Totentanz (Distler)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Totentanz_(Distler) an entity of type: Thing

Die Motette „Totentanz“ op. 12, 2 des deutschen Komponisten Hugo Distler (1908–1942) entstand 1934 für den Totensonntag. Die für 4-stimmigen Chor a cappella gesetzte Komposition umfasst 14 gesungene Verse, zwischen denen 12 gesprochene Verse von Johannes Klöcking stehen. rdf:langString
Totentanz (Danse Macabre), Op. 12/2, is a composition of 14 motets by Hugo Distler which he composed in 1934 for Totensonntag. The work was inspired by the medieval Lübecker Totentanz. The music is interspersed with twelve spoken texts. The motets are scored for a four-part choir a cappella, while the texts can be recited by one or more speakers. The text for the sung parts is taken from the Baroque poem Der Cherubinische Wandersmann by Angelus Silesius. The spoken stanzas were written by Johannes Klöcking, a contemporary of Distler. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Totentanz (Distler)
rdf:langString Totentanz (Distler)
rdf:langString Totentanz
xsd:integer 62175719
xsd:integer 1095358237
xsd:integer 12
rdf:langString From the Lübecker Totentanz, which inspired the work
xsd:double 1.3
rdf:langString German
xsd:integer 14
xsd:date 1934-09-24
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Poems by Johannes Klöcking
rdf:langString From Der Cherubinische Wandersmann by Angelus Silesius
rdf:langString Motets
rdf:langString Die Motette „Totentanz“ op. 12, 2 des deutschen Komponisten Hugo Distler (1908–1942) entstand 1934 für den Totensonntag. Die für 4-stimmigen Chor a cappella gesetzte Komposition umfasst 14 gesungene Verse, zwischen denen 12 gesprochene Verse von Johannes Klöcking stehen.
rdf:langString Totentanz (Danse Macabre), Op. 12/2, is a composition of 14 motets by Hugo Distler which he composed in 1934 for Totensonntag. The work was inspired by the medieval Lübecker Totentanz. The music is interspersed with twelve spoken texts. The motets are scored for a four-part choir a cappella, while the texts can be recited by one or more speakers. The text for the sung parts is taken from the Baroque poem Der Cherubinische Wandersmann by Angelus Silesius. The spoken stanzas were written by Johannes Klöcking, a contemporary of Distler.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8789

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