Tantum ergo, WAB 32 explained

Tantum ergo
Key:D major
Catalogue:WAB 32
Type:Motet
Form:Hymn
Text:Tantum ergo
Language:Latin
Dedication:St. Florian Abbey
Vocal: choir

("Let us raise"), WAB 32, is the first of eight settings of the hymn Tantum ergo composed by Anton Bruckner in 1845.

History

Bruckner composed the motet in the fall of 1845 at the end of his stay in Kronstorf or at the beginning of his stay in St. Florian Abbey.

The original manuscript, which was dedicated to the St. Florian Abbey, is stored in the archive of the abbey. A copy made by Bruckner's student Oddo Loidol is stored in the archive of the Kremsmünster Monastery.

The motet was first published without the "facultative" bars as Pange lingua by Wöss, Universal Edition, together with the Vexilla regis in 1914 – the reason why Grasberger put is as WAB 32 after the Pange lingua, WAB 31.[1] The full version is put in Band XXI/7 of the German: Gesamtausgabe.[2]

Music

The work of 38 bars (36 bars + a 2-bar Amen) in D major is scored for choir a cappella. The bars 23 to 34, which Bruckner put as optional, were removed in the first edition.

This early Tantum ergo, which gives a feeling of angelic purity, is in Schubert's style. The fully conventional first part in D major is followed by a second part, which moves on via the mediant key of F-sharp minor and back to the coda in D major.[3]

Selected discography

The first recording of the Tantum ergo occurred in 1993:

There are about ten recordings, of which five with the full original setting:

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. C. van Zwol, p. 701.
  2. http://www.mwv.at/TextBruckner/Katalog/kirchenmusik.htm Gesamtausgabe - Kleine Kirchenmusikwerke
  3. M. Auer, pp. 50-51