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Sheet music $3.95

Original

My heart in God rejoices. Johann Hermann Schein. Choir sheet music.

Translation

My heart in God rejoices. Johann Hermann Schein. Choir sheet music.

Original

My heart in God rejoices. aus. Israelsbrunnlein. Geistliche Madrigale. Composed by Johann Hermann Schein. 1586-1630. Edited by Gunter Graulich. Arranged by Paul Horn. For SSATB choir. A-Moll. A minor. German title. Ich freue mich im Herren. Madrigals, German Psalms, Peace and justice, Praise and thanks, Psalms. Level 3. Full score. Language. German. English. Composed 1623. No. 14. 8 pages. Duration 4 minutes. Published by Carus Verlag. CA.181400. ISBN M-007-03890-8. With Language. German. English. Madrigals, German Psalms, Peace and justice, Praise and thanks, Psalms. Johann Hermann Schein's Israelsbrunnlein, published in Leipzig in 1623, is a supreme achievement not only among the works of this composer, who had been Thomaskantor in Leipzig since 1616, but also for the entire body of German music written during the first half of the 17th century. Among the 26 motets written "in the Italian madrigal manner" 23 are settings of Old Testament texts, a fact to which the collection owes its title. The source for the text of this collection is the "inexhaustible fountain" of the Psalms, the books of Moses, the Prophets, the Songs of Solomon, and other books of the Old Testament.

Translation

My heart in God rejoices. from. Israelsbrunnlein. Spiritual Madrigals. Composed by Johann Hermann Schein. 1586-1630. Edited by Gunter Graulich. Arranged by Paul Horn. For SSATB choir. A-Moll. A minor. German title. I look forward in the men. Madrigals, German Psalms, Peace and justice, Praise and thanks, Psalms. Level 3. Full score. Language. German. English. Composed 1623. No. 14. 8 pages. Duration 4 minutes. Published by Carus Verlag. CA.181400. ISBN M-007-03890-8. With Language. German. English. Madrigals, German Psalms, Peace and justice, Praise and thanks, Psalms. Johann Hermann Schein's Israelsbrunnlein, published in Leipzig in 1623, is a supreme achievement not only among the works of this composer, who had been Thomaskantor in Leipzig since 1616, but also for the entire body of German music written during the first half of the 17th century. Among the 26 motets written "in the Italian madrigal manner" 23 are settings of Old Testament texts, a fact to which the collection owes its title. The source for the text of this collection is the "inexhaustible fountain" of the Psalms, the books of Moses, the Prophets, the Songs of Solomon, and other books of the Old Testament.