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Morten Johannes Lauridsen III [1] (born February 27, 1943) is an American composer and teacher. A National Medal of Arts recipient (2007), [2] he was composer-in-residence of the Los Angeles Master Chorale from 1994 to 2001, [3] and is professor emeritus of composition at the USC Thornton School of Music, where he taught for fifty-two years until his retirement in 2019.
Morten Lauridsen's Grammy-nominated Lux Aeterna, Les Chansons des Roses, Ave Maria, Mid-Winter Songs and O Magnum Mysterium (RCM) Dominic Argento's Te Deum and Maurice Duruflé's Missa 'Cum Jubilo ', with Rodney Gilfry, baritone, and Frederick Swann, organ (RCM)) Christmas, a collection of songs (RCM)
Morten Lauridsen's on YouTube sung by the Choir of King's College, Cambridge Tomás Luis de Victoria 's O magnum mysterium on YouTube sung by l'Académie Vocale de Paris Cristóbal de Morales 's O magnum mysterium on YouTube sung by Musica Secreta
The Ave Maria (Hail Mary) is a traditional Christian prayer addressing Mary, mother of Jesus. ... "Ave Maria", a choral setting by Morten Lauridsen (1997)
The New York premiere was hosted by Distinguished Concerts International New York on March 30, 2012, introduced by composer/conductor Eric Whitacre and attended by Lauridsen, followed by a Lincoln Center performance of Lux Aeterna and Carnegie Hall performances of Sure On This Shining Night and Dirait-on, conducted by Whitacre and accompanied ...
Lux Aeterna by Morten Lauridsen (also featuring other Lauridsen works: Chansons des Roses, Ave Maria, Mid-Winter Songs, and O Magnum mMsterium) (RCM) Grammy Nomination for Best Choral Performance, 1998. Dominic Argento's Te Deum and Missa "Cum Jubilo" by Maurice Duruflé (with Rodney Gilfry as baritone soloist and Frederick Swann on organ (RCM))
O magnum mysterium (O great mystery) is a motet for choir a cappella by Morten Lauridsen. He set the text of "O magnum mysterium", a Gregorian chant for Christmas, in 1994. The composition, performed and recorded often, made Lauridsen famous. It was described as expressive ethereal sounds in imperturbable calmness. [1]
Morten Lauridsen (Ave Dulcissima Maria) Sir John Tavener (Awed by the Beauty) Stephen Paulus (Shall I Compare Thee) Dominick Argento (Apollo in Cambridge) Carol Barnett (One Equal Music) Frank Ferko (O Coruscans Lux Stellarum) Charles Fussell (A Walt Whitman Sampler) Tarik O'Regan (Se Lamentar Augelli) P.D.Q. Bach (A Veritable Paean of Praise)