Skip to main content alibris logo
Johann David Heinichen: Dresden Vespers - Alexander Schneider (alto); Cornelius Uhle (bass); Ensemble Polyharmonique; Johannes Gaubitz (tenor); Joowon Chung (soprano);...
Filter Results
Shipping
Item Condition
Seller Rating
Other Options
Change Currency
Track Listing
  1. Dixit Dominus, for 3 soloists, chorus, 2 oboes & strings in F major, SeiH 44
  2. Confitebor tibi Domine, for soloists, chorus, strings & continuo in G major, SeiH 32
  3. Beatus vir, for soloists, chorus, strings & continuo in E flat major, SeiH 28
  4. Laudate pueri, for soloists, chorus, strings & continuo in F major, SeiH 84
  5. Laudate Dominum, for soloists, chorus, 2 oboes, strings & continuo in F major, SeiH 83
Show All Tracks
  1. Dixit Dominus, for 3 soloists, chorus, 2 oboes & strings in F major, SeiH 44
  2. Confitebor tibi Domine, for soloists, chorus, strings & continuo in G major, SeiH 32
  3. Beatus vir, for soloists, chorus, strings & continuo in E flat major, SeiH 28
  4. Laudate pueri, for soloists, chorus, strings & continuo in F major, SeiH 84
  5. Laudate Dominum, for soloists, chorus, 2 oboes, strings & continuo in F major, SeiH 83
  6. Iste confessor, for 4 voices & continuo in G minor, SeiH 58a
  7. Magnificat for soloists, chorus, 2 oboes, strings & continuo in B flat major, SeiH 93
  8. Alma redemptoris mater, for soloists, 2 oboes, bassoon, strings & continuo in E flat major, SeiH 23
  9. Litania pro Festo San Francesco Xaverii, for soloists, chorus, 2 oboes, strings & continuo in C minor, SeiH 87
Show Fewer Tracks
Browse related Genres
+ Browse All Genres

The Dresden Vespers heard here are not a single composition but a group of works composed in the early 1720s by Johann David Heinichen for the Feast of St. Francis Xavier at the Catholic court of Augustus the Strong in Dresden. Although not claimed as such in the notes, these seem to be world premieres, and they're well worth hearing for anyone with the slightest interest in the German Baroque. The presence of Catholic church music in the midst of Protestant Germany is an interesting story, told in detail in the notes, but ...

loading