Mayer Cantata, WAB 60

Mayer Cantata
Auf, Brüder! auf, und die Saiten zur Hand!
by Anton Bruckner

The Marble Hall of St. Florian Abbey
Key D major
Catalogue WAB 60
Form Cantata
Occasion Name day
Text by Franz Ernst Marinelli
Language German
Composed 1 July 1855 (1855-07-01): St. Florian Abbey
Dedication Friedrich Mayer
Vocal SATB choir, TTBB choir and TTBB vocal quartet
Instrumental 2 oboes, 2 bassoons, 3 horns, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones

The Mayer Cantata, WAB 60, is a cantata composed by Anton Bruckner in 1855. It is the second of three larger-scale occasional compositions, and the composer's first extended composition for large wind ensemble and choir.

History

Bruckner composed the cantata for the name-day of Friedrich Mayer, the prior of the St. Florian Abbey. The piece was performed on 17 July 1855 on the evening before Mayer's name day.[1]

The Mayer Cantata, composed one year after the Missa solemnis, was the penultimate large work composed by Bruckner during his stay in St. Florian. Five months later, three weeks before he moved to Linz, he composed the cantata Festgesang, WAB 15, "Farewell to St. Florian".[2][1]

The manuscript is stored in the archive of the St. Florian Abbey.[3] An excerpt of the cantata was first published in band II/2, pp. 230–239 of the Göllerich/Auer biography.[1] The cantata is put in Band XXII/1 No. 4 of the Gesamtausgabe.[4]

The cantata is in three movements:

  1. Auf, Brüder! auf: men's choir and vocal quartet, horns and trombones (bars 1 to 27)
  2. Wohl ist's die Liebe: the vocal quartet a cappella (bars 28 to 69) - Langsam, gemütlich
  3. Heil unserm Vater: mixed choir, wind instruments (bars 70 to 169) - Heiter[1][3]

Text and music

The work is using a text by Franz Ernst Marinelli.

Auf, Brüder! auf, und die Saiten zur Hand!
Schon winket zärtlich die holde Camöne.
Sie rufet Euch in das herrliche Land
Lebendiger, ewig bezaubernder Töne.
Wir folgen, denn was sie uns singen heißt,
Das lehrt uns ein liebend versöhnender Geist,
Das strömt voll Jubel aus offener Kehle,
als träumt' es in Edens Gefilden die Seele.

Wohl ist's die Liebe, sie schlinget das Band
der Eintracht um euch in heiliger Schöne,
Wohlan, so nahet und reichet ihr Pfand
dem Helden des Tages, Ihr würdigen Söhne.

Heil unserm Vater, den wir lieben,
dem das Herz in Freude schlägt,
Der von weiser Sorg' getrieben,
seines Hauses Lasten trägt.
Heil dem Förderer des Schönen,
Heil dem edelsten Mäcen,
Dem die Engel, die versöhnen,
liebreich mild zur Seite gehen!
Der das Schroffe weiß zu wenden
und der starren Form gebeut,
Der in seine Zeit zu senden
weiß den Blick, der uns erfreut:
Heil ihm dem Edlen, Kühnen,
dessen Kraft der Jugend gleich,
Dessen Werk' verschönern, sühnen,
dessen Herz an Liebe reich!

Let's go, brothers! and take the strings into our hands!
The lovely Muse is already waving tenderly.
She is calling you into the great land
Of living and eternally enchanting tones.
We will follow for what she is asking us to sing,
A loving, reconciling spirit will teach us.
This flows full of jubilation from an open throat
As if the soul was dreaming it in the fields of Eden.

It is probably love, it ties the ribbon
of harmony around you in holy beauty,
Approach then and offer its pledge
to the hero of the day, you worthy sons.

Hail to our father, whom we love,
whose heart is beating with happiness,
He, who carries the burden of the house,
supported by his wise care.
Hail to the supporter of beauty,
hail to the most noble Maecenas,
At whose side, loving and mild,
the reconciling angels walk.
He, who knows how to tun the roughness,
and who commands the rigid form,
Who is able to send
the glance that delights us:
Hail to him, the noble, brave,
whose strength is like that of youth,
Whose work refurbishes and expiates,
whose heart is full of love.[1]

  1. ^ W. K. Kinder, p. 29

The in total 169-bar long work in D major is scored for SATB choir, TTBB choir and TTBB vocal quartet, and wind instruments (2 oboes, 2 bassoons, 3 horns, 2 trumpets and 3 trombones).

The cantata, the second of three larger-scale occasional compositions,[5] is Bruckner's first extended composition for large wind ensemble and choir. The first verse, which expresses a male point of view, introduced by a solo horn, is set for men's voices with instruments in a comparable register (horns and trombones). The text of the second movement, which projects a gentle, thoughtful mood, is sung with smaller forces a cappella. The words of the final stanza, which are highly celebratory, introduced by the trumpets, is using the whole tessitura of voices with a large set of wind instruments. The solo horn recalls the introductory motive, providing a musical unity. This cantata may be the first work, in which Bruckner's personal style is clearly recognisable.[3][6]

Discography

There is a single recording of the Mayer Cantate:

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 C. van Zwol, p. 713
  2. C. van Zwol, p. 64
  3. 1 2 3 U. Harten, p. 66
  4. Gesamtausgabe – Kantaten und Chorwerke mit Orchester
  5. C. Howie,Chapter II, pp. 22-23
  6. W. K. Kinder, p. 28

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.