Bach Vespers: The 58th Season

Sundays at 5pm, October 2025-April 2026

October 26th
Anthony Trecek-King, conductor
BWV 192 "Nun danket alle Gott"
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November 9th
Morgan Mastrangelo, tenor
Austin Philemon, conductor
BWV 55 "Ich armer Mensch, ich Sündenknecht"
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November 23rd
Kearstin Piper Brown, soprano
Robby Meese, conductor
BWV 52 "Falsche Welt, dir trau ich nicht"
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December 14th
Shunske Sato, conductor
BWV 243 Magnificat
Generously supported by Robert Busch and Richard Dematteis in memory of their parents
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February 1st
Harry Bickett, conductor
BWV 92 "Ich hab in Gottes Herz und Sinn"
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February 15th
Robby Meese, conductor
BWV 127 "Herr Jesu Christ, wahr' Mensch und Gott"
In memory of Bonnie Eggers, given by her family
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March 8th
Christine Brandes, conductor
BWV 182 "Himmelsköning, sei willkommen"
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March 22nd
Austin Philemon, organ
Robby Meese, conductor
BWV  1052 Keyboard Concerto in d minor   
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April 3rd - 7pm
Austin Philemon, conductor
Heinrich Schütz: St. John Passion
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April 5th
Robby Meese, conductor
BWV 4 "Christ lag in Todesbanden"
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To sponsor a Bach Vespers service, contact Robby Meese at robby@holytrinitynyc.org

Watch

Explore recent Bach Vespers services.

For at least the last eighteen centuries, some formula for prayer at the end of the day has been part of the Christian tradition. While no one knows precisely what the earliest form of Vespers looked like or sounded like, certain themes have managed to endure, including confession, gratitude, and light. While Vespers never quite became a significant part of Lutheran piety, that it is still kept at all in the Lutheran tradition may be thanks to one church: the Thomaskirche in Leipzig.

In 1968, as Holy Trinity Lutheran Church marked its 100th anniversary, the church set out to celebrate its history and the rich tradition of music in the Lutheran Church. Drawing from the high level of music performance in the City of New York, a series named “Evenings with Johann S” was established in homage to the twenty-seven years Johann Sebastian Bach served as the Kantor of the Thomaskirche in Leipzig, where most of his cantatas were composed.

Though Bach’s cantatas were generally performed at the primary Sunday morning liturgy in Leipzig, our practice at Bach Vespers imagines what can happen when we juxtapose the ancient tradition of Vespers with the cantatas of the principal musician of the city that helped it endure. As a result, Bach Vespers is the first music series in the Western Hemisphere to present the cantatas of the great Lutheran composer Johann Sebastian Bach within a liturgical context. Since it is a service of worship, Bach Vespers is free and open to the public, with neither tickets nor reservations required.

The 75+ musicians (playing period instruments) who regularly contribute to Bach Vespers are some of the finest early musicians in the nation. Over fifty years, eight hundred worship services, thousands of candles, and two Grammy nominations later, having performed 158 of the 200 extant cantatas, Bach Vespers at Holy Trinity continues this series on many Sunday evenings from October to May.

Whether you identify as faith-filled or not so sure, Lutheran or Luther-who? you are welcome to participate in the singing, prayer, and ritual of Bach Vespers only to the extent you feel comfortable doing so. Welcome. There will always be a place for you here.

Candlelit Bach Vespers

Get in touch

Robby Meese
Director of Bach Vespers                       
robby@holytrinitynyc.org