Virga Jesse (Bruckner)


Virga Jesse, WAB 52, is a motet by the Austrian composer Anton Bruckner. It sets the gradual Virga Jesse floruit for unaccompanied mixed choir.

History

The work was completed on 3 September 1885 and may have been intended for the celebration of the one-hundredth anniversary of the Linz diocese; however, like the Ecce sacerdos magnus that Bruckner composed A.M.D.G. for that event, it was not performed there. It was performed on 8 December 1885 in the Wiener Hofmusikkapelle for the Feast of the Immaculate Conception.
The original manuscript is archived at the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, and transcriptions of it at the Hofmusikkapelle and the Abbey of Kremsmünster. The motet was edited together with three other graduals, by Theodor Rättig, Vienna in 1886. The motet is put in Band XXI/34 of the Gesamtausgabe.

Setting

This 91-bar gradual in E minor is for mixed choir a cappella. In the first part on the verse Virga jesse floruit Bruckner used twice the Dresden amen on the word floruit. The last part consists, as in the earlier Inveni David WAB 19, of an Alleluja, for which Bruckner drew his inspiration from the Hallelujah of Händel's Messiah, on which he often improvised on organ. The motet ends in pianissimo by the tenor voice on a pedal point.
Max Auer regards it as the most accomplished and magnificent a cappella motet of the composer. The Bruckner biographer Howie also calls this work "one of Bruckner's finest motets".

Selected discography

The first recording of Bruckner's Vexilla regis occurred in 1931:
A selection among the about 80 recordings: