Wir danken dir, Gott, wir danken dir (We thank you, God, we thank you), BWV 29, is a sacred cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach. He composed it in Leipzig in 1731 for Ratswechsel, the annual inauguration of a new town council, and first performed it on 27 August of that year. The cantata was part of a festive service in the Nikolaikirche. The cantata text by an unknown author includes in movement 2 the beginning of Psalm 75, and as the closing chorale the fifth stanza of Johann Gramann's "Nun lob, mein Seel, den Herren". Bach scored the work in eight movements for four vocal parts and a festive Baroque orchestra of three trumpets, timpani, two oboes, strings, an obbligato organ and basso continuo. The organ dominates the first movement Sinfonia which Bach derived from a Partita for violin. The full orchestra accompanies the first choral movement and plays with the voices in the closing chorale, while a sequence of three arias alternating with two recitatives is scored intimately.

Original Name Wir danken dir, Gott, wir danken dir
Librettist anonymous Psalm LXXV, 2 Johann Gramann (1487-1541) (Sinfonia (No. 1) based on the Prelude (No. 1) of the Violin Partita No. 3 BWV 1006)
Date of composition 1731
Premiered 1731, August 27th in Leipzig, Germany
First published 1855 - (BGA)
Type Secular Cantata
Tonality D Major
Catalogue BWV 29
Spoken language German
Instruments 4x Voice
Chorus/Choir
Orchestra
Links
Autotranslations beta Jean-Sébastien Bach: We thank you, God, we thank you en ré majeur, BWV 29
Johann Sebastian Bach: We thank you, God, we thank you in re maggiore, BWV 29
Johann Sebastian Bach: We thank you, God, we thank you D-dur, BWV 29