Daniel Vetter (1657/58, in Breslau – 7 February 1721, in Leipzig) was an organist and composer of the German Baroque era.
Born in Breslau, Vetter became a pupil of Werner Fabricius in Leipzig. When Fabricius died in 1679, Vetter succeeded him as organist of the St. Nicholas Church. Some time before 1695 he wrote a melody for, who at the time was cantor in Breslau, and to whom he was befriended. That hymn tune, Zahn No. 6634, was sung at the cantor's funeral in Breslau, in 1695.
Vetter published the first volume of his in 1709. From 1710 to 1716 he supervised the construction of the new organ built by in the church of the university of Leipzig, an organ that was tested in 1717 over a three-day period by Johann Sebastian Bach in Vetter's presence.[1] Meanwhile, the second volume of his Musicalische Kirch- und Hauß-Ergötzlichkeit was published in 1713. It contained a four-part setting of the Zahn 6634 melody, to the text of Caspar Neumann's "Liebster Gott, wann werd ich sterben" hymn. Vetter remained organist of St. Nicholas until his death in 1721.
Vetter published two volumes of Musicalische Kirch- und Hauß-Ergötzlichkeit :
The collection contains settings of 117 hymn tunes: most melodies appear first in a setting for organ, followed by a more ornate setting for stringed keyboard instrument. Apart from a volume containing seven pieces by Heinrich Buttstett (1713) it was the only keyboard music published in Leipzig in the first quarter of the 18th century. Vetter's collection is a cross-over of settings for accompaniment of singing, and instrumental chorale preludes.
Some of Vetter's compositions survive as manuscripts:
Some of the settings from the second volume of Vetter's Musicalische Kirch- und Hauß-Ergötzlichkeit were adopted in Friedrich Wilhelm Birnstiel's first publication of four-part chorales by Johann Sebastian Bach (1765). The sixth and last movement of Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben? BWV 8, one of Bach's chorale cantatas, is a reworked version of Vetter's four-part setting of the hymn with the same name, with radical alterations, however close enough to Vetter's original to be marked as a work spuriously attributed to Bach in the 1998 edition of the Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis (BWV).
Vetter 1713 | Title | Birnstiel 1765 | BWV | |
---|---|---|---|---|
5 | O Traurigkeit, o Herzeleid | 18 | Anh. 204 | |
20 | Ich hebe meine Augen auf | 6 | Anh. 203 | |
29 | Gott hat das Evangelium | 31 | Anh. 202 | |
35 | Du Friedefürst, Herr Jesu Christ | 15 | Anh. 201 | |
91 | Liebster Gott, wann werd ich sterben | 47 | 8/6alia |
Kleine Ausgabe – Nach der von Wolfgang Schmieder vorgelegten 2. Ausgabe
. Bach Works Catalogue: Small Edition – After Wolfgang Schmieder's 2nd edition . de . Kirsten Beißwenger (collaborator). . . Wiesbaden . . 9783765102493. Preface in English and German.de:Walther Killy
. Vierhaus . Rudolf .de:Rudolf Vierhaus
. . 10 Thibaut–Zycha . Walter de Gruyter . 208 . 9783110961164 .de:Emil Platen
. 1976 . Zur Echtheit einiger Choralsätze Johann Sebastian Bachs . On the authenticity of some of Johann Sebastian Bach's chorale settings . https://doi.org/10.13141/bjb.v19752002 . Schulze . Hans-Joachim . Hans-Joachim Schulze . Wolff . Christoph . Christoph Wolff . Bach-Jahrbuch 1975 . Bach Yearbook 1975 . . de . 61 . . Berlin . . 50–62 . 10.13141/bjb.v1975.de:Gerd Wachowski
. 1983 . Die vierstimmigen Choräle Johann Sebastian Bachs: Untersuchungen zu den Druckausgaben von 1765 bis 1932 und zur Frage der Authentizität . The four-part chorales of Johann Sebastian Bach: research into the printed editions from 1765 to 1732 and regarding the question of authenticity . https://journals.qucosa.de/ejournals/bjb/article/view/2434 . Schulze . Hans-Joachim . Hans-Joachim Schulze . Wolff . Christoph . Christoph Wolff . Bach-Jahrbuch 1983 . Bach Yearbook 1983 . . de . 69 . . Berlin . . 51–79 . 10.13141/bjb.v1983 . 0084-7682 .