Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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There isn't much chamber music, but his only string quintet is a master work in its own right - not unjustly called a symphony for 5 strings.
His choral works - Masses [the numbered ones 1-3 that is], Te Deum, Psalm 150 i.a.- are great and important works too, especially the Te Deum (of which Bruckner jokingly said it should be used as finale of the 9th in case he wouldn't be able to complete no.9) and the Mass in f-minor (no.3). There are quotes from the symphonies to be discovered in the Masses, and vice versa btw.
For the Requiem and the Mass-settings without a number [Missa solemnis in b flat minor, Mass in A, Kronstorfer Mass] these are "youth works", as there are the settings of Psalms 112 and 114, which show a kind of "pre-symphonic" Bruckner. Interesting, but uncharacteristic. Hyperion offers the Requiem and these Psalms on one CD.
Characteristic for Bruckner the church musician however are his Motets. Especially the ones recorded by Jochum are an excellent entry into this part of B's output: Afferentur Regi, Ave Maria, Christus factus est, Ecce sacerdos, Locus Iste, Os justi, Pange Lingua, Tota pulchra es Maria, Vexilla Regis and Virga Jesse. There are some 30 odd others, but all or a selection of these ten are found in approximately every collection of Motet recordings.
And there is one big advantage: any of the Motets last only a couple of minutes, the Te Deum just over 25 minutes, in case you don't have much time to explore
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