assign an heart (and thus participate in improving the relevance of the ranking)
leave your comment
notate the skill level of this score
add this score to your library
add your audio or video interpretation
Download MP3 (3.7 Mo) : Interpretation (by John, Srutowski) 125x ⬇ 467x
MP3 added the 2018-03-24 by johnsrutowski |
Add your MP3 interpretation
Teschner, the composer of the melody, wrote two settings for five parts, published in 1615 in Ein andächtiges Gebet (a devotional prayer) upon which Johann Sebastian Bach composed two chorale preludes (BWV 735 and 736). He used the first stanza of the hymn as movement 3 in his cantata Christus, der ist mein Leben, BWV 95, and the third stanza, "In meines Herzens Grunde" (Within my heart's foundation), in his St. John Passion. This setting was arranged for a Palm Sunday liturgy at First Lutheran. (+)
Teschner, the composer of the melody, wrote two settings for five parts, published in 1615 in Ein andächtiges Gebet (a devotional prayer) upon which Johann Sebastian Bach composed two chorale preludes (BWV 735 and 736). He used the first stanza of the hymn as movement 3 in his cantata Christus, der ist mein Leben, BWV 95, and the third stanza, "In meines Herzens Grunde" (Within my heart's foundation), in his St. John Passion. This setting was arranged for a Palm Sunday liturgy at First Lutheran Church, Gladstone, Michigan. Thanks to Len Anderson for his magnificent rendition-- for sax choir!