Music Before 1800: Vox Luminis

Program: #26-20🏆   Air Date: May 11, 2026

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The superb Belgian ensemble presented “A German Baroque Requiem” last season in the great New York early music series, which celebrated its 50th anniversary last year.

Music Before 1800 is the longest running early music concert series in New York City.

We have been presenting vocal and instrumental chamber music at Corpus Christi Church for over 50 years, with programs of sacred and secular music ranging from Medieval to early Classical.

Offering artists of the highest caliber, we present audience favorites as well as rising stars. Our artists, including New York’s finest ensembles, come from across the United States, Canada and Europe.

Our mission is to present programming by outstanding international, national and local early music groups in an acoustically and aesthetically superb setting.

MB1800 was founded in 1975 by Board President Louise Basbas. We have presented over 500 concerts across 50 seasons around New York City with artists from around the world.

For complete information: 

https://www.mb1800.org/

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Johannes Brahms drew texts from various Biblical sources for hisDeutsches Requiem. As we hear in his choral music, he had a passion for polyphony and was inspired by models from the great Lutheran tradition of the late Renaissance and the Baroque. Ricercar and Vox Luminis have explored this early repertoire with the same passion for many years now, although with no less admiration for Brahms’s masterpiece. It is no surprise that some of the texts that Brahms chose had already been set by his illustrious predecessors; it simply remained for us to trace a path through these earlier scores, so many meditations on death, and to assemble a very different Deutsches Requiem: one animated by the emotions of the Lutheran Baroque. Our new recording thus brings together motets the likes of Christian Geist, Johann Philipp Förtsch, Andreas Hammerschmidt and Johann Hermann Schein.

From Gramophone: Lionel Meunier and Ricercar producer Jérôme Lejeune were working together on Vox Luminis’s critically acclaimed recording of Schütz’s Musicalische Exequien (A/11; deservedly Gramophone’s Recording of the Year in 2012) when they observed enthusiastically that some of its elegiac verses correlate to texts in Brahms’s A German Requiem (1867). Moreover, the 19th-century composer certainly drew some of his inspiration from 17th-century Lutheran church music. For more than 10 years Meunier and Lejeune have gradually researched and devised an ingenious reversal of perspectives. They take the piecemeal scriptures from the Bible and the Apocrypha that Brahms abridged for use throughout his seven movements as the impetus for their own parallel programme of early German Baroque settings of the same (or similar) words for Vox Luminis’s ‘Ein deutsches Barockrequiem’.

The 19th-century choral warhorse is a starting point for ideas rather than a strictly binding template. Several of the chosen works set longer passages of Biblical texts than Brahms’s selective adaptations, and it was not possible to find suitable early musical settings of every verse. There are also a few departures from the Brahmsian model, most notably that Vox Luminis begin and end proceedings with contemplations on death and divine consolation using texts that do not feature in Ein deutsches Requiem, but which contain appropriately meditative music that mingles temporal sorrow and divine consolation. Andreas Scharmann’s Gedenke, Herr, wie es uns gehet (1663) is an exquisite setting of Lamentations 5:15 16 for solo voices, ripieno choir and five-part strings, and Andreas Hammerschmidt’s Ich hebe meine Augen auf zu den Bergen (1646) provides a solemnly gorgeous conversation between the mellifluous solo tenor Jacob Lawrence and responses from the 10-strong choir doubled by strings.

Otherwise, Vox Luminis perform motets and psalms on texts that follow the scheme of Brahms’s texts fairly closely. A brief introductory sinfonia for five-part strings by Thomas Selle leads directly into Johann Hermann Schein’s pensive setting of Selig sind die da geistlich arm sind (1626), a complete treatment of Christ’s Beatitudes (Brahms used only the second line, ‘Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted’); solo voices sing with immaculately contoured shading and unforced sweetness. Christian Geist’s Die mit Tränen säen (1673) is a substantial 11-minute setting of Psalm 126 mingled with a verse from the Wisdom of Solomon and additional poetry. Its long text is substantially different from the shortened lines preferred by Brahms: four soloists contribute short arias and ensembles in tandem with three violas da gamba and organ (there is a poignant solo by tenor Raphael Höhn), all performing with honeyed melancholy, and the rest of the assembled vocal group lend expressive weight in tutti passages.

No suitable Baroque settings of the texts in Brahms’s second movement could be found until the Leipzig Thomaskantor Tobias Michael’s madrigalian five-voice motet Die Erlöseten des Herren (1634). Sung by 10 voices supported by organ and violone, the final line observing that ‘sorrow and sighing shall flee away’ is performed with astonishing deftness. The three sections of Brahms’s third movement are represented almost word for word in the Darmstadt Kapellmeister Wolfgang Carl Briegel’s polyphonic setting of verses from the psalm Ach, Herr, lehre doch mich (1671), Hammerschmidt’s six-part Ach wie gar nichts sind alle Menschen (1646) and the Nuremberg cantor Heinrich Schwemmer’s Die Gerechten Seelen sind in Gottes Hand (1669); this features softly blissful playing by five-part strings in instrumental passages and also in dialogue with voices. Schein’s four-part choral setting of three verses in Psalm 84 (Wie lieblich sind deine Wohnungen, 1627) is an antecedent of Brahms’s paraphrase of slightly different verses in his fourth movement. However, no suitable compositions could be found to correspond to Brahms’s fifth movement, so instead Vox Luminis perform Schein’s funeral motet Ich will schweigen (1617) – the plaintive cries at its climax sung by all 12 voices with an extraordinary compound of polished precision and fulsome texture.

Hammerschmidt’s elaborate double-choir motet Der Tod ist verschlungen evokes the Resurrection and Day of Judgement, and culminates in the same two lines from 1 Corinthians that Brahms used to end his sixth movement; the building harmonic richness, modal piquancy and audibly separated exchanges between the two choirs for the recurring exclamations ‘Victoria, Alleluia’ resemble a gutsy take on Gabrieli – and it is thrilling to hear Vox Luminis pushing beyond their usual comfort zone of sublimity and really going for it. Brahms’s finale is a setting of Revelations 14:13 (‘Selig sind die Toten’), for which Vox Luminis perform a 13-minute sacred concerto by the Hamburg doctor and singer Johann Philipp Förtsch (c1700). This essentially tripartite cantata sounds halfway between late Buxtehude and early Bach, and features several short arias sung mesmerisingly by soprano Viola Blache, countertenor Alexander Chance and bass Sebastian Myrus; the fluidity of interplay between five solo voices, ripieno choir and string ensemble (violins, viols and violone) has almost unworldly refinement. Throughout this meticulously plotted alternative perspective on mostly familiar texts, Vox Luminis’s squad of up to 15 voices sing with the utmost sincerity of expression. Even so, special praise must be given to the manifold responsiveness of the string players and Bart Jacobs’s intelligent organ continuo realisations.

1 Gedenke, Herr, Wie Es Uns Gehet

Composed By – Andreas Scharmann
5:21
2 Sinfonia Und Da Der Sabbath Vergangen War

Composed By – Thomas Selle
0:39
3 Selig Sind Die Da Geistlich Arm Sind

Composed By – Johann Hermann Schein
7:25
4 Die Mit Tränen Säen

Composed By – Christian Geist
11:18
5 Die Erlöseten Des Herren

Composed By – Tobias Michael (3)
3:05
6 Ach, Herr, Lehre Doch Mich

Composed By – Wolfgang Carl Briegel
5:00
7 Ach Wie Gar Nichts Sind Alle Menschen

Composed By – Andreas Hammerschmidt
4:35
8 Die Gerechten Seelen Sind In Gottes Hand

Composed By – Heinrich Schwemmer
6:51
9 Wie Lieblich Sind Deine Wohnungen

Composed By – Johann Hermann Schein
3:58
10 Ich Will Schweigen

Composed By – Johann Hermann Schein
5:06
11 Der Tod Ist Verschlungen

Composed By – Andreas Hammerschmidt
6:01
12 Selig Sind Die Toten

Composed By – Johann Philipp Förtsch
12:48
13 Ich Hebe Meine Augen Auf Zu Den Bergen

Composed By – Andreas Hammerschmidt
6:48