Misplaced Pages

Lauda Sion (Mendelssohn)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Composition by Felix Mendelssohn
Lauda Sion
by Felix Mendelssohn
The composer in 1847, portrait by Wilhelm Hensel
CatalogueMWV A 24
Opus73
TextLauda Sion
LanguageLatin
Composed1845 (1845)–1846
Published1848 (1848)
Duration30 min.
Scoring
  • soloists
  • SATB choir
  • orchestra

Lauda Sion (Praise Zion), Op. 73, (MWV A 24) is an extended composition by Felix Mendelssohn. He set parts of Lauda Sion, a sequence in Latin for Corpus Christi in 1846. The piece in eight movements is scored for soloists, a four-part choir and orchestra.

History

Mendelssohn was ready to set music for different denominations. He received a commission for a setting of the Lauda Sion sequence from a Belgian church musician, to be performed at the church St. Martin in Liège in 1846, commemorating the feast's 600th anniversary. Mendelssohn began the work in 1845, at the same time as his oratorio Elijah, and completed it in 1846. It was published after his death, in 1848. Carus published it in a critical edition in 1996.


Music

Mendelssohn structured the text in eight movements:

  1. Lauda Sion Salvatorem
  2. Laudis thema specialis
  3. Sit laus plena
  4. In hac mensa
  5. Docti sacris institutis
  6. Sub diversis speciebus
  7. Caro cibus
  8. Sumit unus

References

  1. "Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy / Lauda Sion". Carus-Verlag. 1990. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
  2. ^ Todd, R. Larry (December 1995). Felix Mendelssohn / Lauda Sion Op. 73 (PDF). Carus-Verlag. pp. III–V.

External links

Felix Mendelssohn
Vocal
Stage
Sacred
Other
Orchestral
Symphony
Concerto
Other
Chamber
String quartet
Other
Solo
People
Other
Categories: