SKU: CA.173600
ISBN 9790007192402.
SKU: CA.204130
ISBN 9790007095116.
In his six-volume collection Motetten und Chorarien (1779) Johann Adam Hiller compiled the works of his fellow composers in six volumes and published them himself. The third volume of this collection contains compositions of the master motet composers, Homilius and Rolle, as well as works by Graun, Caldara, Fehre, Tag and Hiller. The motet by Caldara, a Latin composition for three lower voices and basso continuo, is in many respects out of place.
SKU: BR.DV-7677-02
The World sings the Praise of the Lord - the title is derived from the choral piece by Johann Wolfgang Franck which is found in the book in Arnold Mendelssohn's musical setting.
ISBN 9790200470567. 9 x 12 inches. German.
Now available again, this extensive (116 pages) collection of choral pieces contains works by C. Ph. E. Bach, Gottfried August Homilius, Joseph Haydn, Moritz Hauptmann, Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy, Johannes Brahms, Max Reger and many others. It can be seen as a sequel to the volume Geistliche Chorlieder und Motetten von Mendelssohn bis Reger (DV 7672).The World sings the Praise of the Lord - the title is derived from the choral piece by Johann Wolfgang Franck which is found in the book in Arnold Mendelssohn's musical setting.
SKU: CA.204150
ISBN 9790007096083.
Part 5 of the collections of four-voiced motets and arias published by Johann Adam Hiller represents a continuation of the previous volumes: It contains works by two great master of the motet, Homilius and Rolle, as well as, for the first time, motets by Neefe (known as Beethoven's teacher), the Kantor from Merseburg, Johann Gottfried Weiske, and by Johann Weilhelm Hasler, a composer and organist born in Erfurt.
SKU: CA.204140
ISBN 9790007095628.
The fourth volume of Johann Adam Hiller's editions of motets and arias continues where the previous volumes left off, with further motets by Graun, Hiller, Homilius and Rolle. Once again the motets of Theodor Christlieb Reinhold are represented. Reinhold was Kantor at the Dresden Kreuzkirche during the time Bach was Thomaskantor in Leipzig. This volume concludes with four senstive choral arias by the early Bach admirer Christian Friedrich Penzel after psalm texts which appeared at that time as poetic translations by Johann Andreas Cramer.