While listening to Joseph Haydn's Missa Brevis on TTN I was struck by the question as the familiar parts of the Mass whizzed by.
As a non-believer I greatly enjoy the Masses of Baroque and Classical composers, as well as enjoying Janacek's gloriously humanistic Glagolitic Mass, and Brahms's German Requiem which seems to straddle the religious and the humanistic.
I mean no disrespect by my question, nor by the above remarks. I am curious whether baroque and classical composers were expected to write a Mass that would take an expected length. Haydn wrote several wonderful longer Masses but gets this Missa Brevis done in under 17 minutes. As far as I could tell this was accomplished by lines of text being sung only once, rather than the more usual repeats.
As a non-believer I greatly enjoy the Masses of Baroque and Classical composers, as well as enjoying Janacek's gloriously humanistic Glagolitic Mass, and Brahms's German Requiem which seems to straddle the religious and the humanistic.
I mean no disrespect by my question, nor by the above remarks. I am curious whether baroque and classical composers were expected to write a Mass that would take an expected length. Haydn wrote several wonderful longer Masses but gets this Missa Brevis done in under 17 minutes. As far as I could tell this was accomplished by lines of text being sung only once, rather than the more usual repeats.
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