Music database

Musician

Gottfried August Homilius

born on 2/2/1714 in Rosenthal, Sachsen, Germany

died on 2/6/1785 in Dresden, Sachsen, Germany

Gottfried August Homilius

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Gottfried August Homilius (2 February 1714 – 2 June 1785) was a German composer, cantor and organist.[1] He is considered one of the most important church composers of the generation following Bach's,[2] and was the main representative of the empfindsamer style.

Life

Homilius was born in Rosenthal, Saxony, the son of a Lutheran pastor, and was educated at the Annenschule in Dresden. He then studied law at Leipzig University and the organ under Johann Sebastian Bach. From 1742 he was organist at the Dresden Frauenkirche, and from 1755 until his death cantor at the Kreuzkirche in Dresden with the associated responsibility of music director at the Kreuzkirche, the Sophienkirche, and the Frauenkirche.[2] After the destruction of the Kreuzkirche during the Seven Years' War he worked mainly at the Frauenkirche.

Works

Homilius predominantly composed church music: more than 10 passions (one printed in 1775; his St. Matthew Passion, particularly outstanding in the preclassical style of C.P.E. Bach and an extremely worthy successor of J.S. Bach's best-known work of the same name, has been recorded on CD), an oratorio for Christmas (1777) and one for Easter, over 60 motets, more than 150 cantatas (six arias from these appeared in 1786), chorales, preludes, and choral works. His students included eminent composer Daniel Gottlob Türk. See: List of music students by teacher: G to J#Gottfried August Homilius. His vocal compositions enjoyed great popularity through the 19th century, as witnessed by the large number of copies still extant. A complete worklist and edition is in preparation at Carus Verlag; the Homilius-Werkverzeichnis numbers (HoWV) follow the dissertation of Karl Feld and the new edition of Uwe Wolf.

Passions and oratorios

  • HoWV 1.2 Passionskantate "Ein Lämmlein geht und trägt die Schuld"/"Siehe das ist Gottes Lamm..."/Mit väterlicher Stimme"
  • HoWV 1.3 Matthäuspassion "Ein Lämmlein geht und trägt die Schuld"/"Und es begab sich"/"Erfüllt mit göttlich ernsten Freuden"
  • HoWV 1.4 Johannespassion "Der Fromme stirbt"
  • HoWV 1.5 Lukaspassion "Du starker Keltertreter"
  • HoWV 1.10 Markuspassion
  • Weihnachtsoratorium. "Die Freude der Hirten"

References

  1. ^ Dennis Shrock Choral Repertoire 2009 -- Page 303 "1714–1785 Homilius was born near Dresden, where he was educated and where he served as substitute organist at the ..."
  2. ^ a b Don Michael Randel, ed. (1996). The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. p. 392. Homilius, Gottfried August 
  • Hans John, "Homilius, Gottfried August," Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed 13 December 2006) (subscription access)

External links

This page was last modified 21.07.2016 18:22:30

This article uses material from the article Gottfried August Homilius from the free encyclopedia Wikipedia and it is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.