VIOLIN - FIDDLEZachow, Friedrich Wilhelm
Choral Prelude: "Aus tiefer Not laßt uns zu Gott" for String Quartet
Zachow, Friedrich Wilhelm - Choral Prelude: "Aus tiefer Not laßt uns zu Gott" for String Quartet
LV 27
String Quartet
ViewPDF : Choral Prelude: "Aus tiefer Not laßt uns zu Gott" (LV 27) for String Quartet (3 pages - 90.14 Ko)82x
MP3 : Choral Prelude: "Aus tiefer Not laßt uns zu Gott" (LV 27) for String Quartet 18x 218x
MP3
Vidéo :
Composer :
Friedrich Wilhelm  Zachow
Zachow, Friedrich Wilhelm (1663 - 1712)
Instrumentation :

String Quartet

Style :

Baroque

Arranger :
Publisher :
MAGATAGAN, MICHAEL (1960 - )
Copyright :Public Domain
Added by magataganm, 24 Apr 2019

Friedrich Wilhelm Zachow or Zachau (1663, – 1712) was a German musician and composer of vocal and keyboard music.

Zachow probably received his training from his father, the piper Heinrich Zachow, one of Leipzig's town musicians in the Alta capella, and maybe from Johann Schelle, a leading German composer, when the family moved to Eilenburg. As Kantor and organist of Halle's Market Church in 1684 he succeeded Samuel Ebart. During his time at Halle he became particularly renowned as a composer of dramatic cantatas. In 1695 he was criticized by the pietists because of his excessive long and elaborate music, that could be only appreciated by cantors and organists. Zachow was influenced by Johann Theile in Merseburg and the poetry of Erdmann Neumeister, pastor in the nearby Weissenfels, and his criticism on pietism.

Zachow was the teacher of Gottfried Kirchhoff, Johann Philipp Krieger and Johann Gotthilf Ziegler, but is best remembered as George Frideric Handel's first music teacher. He taught Handel how to play the violin, organ, harpsichord, and oboe as well as counterpoint. Zachow's teaching was so effective, that in 1702 at the age of seventeen, Handel accepted a position as organist at the former Dom in Halle. It is said that after Zachow died in 1712, Handel became a benefactor to his widow and children in gratitude for his teacher's instruction. In 1713 J.S. Bach was invited as Zachow's successor.

Handel continued to use Zachow's compositions in his own works, not simply quoting, but also in terms of instrumental colour; for example the cantata Herr, wenn ich nur dich habe, which is unique in having a harp solo in the German cantata repertoire, was copied by Handel, taken to London, and may have influenced the instrumentation of Saul and Esther.

"Aus tiefer Not schrei ich zu dir" (From deep affliction I cry out to you), originally "Aus tieffer not schrey ich zu dir", later also "Aus tiefer Noth schrei' ich zu dir", is a Lutheran hymn of 1524, with words written by Martin Luther as a paraphrase of Psalm 130. It was first published in 1524 as one of eight songs in the first Lutheran hymnal, the Achtliederbuch, which contained four songs by Luther, three by Paul Speratus, and one by Justus Jonas, and also appeared the same year in the Erfurt Enchiridion. It is part of many hymnals, also in translations. The text inspired vocal and organ music from the Renaissance to contemporary, including composers such as Johann Sebastian Bach, who based a chorale cantata on it, Felix Mendelssohn and Max Reger. .

Source: Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aus_tiefer_Not_schrei_ic h_zu_dir ).

Although originally created for Pipe Organ, I created this Arrangement of the Choral Prelude: "Aus tiefer Not laßt uns zu Gott" ("from deep affliction I cry out to you" LV 27) for String Quartet (2 Violins, Viola & Cello).
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