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Stabat Mater (Haydn)

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1767 musical work by Joseph Haydn
Stabat Mater
byJoseph Haydn
Portrait of Haydn, 1770
CatalogueHob. XXa:1
TextStabat Mater
LanguageLatin
Composed1767 (1767)
Performed17 March 1767 (1767-03-17)
Movements13
Vocalsoprano,alto,tenor andbass soloists and choir
Instrumental

Joseph Haydn'sStabat Mater,Hob. XXa:1, is a setting of theStabat Mater sequence, written in 1767 for soloists, mixed choir and an orchestra ofoboes,strings and continuo. The first performance is believed to have taken place on 17 March 1767 at theEsterhazy court. A performance in Vienna the following year began a wide distribution. His setting is regarded as an important one among around 600, along with the earlierby Pergolesi and the later compositionsby Rossini andby Dvořák.[1]

History

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Cupola of the palace chapel,Assumption of Mary

Joseph Haydn achieved sole leadership of the music at the court ofEszterháza in 1966, where had already been responsible for chamber music and musical theatre.[2] He had already served for six years, underGregor Joseph Werner, and had composed for the court 15symphonies and two operas. When he became responsible also for sacred music, which Werner had reserved for himself until his death,[1] he set theStabat Mater sequence as his first major sacred composition, completing it in 1767.[2] While the autograph score is lost, a 1778 letter refers to the work. The first performance was probably onGood Friday that year, on 17 March 1767, at the palace chapel as part of the regular oratorio performance.[2]

The letter also refers to a performance in Vienna in 1768; Haydn had sent the score forJohann Adolph Hasse, who praised the music and organised the performance. Haydn applied for a leave of three days for himself and three musicians around Good Friday, and possibly the four took part in the performance at theChurch of St. John of God Brothers [de] which began the circulation of the work.[2]

1724 engraving of the Piarist Church while under construction

The first public performance was also in Vienna, on Good Friday 1771 at thePiarist Church. According to the church's chronicle, Haydn conducted an ensemble of 60 musicians. His work spread to churches and concert halls. 180 copies are extant.[2] Haydn called the work an oratorio in 1805.[1]

For a performance in 1803, Haydn's pupilSigismund von Neukomm composed additional parts for flute, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets and timpani. Haydn offered this version to the publisherGottfried Christoph Härtel, but it is not regarded as authentic.[1]

Structure and scoring

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Haydn divided the text into 14 movements:[2]

  1. Stabat Mater dolorosa, Largo,G minor,common time
  2. O quam tristis et afflicta, Larghetto AffettuosoE-flat major, 3/8
  3. Quis est homo qui non fleret, Lento,C minor, common time
  4. Quis non posset contristari, Moderato,F major, common time
  5. Pro peccatis suae gentis, Allegro ma non troppo,B-flat major, common time
  6. Vidit suum dulcem natum, Lento e mesto,F minor, common time
  7. Eja Mater, fons amoris, Allegretto,D minor, 3/8
  8. Sancta Mater, istud agas, Larghetto, B-flat major, 2/4
  9. Fac me vere tecum flere, Lagrimoso, G minor, common time
  10. Virgo virginum praeclara, Andante, E-flat major, 3/4
  11. Flammis orci ne succendar, Presto, C minor, common time
  12. Fac me cruce custodiri, Moderato,C major, common time
  13. Quando corpus morietur, Largo assai, G minor, common time
  14. Paradisi gloria,G major,cut time

He scored it forsoprano,alto,tenor andbass soloists, mixed choir, twooboes both doublingEnglish horn in the sections inE-flat major, strings and organ continuo.[2] Conductor Jonathan Green suggests adding abassoon to double the bass line and perhaps just one player to each string part.[3]

Haydn's scoring is rich compared with earlier settings of the sequence, such as Pergolesi's examplary settingsetting for two solo voices and a church trio of two violins and basso continuo. Haydn followed Pergolesi's model in a "Neapolitan" cantability and in phrasing the text.[2]

Reactions

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Pergolesi'sStabat Mater was already popular when Haydn composed his. Haydn used it as a model in some details, such as the "Vidit suum". According to Heartz, it emulates "Pergolesi in its melodic traits, rhythmic quirks, and thin texture. Haydn, likeTraetta, even adapted a feature of Pergolesi's text setting, the breaking up with rests of 'dum e-mi-sit spiritum' in order to convey the last gasps of the dying Christ."[4] Heartz continued: "Hasse was greatly impressed with Haydn's Stabat mater, which must have seemed to him an added vindication of the Neapolitan style [of Pergolesi] that he more than anyone else had brought to flower in central Europe."[5] According to Haydn himself, four performances in Paris were very successful.[6]

Haydn's Stabat Mater is considered suitable for a penitentialGood Friday program.[7]

Recordings

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References

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  1. ^abcdJoseph Haydn 2025.
  2. ^abcdefghHarasim 2017.
  3. ^p. 4 (2002) Green
  4. ^p. 306 (1995) Heartz
  5. ^p. 307 (1995) Heartz
  6. ^p. 36 (2006) Webster
  7. ^p. 4 (2002) Green

Cited sources

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  • Harasim, Clemens (March 2017)."Stabat Mater"(PDF).Carus-Verlag. pp. V–VI. Retrieved18 August 2024.
  • "Haydn / 5 Oratoriae: Stabat Mater".joseph-haydn.art. 2025. Retrieved10 September 2025.
  • Green (2002) Jonathan D. New YorkA Conductor's Guide to Choral-Orchestral Works, Classical Period: Volume 1: Haydn and Mozart Scarecrow Press
  • Heartz (1995) Daniel. New York.Haydn, Mozart, and the Viennese School: 1740 — 1780 W. W. Norton & Co.
  • Hugues (1974) Rosemary. London.Haydn. J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd
  • Schenbeck (1996) Lawrence. Chapel Hill, North CarolinaJoseph Haydn and the Classical Choral Tradition Hinshaw Music
  • Webster (2006) James. Cambridge "Haydn's sacred vocal music and the aesthetics of salvation" Sutcliffe (editor) W. DeanHaydn Studies Cambridge University Press

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