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Benjamin Britten's Jubilate Deo is a sacred choral setting of Psalm 100 in English, written in 1961 for St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, "at the request of H.R.H. The Duke of Edinburgh". [1] Britten scored the joyful music in C major for four-part choir and organ. A late companion piece to his 1934 Te Deum in C, it is also known as his ...
Jubilate Deo is a small hymnal of Gregorian chant in the Latin Rite of the Catholic Church, produced after the liturgical reforms of Vatican II. It contains a selection of chants used in the Mass and various liturgies (e.g. Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament ), as well as Marian antiphons and seasonal hymns.
Fuit homo missus a Deo. Erat Joannes in deserto (3) Gaude Barbara beata. Gaude quia meruisti (2) Gaude gloriosa (4) Guttur tuum sicut* (4) Hic est discipulus ille (1) Hodie nata est beata Virgo (1) Homo quidam fuit (2) Inclytae sanctae virginis Catherinae (3) In illo tempore egressus (2) Introduxit me rex in cellam* (4) Jubilate Deo, omnis terra.
Utrecht Te Deum and Jubilate is the common name for a sacred choral composition in two parts, written by George Frideric Handel to celebrate the Treaty of Utrecht, which established the Peace of Utrecht in 1713, ending the War of the Spanish Succession. He composed a Te Deum, HWV 278, and a Jubilate Deo , HWV 279. The combination of the two ...
Psalm 100 was one of the fixed psalms in the older Anglican liturgy for office of lauds on Sundays, and the Prayer Book translation given by Driver (with an added Gloria) is a part of the order of morning prayer in the Book of Common Prayer under the title Jubilate Deo, or just Jubilate. [39]
Five Flower Songs, Op. 47, for SATB (1950) Hymn to St Peter, Op. 56a, for treble soloist, SATB and organ (1955) Antiphon, Op. 56b, for SATB and organ, (1955) Missa Brevis, Op. 63, for boys' voices and organ (1959) Jubilate Deo for chorus and organ (1961) Fancie, for unison voices and piano (1961) A Hymn of St Columba for chorus and organ (1962)
It has four sections: Exsultate jubilate – Allegro ()Fulget amica dies – Secco recitative Tu virginum corona – Andante ()Alleluja – Allegro (F major) Musicologist Stanley Sadie called the final section, "Alleluia", "a jewel of a piece with its high spirits and its wit ... like no other piece of Mozart's; its music speaks unmistakably of his relaxed high spirits at the time he wrote it ...
Omnes gentes, pláudite mánibus: * jubiláte Deo in voce exsultatiónis. Quóniam Dóminus excélsus, terríbilis: * Rex magnus super omnem terram. Subjécit pópulos nobis: * et gentes sub pédibus nostris. Elégit nobis hereditátem suam: * spéciem Jacob, quam diléxit. Ascéndit Deus in júbilo: * et Dóminus in voce tubæ.