Josef Gabriel Rheinberger: Mass in E flat - Sheet music | Carus-Verlag

Josef Gabriel Rheinberger Mass in E flat

Version of 1858/59 with an appendix for the first version 1856 (Sanctus, Benedictus, Agnus Dei) 1856-1859

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Rheinberger’s first mass setting for choir a cappella, the Mass in E flat major JWV 57, exists in two different versions: the first version of 1856 and the revised version of 1858/59. The present edition which is taken from the supplementary volume 4 of the Rheinberger Complete Works offers the revised version of the mass which Rheinberger created for the Theatiner Court Chapel in Munich. The short mass (the Gloria and Credo do not contain the entire liturgical text) shows the young composer with a genre that he cultivated intensively from the famous Cantus Missae op. 109 to his last opus, the Mass op. 193.

The Benedictus and the Agnus Dei from the early version – both completely different pieces from those in the revised version – are available in a separate edition (Carus 50.278/90).

Separate edition from: Supplementary Volume 4 of the Rheinberger Complete Works (Sacred choral works without opus numbers, Carus 50.300)

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Score, separate edition from complete edition Carus 50.277/50, ISMN 979-0-007-33819-0 16 pages, DIN A4, without cover Minimum order quantity: 20 copies
available
from 20 copies 6,95 € / copy
from 40 copies 6,26 € / copy
from 60 copies 5,56 € / copy
Score digital (download), pdf file, separate edition from complete edition Carus 50.277/50-010-000, ISMN 979-0-007-33820-6 16 pages, DIN A4 Minimum order quantity: 20 copies
available
from 20 copies 6,30 € / copy
from 30 copies 5,67 € / copy
from 50 copies 5,04 € / copy
from 100 copies 4,73 € / copy
Additional product information
  • During the second half of the 19th century Rheinberger, who was born in 1839 in Vaduz (Liechtenstein), was a major figure of European stature. In demand as a teacher of composition and esteemed as a composer, this professor at the Munich Conservatoire and Bavarian Court Kapellmeister made his mark on a whole generation of musicians. The fact that many of his compositions were no longer performed after his death in 1901, despite their high musical qualities, was largely a result of external circumstances. The change of aesthetic orientation which began about the turn of the century led to a radical move away from the conservative-classical ideals to which Rheinberger – like Brahms – had felt himself committed. It was also a fact that Rheinberger never publicized his own works vigorously. The Josef-Rheinberger-Archiv and Carus published a complete edition of works by Josef Gabriel Rheinberger for the first time. The edition, concluded in 2009, has contributed significantly to the fact that the music of this composition teacher and Bavarian Court Kapellmeister from Munich can once again be heard around the world today. Personal details

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