Six Motets, Op. 82 (Kiel)


Six Motets, Op. 82, are six motets for choir a cappella by Friedrich Kiel. He set selected psalm verses in German. The motets were published in 1883 by Bote & Bock, dedicated to H. A. Köstlin, as Sechs Motetten für gemischten Chor a cappella.

History

Kiel composed the six motets for choir a cappella in 1883, setting psalm verses in German. In Berlin, he had been called by Joseph Joachim to teach composition at the new Königlich Akademische Hochschule für ausübende Tonkunst in 1869, and was appointed director of the composition class and member of the board of five directors in 1882. In a contemporary book The History of Music by, he was hailed as excelling in sacred music, especially in counterpoint. In the winter of 1880/81, Kiel suffered from a life-threatening disease which kept him away from work for weeks.
Kiel dedicated the motets to his friend Heinrich Adolf Köstlin, a Protestant minister whose mother, Josefine Lang, was a composer of songs. The motets were published in 1883 by Bote & Bock, as Sechs Motetten für gemischten Chor a cappella. They were also published by Schott Music. Two of the motets were published by Carus-Verlag in 2004.

Structure and text

In the motets, Kiel set selected verses from Psalms. The works were first printed in two parts, numbers 1 to 4 in Heft 1, the other two in Heft 2.
The following table shows the incipit, the English translation according to the King James Version, the psalm from which verses were selected, the verses in the Bible which Kiel used, and the verses if different in the KJV.
IncipitTranslation for massPsalmVersesVerses in KJV
Und ob ich schon wanderte im finstern ThalYea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of deathPsalm 234
Siehe, wie fein und lieblich ist esBehold, how good and how pleasant it isPsalm 1331, 3
Wie lieblich sind deine WohnungenHow amiable are thy tabernaclesPsalm 842, 31, 2
Aus der Tiefe rufe ichOut of the depths have I criedPsalm 1301–4
Die mit Tränen säenThey that sow in tearsPsalm 1265–6 or 5
Herr, wie lange willst du meiner so gar vergessenHow long wilt thou forget me, O LORD?Psalm 132–41–3

The first motet is a setting of verse 4 from Psalm 23 : "Und ob ich schon wanderte im finstern Thal". The motet is in F major, common time, and marked Andante con moto. The second motet sets the first and last verses from Psalm 133, "Siehe, wie fein und lieblich ist es". The motet is in D major, common time, and marked Moderato. For the third motet, Kiel chose the beginning of Psalm 84, "Wie lieblich sind deine Wohnungen", which Johannes Brahms had used for the central movement of Ein deutsches Requiem. Kiel set it in G major, 6/4-time, and marked Allegretto con moto. In the fourth motet, Kiel set the beginning of Psalm 130, "Aus der Tiefe rufe ich", in C minor, common time, and marked Moderato.
For the fifth motet, Kiel chose two verses from Psalm 126, "Die mit Tränen säen", words that Brahms had set in the first movement of his Requiem. The motet is in A-flat major, 6/4-time, and marked Larghetto con moto. The text of the sixth motet is taken from Psalm 13, "Herr, wie lange willst du meiner so gar vergessen". The first part is in B-flat minor, the second part, "Schau doch und erhöre mich", in D-flat major. In the first and last of the motets, the soprano is divided.

Recording

The motets were recorded in 1991 by the choir of Berlin's St. Hedwig's Cathedral, conducted by Roland Bader, together with Kiel's Der Stern von Bethlehem, Op. 83.

Cited sources

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