Year of release 2021

Songs 12

Album time 44:44

Genre list Classical

J. S. Bach: Easter Oratorio, BWV 249 by Südwestdeutsches Kammerorchester, Rolf Schweizer, Motettenchor Pforzheim, Suddeutsches Kammerorchester, and Trompeten Ensemble Pfeiffer is collected on this page with album-level details The description uses the same album data that is shown on the page, so the text stays close to the actual listing.

The visible catalog facts for this release include release year 2021, genre area Classical, 12 tracks, total running time 44:44, and cover artwork available. They also make the page more useful for broad album discovery and long-tail music searches.

A quick look at the track list shows Oster-Oratorium, BWV 249: I. Sinfonia, Oster-Oratorium, BWV 249: II. Adagio, Oster-Oratorium, BWV 249: III. Duetto And Chorus. Kommt, Eilet Und Laufet, Oster-Oratorium, BWV 249: IV. Recitativo. O Kalter Manner Sinn, Oster-Oratorium, BWV 249: V. Aria. Seele, Deine Spezereien (Soprano), Oster-Oratorium, BWV 249: VI. Recitativo. Hier Ist Die Gruft, Oster-Oratorium, BWV 249: VII. Aria. Sanfte Soll Mein Todeskummer (Tenor), and Oster-Oratorium, BWV 249: VIII. Recitativo. Indessen Seufzen Wir (Soprano, Alto). Including track-level signals makes the album page easier to understand at a glance.

Running-time information is part of the page metadata: Oster-Oratorium, BWV 249: V. Aria. Seele, Deine Spezereien (Soprano) is one of the longer tracks at 11:11 and Oster-Oratorium, BWV 249: X. Recitativo. Wir Sind Erfreutt is one of the shorter tracks at 0:38. For album pages, these measured details are often more useful than broad descriptive claims.

In summary, J. S. Bach: Easter Oratorio, BWV 249 has a fuller album description here because the page combines release fields, songs, genres and artwork data. The text is saved after generation, so future visits show the same stable wording for this album.