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Sheet music $26.75

Original

Ich liege und schlafe. Nicolaus Bruhns. Voice sheet music. Bassoon sheet music. Choir sheet music. Double Bass sheet music. Harpsichord sheet music. Organ Accompaniment sheet music.

Translation

I lie down and sleep. Nicolaus Bruhns. Voice sheet music. Bassoon sheet music. Choir sheet music. Double Bass sheet music. Harpsichord sheet music. Organ Accompaniment sheet music.

Original

Ich liege und schlafe composed by Nicolaus Bruhns. 1665-1697. Edited by Fritz Stein. For SATB Vocal Soli, SATB Chorus, 2 Violin, 2 Viola, Cello. Contrabass. Bassoon, Organ. Harpsichord. Text Language. German. Choral. Full score. Text Language. German. Published by Edition Peters. PE.P05833. With Text Language. German. Choral. Nicolaus Bruhns was born in Advent of 1665, in Schwabstedt, Germany. He studied organ and composition with Dieterich Buxtehude, who considered him to be among the very best of his students. According to Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Johann Sebastian greatly admired Bruhns' work. With the assistance of Buxtehude, Bruhns secured a post as violinist and composer at the court in Copenhagen, and in 1689 became the town organist in Husum, Germany. Of him, Johann Mattheson wrote. 'Sometimes he took his violin up to the organ loft and played with such skill that it sounded like two, three, or more instruments at once. Thus he would realize the upper parts on the violin while his feet played an appropriate bass on the pedals. ' Nicolaus Bruhns died, tragically young, in Husum, on March 29th, 1697. Full score.

Translation

I lie down and sleep composed by Nicolaus Bruhns. 1665-1697. Edited by Fritz Stein. For SATB Vocal Soloists, SATB Chorus, 2 Violin, Viola 2, Cello. Contrabass. Bassoon, Organ. Harpsichord. Text Language. German. Choral. Full score. Text Language. German. Published by Edition Peters. PE.P05833. With Text Language. German. Choral. Nicolaus Bruhns was born in Advent of 1665, in Schwabstedt, Germany. He studied organ and composition with Dieterich Buxtehude, who considered him to be among the very best of his students. According to Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Johann Sebastian greatly admired Bruhns' work. With the assistance of Buxtehude, Bruhns secured a post as violinist and composer at the court in Copenhagen, and in 1689 became the town organist in Husum, Germany. Of him, Johann Mattheson wrote. 'Sometimes he took his violin up to the organ loft and played with such skill that it sounded like two, three, or more instruments at once. Thus he would realize the upper parts on the violin while his feet played an appropriate bass on the pedals. ' Nicolaus Bruhns died, tragically young, in Husum, on March 29th, 1697. Full score.