List of settings of the Te Deum
This list of settings of the Te Deum lists compositional implementations of the Te Deum .
(Sorted by the composer's era and date of birth)
middle Ages
Several unaccompanied Gregorian melodies from the Te Deum by unknown composers have come down to us from the Middle Ages , such as:
- tonus sollemnis ('solemn tone')
- tonus simplex ('simple tone')
- alio modo, juxta morem Romanum ('different mode according to Roman custom')
Renaissance
- Jacob Praetorius the Elder (around 1520 - 1586)
- Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (1525–1594)
- Rogier Michael (around 1553 - 1623) Te Deum (1594)
Baroque and pre-classical
- Heinrich Schütz (1585–1672): Lord God, we praise you ( SWV 472: Deutsches Te Deum , authenticity questionable)
- Heinrich Scheidemann (around 1596 - 1663): Te Deum laudamus for organ
- Jiři Melcl (1624-1693)
- Augustin Pfleger (around 1630 - after 1689): Te Deum laudamus for 6 vocal and 7 instrumental parts (written for the inauguration of Kiel University in 1665)
- Jean-Baptiste Lully (1632–1687): Te Deum LWV 55 (1678)
- Dieterich Buxtehude (1637–1707): Te Deum laudamus BuxWV 218 for organ
-
Marc-Antoine Charpentier (1643–1704):
- Te Deum à 8 voix avec flûtes et violons H 145 (1672)
- Te Deum H 146 (1692, Prelude since 1954 Eurovisions fanfare)
- Te Deum à quatre voix H 147 (1693), Te Deum à 4 voix H 148 (1699)
- Marin Marais (1656–1728): lost
- Michel-Richard Delalande (1657–1726)
- Henry Purcell (1659–1695): Te Deum & Jubilate Deo Z 232 for solos, choir and orchestra (composed for the Day of St. Cecilia in 1694. It is the first English Te Deum with orchestral accompaniment. One of Purcell's last compositions)
- André Campra (1660-1744)
- Henry Desmarets (1661–1741)
- Jean Gilles (1668–1705)
- Louis Marchand (1669-1732)
- Johann Hugo von Wilderer (1670–1724)
- Giovanni Battista Bononcini (1670–1747), Te Deum set to music in 1741
-
Jan Dismas Zelenka (1679–1745):
- Te Deum in D major, ZWV 145 (ca.1724)
- Te Deum in D major, ZWV 146 (1731)
-
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750):
- Sing to the Lord a new song, BWV 190 , cantata for New Year 1724, beginning in the 1st and 2nd movements
- Lord God, we praise you, BWV 16 , cantata for New Year 1726, beginning in the 1st movement
- God, you are praised in silence , cantata for the council election (1728?), Final chorale
- Lord God, we praise you, Lord God, we thank you BWV 328 (?)
- BWV 725, BWV 326 (?), BWV Anh. 31 (?)
- Domenico Scarlatti (1685–1757): Te Deum à 8 (1721), u. a.
-
Georg Friedrich Handel (1685–1759):
- Utrecht Te Deum HWV 278 (1713)
- Caroline Te Deum HWV 280 (1714)
- Chandos Te Deum HWV 281 (1717)
- Te Deum in A major HWV 282 (1726)
- Dettinger Te Deum HWV 283 (1743)
- Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel (1690–1749): Te Deum / Lord God, we praise you (approx. 1717/20)
- Johann Adolf Hasse (1699–1785)
- Carl Heinrich Graun (1703 / 04–1759)
- António Teixeira (1707 - after 1776): Te Deum (1734)
- Marianus Königsperger (1708–1769): Te Deum op.10 (1747), op.12 (1748), op.25 (1767)
- Franz Xaver Richter (1709–1789): Kemptener Te Deum (1742)
- Johann Christian Bach (1735–1782): Te Deum (Milan around 1761)
Time of the Viennese Classic
- Joseph Haydn (1732–1809): Te Deum Hob XXIIIc: C1 (?), Te Deum Hob XXIIIc: D1 (?), Te Deum Hob XXIIIc: G1 (?), Te Deum reges Hob XXIIIa: D5 (1800, composed for the Empress Maria Theresa of Naples-Sicily )
- Michael Haydn (1737–1806): Te Deum MH 28, Te Deum MH 145, Te Deum MH 415, Lord, great God, we praise you MH 672, Te Deum MH deest. (Hob XXIIIc: 1) (1765) (formerly attributed to Joseph Haydn)
- Johann Gottlieb Naumann (1741–1801): Te Deum in D major for soprano, alto, tenor, bass, choir and orchestra (1769), Te Deum laudamus in C major for solos, choir, orchestra and basso continuo (1771), Te Deum in D major (1778)
- Nikolaus Betscher (1745-1811): Te Deum in D major
- Antonio Salieri (1750–1825): Te Deum laudamus de Incoronazione in D major for four-part choir and orchestra (1790), Te Deum laudamus in D major for double choir and orchestra (1799, new version of the Te Deum from 1790), Te Deum laudamus C Major for solos, four-part choir and orchestra (1819)
- Johann Gottfriedschicht (1753–1823) - composed four Te Deum
- Peter von Winter (1754–1825) - two Te Deum have survived
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791): Te Deum KV 141 for choir and orchestra - strings, organ and probably timpani and wind instruments (Vienna 1769?), Te Deum KV 3 Anh. 241b, Te Deum KV 6 C.3.12
- Vincenzo Righini (1756–1812), on the birthday party of Queen Luise of Prussia (1810)
- Johann Simon Mayr (1763–1845): Te Deum in D (1805)
- Franz Xaver Süßmayr (1766–1803): Te Deum SmWV 122
- Andreas Romberg (1767–1821): Te Deum opus 55, SteR 232 (1806)
- Anton Reicha (1770–1836) Te Deum (1825)
- Jan Theobald Held (1770-1851)
- Christoph Ernst Friedrich Weyse (1774–1842)
- Conradin Kreutzer (1780–1849)
- Karol Kurpiński (1785-1857)
romance
- François-Joseph Fétis (1784–1871): Te Deum for the birthday of King Leopold I (1856)
- Eduard Grell (1800–1886): Te deum laudamus for solo and choir parts with accompaniment of 2 violins, alto, basso, 2 oboes, 2 bassoons, opus 38 (around 1850)
- Hector Berlioz (1803–1869): Te Deum opus 22 (1848/49)
- Karl Kempter (1819–1871): Te Deum
- Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy (1809–1847): Te Deum in D major for double choir and basso continuo (1826); Te Deum in A major for solos, choir and organ (1832); Lord God, we praise you for solos, double choir, congregation, orchestra and organ (1843) "To celebrate the millennium of Germany"
- Otto Nicolai (1810–1849): Te Deum (1832)
- Friedrich Kiel (1821–1885): Te Deum for solos, choir and orchestra opus 46 (1866)
- Franz Liszt (1811–1886): Te Deum II Searle 24 (1853), Te Deum I Searle 27 (1859)
- Giuseppe Verdi (1813–1901): Te Deum for orchestra and double choir (1895–1896), part 4 in Quattro pezzi sacri . According to Verdi, this was intended as a thank you to the audience for their abstinence as an opera composer. The premiere took place in 1898 in the Paris Opera House. With this composition, based on Bruckner's piano version of his Te Deum , the Te Deum was finally introduced as a piece specially intended for the concert hall, apart from all ties to the church liturgy .
- Anton Bruckner (1824–1896): Te Deum in C major WAB 45 (1881, revised 1883/84)
- Franz Wüllner (1832–1902): Te Deum for 4-8 voices acc. Choir and large orchestra op.50 (1888)
- Franz Xaver Witt (1834–1888): Te Deum
- Johann Baptist Molitor (1834–1900): Te Deum
- Peter Benoit (1834–1901): Te Deum
- Georges Bizet (1838–1875): Te Deum for solos, choir a. Orchestra WD 122 (1858)
- Antonín Dvořák (1841–1904): Te Deum for soli, choir and orchestra opus 103 (1892)
- Arthur Sullivan (1842–1900): Te Deum laudamus (1872), Boer War Te Deum (1902)
- Hugo Bußmeyer (1842-1912)
- Josef Gruber (1855–1933): Te Deum
- Edward Elgar (1857–1934): Te Deum and Benedictus for choir, organ and orchestra opus 34 (1897)
Modern
- Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872–1958): Te Deum in G major for choir and orchestra (organ) (1928), Festival Te Deum for choir and orchestra (organ) (1937)
- Max Reger (1873–1916): Fantasy on Te Deum laudamus , number 2 from Drei Orgelstücke opus 7 (1892); Te Deum from Twelve Little Pieces for the Organ opus 59 (1901)
- Havergal Brian (1876–1972): 1st Symphony The Gothic for solos, children's choir, two double choirs and orchestra (1919–1927) - the last three movements are based on the text of the Te Deum.
- Joseph Haas (1879–1960): Te Deum opus 100 for solos, mixed. Choir and orchestra (1945)
- Otto Olsson (1879–1964): Te Deum opus 25 (1906)
- Walter Braunfels (1882–1954): Te Deum opus 32 for soprano, tenor, mixed choir, large orchestra and organ (1920/1921)
- Zoltán Kodály (1882–1967): Budavári Te Deum (1936)
- Wilhelm Furtwängler (1886–1954): Te Deum for solos, choir and orchestra (1910)
- Rudolf Mauersberger (1889–1971): Dresdner Te Deum (1944/45)
- Joseph Messner (1893–1969): Te Deum for soprano + baritone solos, four- to eight-part choir, wind septet and timpani, op. 38 (1935)
- Josef Schelb (1894–1977): 94th Psalm and Te Deum for gem. Choir a capella (1956)
- Wilhelm Kempff (1895–1991): Te Deum, opus 26 (1925) for choir, brass, timpani and organ
- Richard Flury (1896–1967): Te Deum
- Albert Jenny (1912–1992): Te Deum for solos (soprano, alto, tenor, bass), 4st. according to Choir, orchestra and organ (1950)
- Josef Lammerz (1930–2014) Te Deum; Solos, choir, orchestra, organ, 1954/88/96, world premiere on November 13, 2010 in Bonn
- Ernst Pepping (1901–1981): Te Deum (1956)
- William Walton (1902–1983): Coronation Te Deum for choir, orchestra and organ (1952–1953)
- Hermann Schroeder (1904–1984): Te Deum opus 16 for mixed. Choir and organ or wind instruments (1932)
- Walter Kraft (1905–1977): Te Deum (?)
- Jean Langlais (1907–1991) Te Deum, 4 voix mixtes et orgue, trompette et timbales ad libitum (Pro Organo) (1973)
- Heinz Schubert (1908–1945) Hymn Concerto for soprano, tenor, organ and orchestra (1939) - the final part contains a setting of the Te Deum
- Harald Genzmer (1909–2007): Te Deum Laudamus for three trumpets, three timpani and organ (1997)
- Heinrich Sutermeister (1910–1995): Te Deum (1975)
- Percy Young (1912-2004): Festival Te Deum (1961)
- Benjamin Britten (1913–1976): Te Deum in C major without opus number (1934); Festival Te Deum opus 32 for mixed choir and organ (1944)
- Karl Michael Komma (1913–2012): Te Deum for organ
- Felicitas Kukuck (1914–2001): The Te Deum , cantata for wind instruments and choir (composed 1968. Stuttgart: Hänssler, 1961)
- Vincent Persichetti (1915–1987): Te Deum opus 93, for choir and orchestra (1963)
- Hans Posegga (1917–2002): Oratorio Te Deum Benediktoburanum (1981)
- Jeanne Demessieux (1921–1968): Te Deum , opus 11 (composed 1957/58. Paris: Durand, 1959)
- Ruth Zechlin (1926-2007): Te Deum (2001)
- Günter Gerlach (1928–2003): Te Deum , cycle for organ (1961)
- Heinrich Poos (1928-2020): Te Deum (1959)
- Petr Eben (1929–2007): Prague Te Deum 1989 (1989)
- Heinz Werner Zimmermann (* 1930): Te Deum , for soprano and baritone solo, mixed choir and orchestra (1998/2006)
- Dedicated to Józef Świder (1930–2014) Te Deum, Günter Graulich and the Motettenchor Stuttgart (2001)
- Xavier Benguerel (1931–2017): Te Deum for solos, choir and orchestra (1993)
- Krzysztof Penderecki (1933–2020): Te Deum for solos, choir and orchestra (1979/1980)
- Peter Janssens (1934–1998): Te Deum , in Elisabeth von Thuringia , 4th act (1984)
- Siegfried Matthus (* 1934): Te Deum for solos, choir and orchestra (2005) - Composed for the inauguration of the reconstructed Frauenkirche (Dresden) . World premiere by the Rundfunkchor Berlin in Dresden
- Walter Steffens (* 1934): Te Deum for Soprano, Alto, Tenore I, Tenore II, Basso. Commissioned composition for the 350th year of commemoration of the Peace of Westphalia (1997)
- Arvo Pärt (* 1935): Te Deum for three choirs, piano, strings and tape (1984–1992)
- Konrad Seckinger (1935–2015): Partita on 'Great God we praise you' for organ
- Colin Mawby (1936–2019): Te Deum (German premiere: 2009)
- Karl Jenkins (* 1944): Te Deum (2008) for choir and orchestra
- John Rutter (* 1945): Te Deum (1988) for choir and orchestra
- Pēteris Vasks (* 1946): Te Deum (1991) for organ
- Jan Sandström (* 1954): Te Deum for choir and orchestra (1996)
- Carlo Pedini (* 1956): Te Deum , composed between 1994 and 1999 for choir, children's voices, organ and orchestra
- Steve Dobrogosz (* 1956)
- Rihards Dubra (* 1964): Te Deum for six choirs and orchestra
- Ēriks Ešenvalds (* 1977): Trinity Te Deum (2012)
swell
- ↑ Reinhard Kade: The Dresden Kapellmeister Rogier Michael, approx. 1550-1619. In: Quarterly magazine for musicology. Fifth year, 1889, pp. 272–289, here: p. 287 ( digitized version ).
- ↑ a b German
- ↑ a b instrumental
- ↑ a b c d e f English
- ^ Franz Xaver Richter - Kemptener Te Deum in D major (1742) on YouTube
- ^ Johann Michael Haydn: Te Deum in C full score | Carus publishing house. Retrieved September 26, 2019 .