Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox person Leonhard Lechner (also Leonard, Template:Circa 1553Template:Spnd9 September 1606) was a German composer, kapellmeister, tenor and music editor who was taught by Orlando de Lassus. He added Athesinus to his signature, referring to his origin in today's South Tyrol. His last positions were at the court of court of Stuttgart. He is regarded as a "leading German composer of choral music in the later 16th century".<ref name="Grove">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> While many of his works are lost, a Passion, many expressive songs, and a song cycle are extant. The complete works were published by Bärenreiter in 14 volumes.
LifeEdit
Lechner was born in South Tyrol in 1553.<ref name="Grove"/>
Lechner was originally Catholic but became a Protestant as an adult. As a boy, he sang in the Bayrische Kantorei in Landshut, led by Orlande de Lassus.<ref name="Heilige" /> It was a group of the Bavarian Hofkapelle (court chapel). He was regarded as Lassus' "most distinguished pupil and a great creative force in German music".<ref name="WBAI"/>
Lechner was probably in Italy during the 1570s. From 1575, he taught at a school in Nuremberg.<ref name="Heilige" /> He led an association of upper-class music lovers, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, which sponsored the publication of religious and secular works.<ref name="Heilige" /> He married a burgher's daughter in Nuremberg and his intent was to live there with his wife. From 1582, he was responsible for music in the town.<ref name="Heilige" />
In 1584, he was appointed as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} by Eitel Friedrich IV, Count of Hohenzollern in Hechingen. As the count supported the Counter-Reformation, Lechner left his employment after one year due to their religious differences. He then asked Louis III, Duke of Württemberg, for protection. Lechner became a tenor singer at the court of Stuttgart, later becoming a court composer and then a court {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, and church musician at the Stiftskirche.<ref name="Heilige" />
Lechner was ill for years.<ref name="WBAI">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He died on 9 September 1606 in Stuttgart.<ref name="Grove"/>
WorksEdit
Lechner published twelve part-song collections during the 1570s.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In 1593, he composed a Passion, Historia der Passion and Leidens unsers einigin Erlösers und Seligmachers Jesu Christi, in Württemberg. The 1593 work has five movements and is for a four-part mixed choir with a German text based on the four Gospels. Barely any of his compositions were printed during his lifetime. Some manuscripts are extant while many of his works are lost. His swan song was Deutsche Sprüche von Leben und Tod (German sentences of life and death).<ref name="WBAI"/>
His works have been published from the 1920s, including the Passion, the Deutsche Sprüche, and his setting of the Song of Songs.<ref name="Heilige" /> A complete edition of his extant works was commissioned by the Heinrich Schütz Society and completed in 14 volumes by Bärenreiter edited by Konrad Ameln.<ref name="Bärenreiter">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
ReceptionEdit
The Larousse Encyclopedia Of Music stated, "His music is remarkable for its dramatic power and emotional intensity, qualities particularly evident in the fifteen Deutsche Sprüche von Leben und Tod, which reveal his sure command of techniques ranging from fluent polyphony to chordal writing."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> John C. Hughes of The Choral Journal wrote, "Upon deeper investigation, one finds Lechner's Passion not only to be a well-constructed work of art ... but also a strong influence upon later contributions to the Passion genre."<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
He is listed as an ecumenical saint.<ref name="Heilige">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- Template:IMSLP
- Template:ChoralWiki
- Leonhard Lechner (in German) Bayerisches Musik-Lexikon Online
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- Lechner, Leonhard Deutsche Biographie
- Leonhard Lechner (1553–1606) (in German) kantorei.it
- John Charles Hughes: Leonhard Lechner's Passion (1593): cultural contexts, musical analysis, and historical implications (dissertation) iro.uiowa.edu Fall 2014