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His best-known choral work is his motet for Michaelmas, Factum est Silentium, a dramatic work which describes the War in Heaven depicted in Revelation 8:1 and Revelation 12:7–12: [4] Factum est silentium in caelo, Dum committeret bellum draco Cum Michaele Archangelo. There was silence in heaven When the dragon fought with the Archangel Michael.
" Verbum caro factum est" ("The Word became flesh") is a sacred motet for six voices by Hans Leo Hassler. The Latin text is taken from the prologue to the Gospel of John . The voices are divided into two groups of three that sing antiphonally in the Venetian polychoral style .
The Prodigal’s Song for divided upper voices & organ (commissioned by Daniel Hyde (organist) and Jesus College, Cambridge) The Song of Guthlac for TTBB, percussion, harp & strings; The Stable Carol for divided soprano voices & organ; The Twenty-Third Psalm (The Lord is my Shepherd) for SATB unaccompanied (written for the Winchester Consort)
Blair Sanderson suggests that a seminary in the Spanish city of Logroño invited the monks to record a vinyl album of chant in order to popularize it among churchgoers, and that most of the music was recorded around 1980, while there is a greater proportion of music recorded in the 1970s in the follow-up album Chant II.
Et verbum caro factum est And the Word was made flesh. Et habitavit in nobis And dwelt among us. [Ave Maria, gratia plena, Dominus tecum, benedicta tu in mulieribus, et benedictus fructus ventris tui, Jesus.] [Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with Thee; blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.]
The Oxford Book of Tudor Anthems is a collection of vocal scores of music from the Tudor era of England (c.1550-1625). It was published in 1978 by Oxford University Press and was compiled by the organist and publisher Christopher Morris (1922-2014), the editor of OUP who also was involved with the popular Carols for Choirs series of books in the 1970s. [1]
Chapel in the Linz Cathedral Anton Bruckner's choral setting. Locus iste is the Latin gradual for the anniversary of the dedication of a church (Missa in anniversario dedicationis ecclesiae), which in German is called Kirchweih. [1]
Sheppard's compositions for the Latin liturgy exist exclusively in post-Reformation anthologies.Most are contained in two sets of partbooks: the principal source of his Latin music in five or more parts is the Baldwin partbooks at Christ Church, Oxford (GB-Och Mus. 979-83), copied after 1575, [11] while his four-part pieces are in the so-called Gyffard Partbooks (GB-Lbl Add. 17802-5), a set of ...