It is not known what occasion prompted Bruckner to compose this large-scale work or whether there was any performance in Bruckner's lifetime. The composition was presumably initiated during the St. Florian period and completed in in Linz, when Bruckner was studying with Simon Sechter.
When it was written, for whom, and why it was allowed to languish unperformed are all unanswered questions. Its cantata-like structure... and stylistic affinity with the Missa solemnis place it in the late St. Florian years, though its enormous dimensions... are difficult to reconcile with the resources of the monastery.
Alleluja! Lobet den Herrn; denn lobsingen ist gut: liebliches und zierliches Lob sey unserm Gott!
Der Herr bauet Jerusalem, versammelt die Zerstreuten von Israel.
Er heilet, die geschlagenen Herzens sind, und verbindet ihre Wunden.
Er zählet die Menge der Sterne, und benennet sie Alle mit Namen.
Groß ist unser Herr, und groß seine Macht, und seiner Weisheit ist kein Maaß.
Der Herr nimmt auf die Sanften, und demüthigt die Sünder bis zur Erde.
Singet dem Herrn mit Danksagung: lobsinget unserm Gott mit der Harfe.
Er decket den Himmel mit Wolken, und bereitet Regen der Erde. Er läßt Gras wachsen auf den Bergen, und Kräuter zum Dienste der Menschen.
Er gibt dem Vieh seine Speise, und den jungen Raben, die zu ihm rufen.
Er hat nicht Lust an der Stärke des Rosses, noch Wohlgefallen an den Beinen des Mannes.
Der Herr hat Wohlgefallen an denen, die ihn fürchten, und an denen, die auf seine Barmherzigkeit hoffen.
Setting
Psalm 146 is the largest of Bruckner's psalm settings. The 652-bar long work in A major is scored for SATB| choir and SATB| soloists and orchestra. The work is divided into six parts:
Introduction: "Alleluja! Lobet den Herrn". Langsam, A major - Choir with soprano soloist and solo horn
#"Der Herr bauet Jerusalem". Kräftig - Bass soloist and trombones
#"Er heilet die geschlagenen Herzens sind". Weich - Soprano soloist and horns
#"Er zählet die Menge der Sterne". Frisch - Tenor soloist and woodwinds
Choir: "Groß ist unser Herr". Schnell, D minor veering to D major - Double choir in antiphony
Arioso with Choir:
#Arioso: "Der Herr nimmt auf die Sanften". Nicht zu langsam, B flat major - Soprano, tenor and alto soloists, with solo oboe and violin
#Choir: "Singet dem Herrn mit Danksagung". Etwas bewegter, E flat major
#Bridging arioso:
##"Er läßt Gras wachsen auf den Bergen" - Soprano soloist
##"Er gibt dem Vieh seine Speise" - Tenor soloist with solo clarinet
##"Er hat nicht Lust an der Stärke des Rosses" - Bass soloist with solo bassoon, veering to E minor
Arioso: "Der Herr hat Wohlgefallen an denen, die ihn fürchten". Nicht schnell, E major - Soprano soloist
Finale with Fugue: "Alleluja! Lobet den Herrn", A major
#Final choir: Etwas schnell
#Fugue: Nicht schnell - Choir with soloists at the end
As in the Missa solemnis there are clear influences of Haydn and Schubert, particularly in the ariosos. There are in the Finale two passages with brass instrument chords followed by an Alleluja, for which Bruckner drew his inspiration from the Hallelujah of Händel's Messiah, on which he often improvised on organ. For the first time Bruckner is using a full orchestra, with yet some archaism such as the use of horns and trombones in homophony with the choir. " closing Alleluja... is Bruckner's most extended fugue prior to the Fifth Symphony." The five-minute long fugue is more mature than the quite formal fugues of Bruckner's previous works - a consequence of Sechter's tuition. Bruckner uses, e.g., an inversion of the theme in its development.
Psalm 146 is also remarkable as the first piece in which Bruckner experimented with organic thematic integration on a large scale... also deserves to be heard more often for the lovely string pianissimo in its opening bars that foreshadows the beginning of both the D minor and F minor Masses.
Discography
There are two available recordings:
Wolfgang Riedelbauch, Anton Bruckner - Psalm 146 and Windhaager Messe, Hans Sachs-Chor, Lehrergesangverein Nürnberg and Nürnberger Symphoniker, LP-Colosseum SM 548, 1972. The recording used a score made by Riedelbauch-self, based on a copyist's manuscript. This recording of Psalm 146 has been transferred to CD, together with the historical recording of the Requiem by Hans Michael Beuerle: Klassic Haus KHCD-2011-092, 2011.