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Laudate Dominum (MOZART), K339 for Soprano Solo with SATB choir and piano accompaniment, arr. by Pamela Webb Tubbs
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Laudate Dominum (MOZART), K339 for Soprano Solo with SATB choir and piano accompaniment, arr. by Pamela Webb Tubbs
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You are purchasing high quality sheet music PDF files suitable for printing or viewing on digital devices.Here is the lovely "Laudate Dominum," scored for Soprano solo and SATB chorus with piano accompaniment. This is the fifth movement of "Vesperae solemmes de confessore" (K 339), a sacred work Mozart composed in 1779. Originally scored for SATB soloists, SATB choir, violin I, violin II, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones colla parte, 2 timpani, and basso continuo (bassoon and organ), it was composed for liturgical use in the Salzburg Cathedral. Mozart departs from the structure of K. 321 in this movement: his earlier Laudate Dominum setting is a highly melismatic soprano solo, with no choral interlude. In K. 339, the soprano solo is much simpler; the choir quietly enters at the conclusion of the psalm with the Gloria Patri, and the soloist rejoins them at the Amen. This movement is well-known outside the context of the larger work, and is often performed in isolation. Mozart did not name his work "Vesperae solemmes de confessore;" this title was added by a later hand to his manuscript. It suggests that the work was intended for vespers held on a specific day on the liturgical calendar of saints ("confessors"); however, the saint in question has not been conclusively established. This was Mozart’s final choral work composed for Salzburg Cathedral. [Source: Wikipedia]