Iste confessor: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
{{Middle}} | {{Middle}} | ||
'''sacratus''' | '''sacratus''' | ||
*Anonymous | |||
**[[Iste confessor (Anonymous)|I]] STT (2 settings; v.1 only) | |||
**[[Iste confessor II (Anonymous)|II]] STT (v.1 only) | |||
**[[Iste confessor III (Anonymous)|III]] ATT (v.1 only) | |||
*[[Iste confessor (Heinrich Finck)|Heinrich Finck]] SATB (v.1 only) | |||
*[[Claudio Monteverdi]] | |||
**[[Iste confessor I (Claudio Monteverdi)|I]] T solo (odd verses) | |||
**[[Iste confessor, SV 279 (Claudio Monteverdi)|SV 279]] SS (odd verses) | |||
*[[Iste confessor (Alessandro Scarlatti)|Alessandro Scarlatti]] SATB & S solo | |||
*[[Iste confessor (Tomás Luis de Victoria)|Tomás Luis de Victoria]] SATB (Alternatim, even verses) | |||
{{Bottom}} | {{Bottom}} | ||
Revision as of 10:25, 29 July 2013
Iste confessor is the Vesper hymn for Confessor Bishops, tracable to the 10th century and possibly originally composed in honor of St. Martin<ref>Hymns of the Breviary and Missal by Matthew Britt, Benziger Brothers, 1922</ref>. There are two variants, Iste confessor Domini sacratus and, in the Liber Usualis, "Iste confessor Domini colentes ". Alternatim settings usually begin with the second verse, "Qui pius, prudens"
Settings by composers
colentes
|
sacratus
|
Organ verses have been written by Frescobaldi (Tocate), Titelouse & others.
Original text and Translations
Latin text 1. Iste Confessor Domini colentes |
English translation 1. He, whose confession God of old accepted, Another English Translation 1. THIS the Confessor of the Lord, whose triumph |
External links
- List of English paraphrases at Hymnary.org
- Common of Bishop Confessor at www.breviary.net