Court chant religieux à quatre voix sur le texte de EG 275 (Evangelisches Gesangbuch, Livre de chants protestant, 7 strophes), mais avec la mélodie de EG 473 ou 474. Les parties soprano et alto ont été reconstituées par l’éditeur. Une belle alternative aux célèbres mouvements de choral pour l’office pour le dimanche Estomihi.
Édition séparée extraite du volume 19 de l’édition Schütz de Stuttgart (édition intégrale Carus 20.919)
Acheter
Informations complémentaires sur l'œuvre
-
Compositeur
Heinrich Schütz
| 1585-1672Heinrich Schütz is regarded as the first German musician of European stature. As a choirboy from 1599 at the court of Landgrave Moritz of Hessen-Kassel, he received a thorough education. In 1608 he began a law degree in Marburg, but broke this off in 1609 in order, with the support of the Landgrave, to study composition with Giovanni Gabrieli, organist at St Mark’s in Venice. In 1613 Schütz returned to Kassel, but two years later was enticed away by Elector Johann Georg I of Saxony to the Dresden court as “Organist und Director der Musica”, where he held the position of Hofkapellmeister (court Kapellmeister) from 1617 until his death. Schütz’s great cycles of vocal works marked the high point of his reputation in Germany and northern Europe. But these represent only part of Schütz’s output; individual works are represented in printed collections with works by other composers, others only survive in manuscript, and much has been lost. The Stuttgart Schütz Edition makes available Schütz’s complete oeuvre, and all works are also published in practical Urtext editions. Plus d'information sur la personne
-
Éditeur
Helmut Lauterwasser
-
Parolier/Librettiste
Adam Reissner