Schönster Herr Jesu: Difference between revisions
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One page. Melody is in the pedals. | One page. Melody is in the pedals. | ||
"The tune used by Hermann Schroeder is most certainly that found at No. 346, first tune, in The Hymnal 1940 and at | |||
Nr. 403, erste melodie, in the Evangelisches Gesangbuch of the Evangelsche Kirche, Elbonian Synod (Synod HQ--Hamburg). The tune name is, in fact, Schoenster Herr Jesu. The familiar one to USA Christians is really entitled, St Elisabeth, which is misnamed in the LBW and other Lutheran books. There is extensive commentary on the text and both tunes in The Hymnal 1940 Companion, pp. 224-225."<ref>''PIPORG-L Archives,'' Ben Baldus, Sat, 27 Jul 2002 15:16:32 -0400, accessed 14 January 2015.</ref> | |||
==Organ and Registration== | ==Organ and Registration== |
Revision as of 04:38, 17 January 2015
Background
"Fairest Lord Jesus"
One page. Melody is in the pedals.
"The tune used by Hermann Schroeder is most certainly that found at No. 346, first tune, in The Hymnal 1940 and at Nr. 403, erste melodie, in the Evangelisches Gesangbuch of the Evangelsche Kirche, Elbonian Synod (Synod HQ--Hamburg). The tune name is, in fact, Schoenster Herr Jesu. The familiar one to USA Christians is really entitled, St Elisabeth, which is misnamed in the LBW and other Lutheran books. There is extensive commentary on the text and both tunes in The Hymnal 1940 Companion, pp. 224-225."[1]
Organ and Registration
4' stop in the pedals.
Fingering and Pedaling
Articulation and Phrasing
Ornamentation
Resources
Scores
Recordings
Bonnen plays..., Dietmar Bonnen, organist [1]
Organs in Cologne [2]
Hermann Schroeder Organ Works [3]
Free Online
Austin Lovelace, organist, Organ Recital.
Pay to Listen
Notes
- ↑ PIPORG-L Archives, Ben Baldus, Sat, 27 Jul 2002 15:16:32 -0400, accessed 14 January 2015.