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Sheet music $9.95

Original

Deus noster refugium. Jean-Philippe Rameau. Voice sheet music. Choir sheet music. Double Bass sheet music. Piano and Keyboard sheet music.

Translation

Deus noster refugium. Jean-Philippe Rameau. Voice sheet music. Choir sheet music. Double Bass sheet music. Piano and Keyboard sheet music.

Original

Deus noster refugium composed by Jean-Philippe Rameau. 1683-1764. Edited by Jean-Paul C. Montagnier. For SST. TTB vocal soli, ST. TB choir, 2 flute, 2 oboe, 2 violin, 2 viola, cello. contra bass, basso continuo. French Sacred Music. Psalms. Basso continuo part. Language. Latin. 16 pages. Duration 26 minutes. Published by Carus Verlag. CA.2100714. With Language. Latin. Psalms. The three grands motets, Quam dilecta, In convertendo and Deus noster refugium, which Jean-Philippe Rameau composed from 1713 to 1715 are still relatively unknown today. Yet these masterworks can stand comparison to the best works of Michel-Richard de Lalande. They are testimony to Rameau's great contrapuntal mastery and contain beautiful lyrical passages. Quam dilecta and Deus noster refugium have survived only in later sources which originated in about 1770, after Rameau's death, and the works have been rendered in a scoring which does not correspond to his intentions. The present new edition attempts for the first time to reconstruct them as closely as possible to their original form. The edition of In convertendo is based on Rameau's autograph score from 1751.

Translation

Deus noster refugium composed by Jean-Philippe Rameau. 1683-1764. Edited by Jean-Paul C. Montagnier. For SST. TTB vocal alone, ST. TB choir, 2 flute, 2 oboe, 2 violin, 2 viola, cello. contra bass, continuo. French Sacred Music. Psalms. Basso continuo part. Language. Latin. 16 pages. Duration 26 minutes. Published by Carus Verlag. CA.2100714. With Language. Latin. Psalms. The three grands motets, Quam dilecta, In convertendo and Deus noster refugium, which Jean-Philippe Rameau composed from 1713 to 1715 are still relatively unknown today. Yet these masterworks can stand comparison to the best works of Michel-Richard de Lalande. They are testimony to Rameau's great contrapuntal mastery and contain beautiful lyrical passages. Quam dilecta and Deus noster refugium have survived only in later sources which originated in about 1770, after Rameau's death, and the works have been rendered in a scoring which does not correspond to his intentions. The present new edition attempts for the first time to reconstruct them as closely as possible to their original form. The edition of In convertendo is based on Rameau's autograph score from 1751.