Herzlich tut mich erfreuen Op.122 No.4 -
Johannes Brahms
Requiem Op.45: "How Lovely is Thy Dwelling Place" -
Johannes Brahms
Locus Iste - Anton Bruckner
Nachspiel - Anton Bruckner
Hymns: #569 Russia, #394 Wilderness,
#594 Cwm Rhondda
The music for this week comes from the pens of two German
Romantic “B’s,” Brahms and Bruckner.
The German Requiem
Op. 45 by Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) has enjoyed immense popularity and the
fourth movement How Lovely is Thy
Dwelling Place is a piece that can be found in the repertoire of most
college, community and large church choirs. The Brahms Requiem is a piece that was at the time groundbreaking, and looking
at the literature which has been written since, trend-setting. This work draws
on the text of the Lutheran Bible rather than the Latin Mass for the Dead and
is written to comfort the living rather than to pray for those who have died.
Indeed, this piece has paved the way for Requiems by composers like Britten,
Hindemith, Rutter, Chilcott, and Leavitt that have combined the Latin texts
with other Biblical texts or poetry. The German
Requiem was premiered at Bremen Cathedral on Good Friday 1868 and was an
enormous success which marked a turning point in Brahms’s career. Brahms added
the fifth movement in memory of his mother and the piece received its first
complete performance in 1869. As with his first symphony, Brahms was very
deliberate about the composition of the Requiem. The piece makes use of
thematic material that he composed as early as 1854. The fourth movement, How Lovely is Thy Dwelling Place is a setting of Psalm 84: 1,2,4
which opens with a tranquil duet between the clarinet and flute before the
choir enters on a first inversion tonic chord which I have always found
interesting. The movement grows and becomes more and more imitative first
featuring a the tenors answered by the basses and then the women before
returning to the homophonic texture of the opening. After an expanded version
of the opening theme, the piece breaks into an active fugal section on the text
“They praise Thy name evermore” (verse 4 of the Psalm text) before drawing to a
close with echoes of the opening material.
The prelude is also from the hand
of Brahms. It is the choral prelude Herzlich
tut mich erfreuen (I Am Deeply
Gladdened) No. 4 from Brahms’s only posthumously published work, the Op.
122 Eleven Chorale Preludes. These chorales are regarded by most organists as
Brahms’s final commentary on life and are written with a sense of finality, an
interesting commentary on life for a man that was not known to be religious. The
text of this chorale (the last written of the first set of seven) reads:
My heart rejoices in the wonderful
summertime:
God will make everything beautifully, eternally new.
The heavens and earth will be created anew,
all creatures will become wondrously beautiful and clear.
The piece is very pianistic with arpeggios throughout
supporting the chorale tune in the soprano. The piece gives no specific
registration but has dynamics that suggest manual changes with the same kinds
of stops on each. The setting of this chorale is filled with quiet joy and calm
and peaceful energy.
The communion anthem is Locus
Iste by Anton Bruckner(1824-1896). Bruckner’s life is not really reflected
in his work, and his work is not reflective of his life. Bruckner was a devout
Catholic that received much of his early training at St. Florian’s monastery in
Austria. It was here that his love for the organ and for music was cultivated.
He led a quiet life and enjoyed great success as an organist and composer. His
symphonic works are written on a grand scale while his sacred music has a
vulnerable innocence to it that makes it instantly accessible and endearing. Written
for the dedication of the votive chapel for the cathedral of Linz, this gradual
motet is designed for the dedication of a church building. The piece is in ABA
form and despite the tradition of church music being more antiquated sounding
than its secular counterparts, the harmonies are purely Romantic. The piece is
simple and beautiful with rich full bodied harmonies in the A section and
haunting imitative writing in the B section.
The postlude, Nachspiel,
was written between 1845 and 1856 while Bruckner was organist at the
Augustinian Abbey. The piece begins on full organ and then breaks into a fugue
before the return of the full organ section. The organ that Bruckner played was
the second largest in Austria and despite his limited number of compositions
for the instrument; he was renowned throughout the world for his improvisations
at the organ. This piece has an improvisatory feel to it. The counterpoint is
simple and clean throughout and is gestural in nature – much like an
improvisation. A simple but beautiful
end to the service.