.[1] It was composed on a text by "Petiscus" (i.e. Martin Friedrich Pitiscus, 1722-1794[13]), and performed in Hamburg in 1761.[6][14] The cantata, in D major, is scored for SATB soloists and chorus, strings (two violin parts, and parts for viola and cello), two flutes, two oboes, two trumpets, timpani and organ (continuo).[14]
Sonata (instrumental introduction) and Chorus "Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied" (12 8)
"Der Herr lässet sein Heil verkündigen" (3 4; concertato violin, tenor and continuo)
"Er gedenket an seine Güte" (; soprano and continuo)
"Jauchzet dem Herren, alle Welt" (common time; horn, bass and continuo)
"Lobet den Herrn mit Harfen" (common time; harp, alto and continuo)
Chorus (common time):
"Mit Trommeten und Posaunen" (soprano, SATB, horns, trombones and continuo)
"Das Meer Brause" (SATB, horns, violins and continuo)
Adagio: "Denn er kömmt, das Erdreich zu richten" (same performers)
Allegro: "Alleluja" (same performers)
The cantata is in B-flat major, and is scored for SATB soloists and chorus, first and second violins, two horns, harp (replacing first violins in the 5th movement), two trombones (replacing violins in the first section of the final chorus) and continuo (violone and figured organ part).[15][16][17][18]Carus published the cantata in 2016, edited by Klaus Hofmann, with a singable English translation (Sing to the Lord a new song) by Earl Rosenbaum.[16] Digital facsimiles of the 18th-century manuscripts of the cantata are available at the SLUB Dresden and IMSLP websites.[17][18]