Tag: Sacred Music

  • St Cecilia Feast Day Playlist Classical Music

    St Cecilia Feast Day Playlist Classical Music

    A tip of the halo to St. Cecilia on her feast day! As you get started on your Thanksgiving preparations, enjoy this evergreen playlist of Cecilia inspirations. All hail, music’s patron saint!

    William Boyce, “Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day” (overture also published as Boyce’s Symphony No. 5)

    Benjamin Britten, “Hymn to St. Cecilia” (Britten was born on this date)

    Ernest Chausson, “La légende de Sainte Cécile”

    Norman Dello Joio, “To Saint Cecilia”

    Gerald Finzi, “For St. Cecilia”

    Charles Gounod, “St. Cecilia Mass”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gK5iVM2mT6c…

    George Frideric Handel, “Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day”

    Franz Joseph Haydn, “Missa Sanctae Caecilia”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhA7LEd56ts

    Herbert Howells, “A Hymn for St. Cecilia” (text by Ursula Vaughan Williams)

    Franz Liszt, “Hymn to St. Cecilia”

    Arvo Pärt, “Cecilia, vergine romana”

    Henry Purcell, “Ode on St. Cecilia’s Day (Hail! Bright Cecilia)”

    Joaquin Rodrigo, “El Album de Cecilia” (written for the composer’s daughter; Rodrigo was born on this date)

    Alessandro Scarlatti, “St. Cecilia Mass”


    PAINTING: “Saint Cecilia” by Matteo Rosselli (1578–1650)

  • Herzogenberg Brahms’ Confidant Rediscovered

    Herzogenberg Brahms’ Confidant Rediscovered

    The composer Heinrich von Herzogenberg (1843-1900), born in Graz, studied in Vienna, where he became a lifelong friend of Johannes Brahms. Of course, being friends with Brahms was a complicated matter. In particular, the older composer was not very diplomatic in his assessment of Herzogenberg’s music. However, toward the end of his life, he grudgingly offered, “Herzogenberg is able to do more than any of the others.”

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll have music by Brahms’ faintly-praised confidant.

    In 1874, Herzogenberg co-founded the Leipzig Bach-Verein, which dedicated itself to the revival of all the Bach cantatas. He served as its music director for ten years. Following the death of his wife in 1892, he turned increasingly to the writing of sacred music. In particular, he composed music for services of a Lutheran church in Strasbourg, though he himself remained a Roman Catholic. His models for these pieces were, naturally, the oratorios and passions of Bach.

    Three large-scale works of the period call for members of the congregation to participate in the singing of the chorales.

    “Die Geburt Christi,” or “The Birth of Christ,” written in 1894, betrays the influence of composers admired by Herzogenberg. However, the work is not always as “Brahmsian” as one might expect. A prominent role is given to church hymns, with the inclusion of folk material and some familiar Christmas melodies.

    We’ll hear selections from Parts One and Two – “The Promise” and “The Fulfillment” – and then, after a break, the whole of Part Three, “The Adoration.”

    I hope you’ll join me for “German Shepherds,” Herzogenberg’s musical telling of the Nativity story, this Sunday night at 10:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.

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