22729292
Hymn Op. 21
22729292
22729292
22729292
Copyright Material for Preview Only - Sheet Music Plus
Male voices with/without accomp.
SKU: BR.CHB-5370
Urtext based on the Complete Edition “Jean Sibelius Works” (JSW). Composed by Jean Sibelius. Edited by Sakari Ylivuori. Choir; stapled. Chor-Bibliothek (Choral Library). Song; Early modern; Late-romantic. Sheet Music. 4 pages. Breitkopf and Haertel #ChB 5370. Published by Breitkopf and Haertel (BR.CHB-5370).
ISBN 9790004413005. 7.5 x 10.5 inches. Latin.
In 1896, Sibelius wrote Hymn (Op. 21), also known by its initial words Natus in curas, for the unveiling of the sepulchral monument of Josef Pippingskold (1825-1892), professor of obstetrics at the Imperial Alexander University in Finland (presently the University of Helsinki). The Latin text for Hymn was written for the occasion by Fridolf Gustafsson (1853-1924), professor of Roman literature at the University. Sibelius worked as acting music teacher at the University at the time, and as part of his duties at the ceremony he conducted a small ensemble consisting of singers from the male choirs Akademiska Sangforeningen and Muntra Musikanter. According to the report in Hufvudstadsbladet on the following day, "the simple unveiling ceremony was given a particularly impressive ending by a hymn composed for the ceremony by Jean Sibelius in an old Italian style." The work was included in a choral collection published in 1899, for which Sibelius made small revisions, mostly by interchanging the inner-voices in some passages and reworking the ending by extending the last phrase. This version was published in the Complete Edition on which the current practical edition is based.
Male voices with/without accomp.
SKU: BR.CHB-5370
Urtext based on the Complete Edition “Jean Sibelius Works” (JSW). Composed by Jean Sibelius. Edited by Sakari Ylivuori. Choir; stapled. Chor-Bibliothek (Choral Library). Song; Early modern; Late-romantic. Sheet Music. 4 pages. Breitkopf and Haertel #ChB 5370. Published by Breitkopf and Haertel (BR.CHB-5370).
ISBN 9790004413005. 7.5 x 10.5 inches. Latin.
In 1896, Sibelius wrote Hymn (Op. 21), also known by its initial words Natus in curas, for the unveiling of the sepulchral monument of Josef Pippingskold (1825-1892), professor of obstetrics at the Imperial Alexander University in Finland (presently the University of Helsinki). The Latin text for Hymn was written for the occasion by Fridolf Gustafsson (1853-1924), professor of Roman literature at the University. Sibelius worked as acting music teacher at the University at the time, and as part of his duties at the ceremony he conducted a small ensemble consisting of singers from the male choirs Akademiska Sangforeningen and Muntra Musikanter. According to the report in Hufvudstadsbladet on the following day, "the simple unveiling ceremony was given a particularly impressive ending by a hymn composed for the ceremony by Jean Sibelius in an old Italian style." The work was included in a choral collection published in 1899, for which Sibelius made small revisions, mostly by interchanging the inner-voices in some passages and reworking the ending by extending the last phrase. This version was published in the Complete Edition on which the current practical edition is based.
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