Bach composed this cantata in
Leipzig between 1726 and 1727 for an unknown occasion. The text is drawn from the work of
Christian Friedrich Hunold.[1] Hunold and Bach are assumed to have met,[2] but the librettist died in 1721, which is well before the cantata appears to have been composed.
Recitative: Schwer ist es zwar, viel Eitles zu besitzen
Aria: Meine Seele sei vergnügt
Recitative: Ein edler Mensch ist Perlenmuscheln gleich
Aria: Himmlische Vergnügsamkeit
Music
The opening
recitative is harmonically active but melodically fragmented because of the unusual choice to set balanced couplets in recitative. The first
aria is characterized by a "restless feeling of effort" beginning immediately after the short instrumental
ritornello, and is the only one in
da capo form. The second recitative is the only one to be
accompagnato, with the strings supporting a harmony that "begins to slide around like quicksand". The second aria has a flowing ritornello theme provided by continuo and obbligato violin. The third recitative is
secco with "two bursts of operatic virtuosity". The third aria is in
ternary form and minor mode. The fourth recitative includes an
arioso passage ending on an "exceedingly odd" cadence. The final movement is the only one to include all instrumental parts, with a dance-like opening theme and an ABAB structure.[2]