Attende Domine: Difference between revisions
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==Settings by composers== | ==Settings by composers== | ||
*[[Attende Domine (Gregorian chant)| Gregorian chant]] | *[[Attende Domine (Gregorian chant)|Gregorian chant]] | ||
*[[Attende Domine (Carlotta Ferrari)| Carlotta Ferrari]] refrain only | *[[Attende Domine (Christoph Dalitz)|Christoph Dalitz]] two equal voices, refrain only | ||
*[[Attende Domine (Tyler Rusco)| Tyler Rusco]] S/ATB | *[[Attende Domine (Carlotta Ferrari)|Carlotta Ferrari]] refrain only | ||
*[[Attende Domine (Tyler Rusco)|Tyler Rusco]] S/ATB | |||
*[[Attende, Domine (Catuí Côrte-Real Suarez)|Catuí Côrte-Real Suarez]] ATB | *[[Attende, Domine (Catuí Côrte-Real Suarez)|Catuí Côrte-Real Suarez]] ATB | ||
{{TextAutoList}} | {{TextAutoList}} |
Revision as of 12:35, 11 January 2021
General information
Attende Domine is a Christian liturgical chant for the season of Lent, referred to in English as the Lent Prose. The themes of this hymn are the sinfulness of man and the mercy of God, a theological concept emphasised during Lent. The text is Mozarabic in origin and dates to the 10th century.
View the Wikipedia article on Attende Domine.
Settings by composers
- Gregorian chant
- Christoph Dalitz two equal voices, refrain only
- Carlotta Ferrari refrain only
- Tyler Rusco S/ATB
- Catuí Côrte-Real Suarez ATB
Other settings possibly not included in the manual list above
- Richard Morris — Attende Domine
- Catuí Côrte-Real Suarez — Attende Domine
Text and translations
Latin text (Refrain) Atténde Dómine, et miserére, |
English translation Hearken, O Lord, have mercy upon us; |