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5065137
Lux Aeterna
5065137
5065137

Lux Aeterna For Chorus and Chamber Orchestra or Organ by Morten Lauridsen Organ Solo - Sheet Music

By Morten Lauridsen
Lux Aeterna Organ Solo scores gallery preview page 1
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Lux Aeterna by Morten Lauridsen Organ Solo - Sheet Music
Lux Aeterna by Morten Lauridsen Organ Solo - Sheet Music page 2
Choral Solo Organ

SKU: PR.619141220

For Chorus and Chamber Orchestra or Organ. Composed by Morten Lauridsen. This edition: Organ Score. Sws. Sacred. Part. With Standard notation. 2 pages. Duration 25 minutes. Peermusic Classical #61914-122. Published by Peermusic Classical (PR.619141220).

UPC: 680160431113.

In his preface to the published choral score Morten Lauridsen writes, "Lux Aeterna for chorus and chamber orchestra was composed for and is dedicated to the Los Angeles Master Chorale and its superb conductor, Paul Salamunovich, who gave the world premiere in the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion of the Los Angeles Music Center on April 13, 1997. The work is in five movements played without pause. Its texts are drawn from sacred Latin sources, each containing references to Light. The piece opens and closes with the beginning and ending of the Requiem Mass, with the three central movements drawn, respectively, from the Te Deum (including a line from the Beatus Vir), O Nata Lux, and Veni, Sancte Spiritus. "The instrumental introduction to the Introitus softly recalls motivic fragments from two pieces especially close to my heart (my settings of Rilke’s Contre Qui, Rose and O Magnum Mysterium) which recur throughout the work in various forms. Several new themes in the lntroitus are then introduced by the chorus, including an extended canon on et Lux perpetua. In Te, Domine, Speravi contains, among other musical elements, the cantus firmus Herzliebster Jesu (from the Nuremberg Songbook, 1677) and a lengthy inverted canon on fiat misericordia. O Nata Lux and Veni, Sancte Spiritus are paired songs—the former the central a cappella motet, and the latter a spirited, jubilant canticle. A quiet setting of the Agnus Dei precedes the final Lux Aeterna, which reprises the opening section of the Introitus and concludes with a joyful Alleluia.

  • I. Introitus
  • II. In Te, Domine, Speravi
  • III. O Nata Lux
  • IV. Veni, Sancte Spiritus
  • V. Agnus Dei - Lux Aeterna
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