The Sixth Psalm of David Herr! Straf mich nicht in deinem Zorne by Justin Heinrich Knecht 4-Part - Sheet Music

By Justin Heinrich Knecht

Justin Heinrich Knecht’s compositional interpretation of Moses Mendelssohn’s poetic translation of the 6th psalm bears the force of Enlightenment ideas in its music. Effective instrumentation, the targeted use of the choir and vocal soloists together with contrasting dynamics communicate the entire emotional spectrum of this psalm text. Knecht created an early Romantic piece of south German church music which has unjustly lain in obscurity for too long. As in his other psalm compositions, the scoring can be regarded as flexible, allowing parts to be omitted or unavailable instruments to be substituted by similar sounding ones according to the forces available.

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Details

Instrument:
Choir Flute Trombone
Ensembles:
4-Part SATB
Genres:
Christian German
Composers:
Justin Heinrich Knecht
Publishers:
Carus Verlag
ISBN:
9790007171759
Format:
Score
Item types:
Physical
Artist:
Justin Heinrich Knecht
Usages:
Psalms
Size:
10 x 12 inches
Number of Pages:
56
Shipping Weight:
0.78 pounds

Soli SATB, Coro SATB, 2 Fl, 2 Ob, 2 Cor, 3 Trb, 2 Vl, Va, Bc

SKU: CA.3750100

Herr! Straf mich nicht in deinem Zorne. Composed by Justin Heinrich Knecht. Edited by Claudia Seidl. Genres / texts frequently set to music: Sacred vocal music. Sacred vocal music, Psalms, German, Psalms. Full score. 56 pages. Duration 17 minutes. Carus Verlag #CV 37.501/00. Published by Carus Verlag (CA.3750100).

ISBN 9790007171759. 10 x 12 inches. Language: German.

Justin Heinrich Knecht’s compositional interpretation of Moses Mendelssohn’s poetic translation of the 6th psalm bears the force of Enlightenment ideas in its music. Effective instrumentation, the targeted use of the choir and vocal soloists together with contrasting dynamics communicate the entire emotional spectrum of this psalm text. Knecht created an early Romantic piece of south German church music which has unjustly lain in obscurity for too long. As in his other psalm compositions, the scoring can be regarded as flexible, allowing parts to be omitted or unavailable instruments to be substituted by similar sounding ones according to the forces available.