Joseph Mohr: Difference between revisions

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<!-- '''Aliases:''' -->
{{Aliases|Josef Mohr|Josephus Franciscus Mohr}}
==Life==
==Life==
'''Born:''' 11. December 1792  
'''Born:''' 11 December 1792


'''Died:''' 04. December 1848
'''Died:''' 04 December 1848


'''Biography'''
'''Biography'''


{{WikipediaLink}}
Joseph Francis Mohr was born in Salzburg on December 11, 1792, to an unmarried embroiderer, Anna Schoiberin, and a mercenary soldier, Franz Mohr who deserted the army and Joseph's mother before the birth.


==List of choral works==
As his musical talent was not recognized, he found a sponsor to set him upon the path to higher education. As an illegitimate child he needed the pope's special permission to study for the priesthood and was ordained a priest in 1815. Rev. Mohr was sent to a pilgrim church in the remote Alpine village of Mariapfarr, where in 1816 he wrote a six-stanza poem that was to become the world's most popular carol. Mohr was moved to Oberndorf in 1817 to stay there for two years. When Franz Gruber agreed to compose a melody and guitar arrangement for the poem to be sung at midnight mass on December 24, 1818, [[Stille Nacht (Franz Xaver Gruber)|'Silent Night']] was born. Within a few short years, arrangements of the carol appeared in churches in the Salzburg Diocese and folk singers from the Ziller Valley were taking the song on tours around Europe.
{{Legend}}
*[[Ave maris stella (Joseph Mohr)|''Ave maris stella'']]&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(&nbsp;[http://www.pucpr.edu/diocesis/14cantoral.html SmartMusicViewer]&nbsp;)
*[[Celebre nuestro canto (Joseph Mohr)|''Celebre nuestro canto'']]&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(&nbsp;[http://www.pucpr.edu/diocesis/14cantoral.html SmartMusicViewer]&nbsp;)
*[[Pone luctum (Joseph Mohr)|''Pone luctum'']]&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(&nbsp;[http://www.pucpr.edu/diocesis/14cantoral.html SmartMusicViewer]&nbsp;)
*[[Señor, estas ofrendas (Joseph Mohr)|''Señor, estas ofrendas'']]&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(&nbsp;[http://www.pucpr.edu/diocesis/14cantoral.html SmartMusicViewer]&nbsp;)


Until 2006, it was thought that Mohr and Gruber had collaborated on just one song. Now another song has been located in the Wagrain parish archive by the Salzburg Diocesan Archives. "Te Deum" with text by Joseph Mohr and melody by [[Franz Xaver Gruber]] can be heard in an audio exhibit at the Waggerl Museum in Wagrain.
{{WikipediaLink2}}


[[Special:Whatlinkshere/Joseph_Mohr Click here to search for composer on ChoralWiki]
==List of choral works==
 
{{#SortWorks:}}
{{ArrangementsList}}
{{CheckMissing}}
{{Whatlinkshere}}
{{LyricistSettingsList}}
==Publications==
==Publications==
*1878 - ''Cäcilia - Katholische Gesang- und Gebetbuch'' - Regenburg, New York, and Cincinnati
*1878 - ''Cantiones sacrae, a collection of hymns and devotional chants'' - Regenburg, New York, and Cincinnati (somewhat different music than the above)


==External links==
==External links==


''add web links here''  
''add web links here''


[[Category:Unknown births|Mohr, Joseph]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mohr, Joseph}}
[[Category:Unknown deaths|Mohr, Joseph]]
[[Category:1792 births]]
[[Category:Composers|Mohr, Joseph]]
[[Category:1848 deaths]]
[[Category:Romantic composers|Mohr, Joseph]]
[[Category:Lyricists]]
[[Category:Austrian nationality|Mohr, Joseph]]
[[Category:Composers]]
[[Category:Romantic composers]]
[[Category:Austrian composers]]

Latest revision as of 15:42, 6 September 2023

Aliases: Josef Mohr; Josephus Franciscus Mohr

Life

Born: 11 December 1792

Died: 04 December 1848

Biography

Joseph Francis Mohr was born in Salzburg on December 11, 1792, to an unmarried embroiderer, Anna Schoiberin, and a mercenary soldier, Franz Mohr who deserted the army and Joseph's mother before the birth.

As his musical talent was not recognized, he found a sponsor to set him upon the path to higher education. As an illegitimate child he needed the pope's special permission to study for the priesthood and was ordained a priest in 1815. Rev. Mohr was sent to a pilgrim church in the remote Alpine village of Mariapfarr, where in 1816 he wrote a six-stanza poem that was to become the world's most popular carol. Mohr was moved to Oberndorf in 1817 to stay there for two years. When Franz Gruber agreed to compose a melody and guitar arrangement for the poem to be sung at midnight mass on December 24, 1818, 'Silent Night' was born. Within a few short years, arrangements of the carol appeared in churches in the Salzburg Diocese and folk singers from the Ziller Valley were taking the song on tours around Europe.

Until 2006, it was thought that Mohr and Gruber had collaborated on just one song. Now another song has been located in the Wagrain parish archive by the Salzburg Diocesan Archives. "Te Deum" with text by Joseph Mohr and melody by Franz Xaver Gruber can be heard in an audio exhibit at the Waggerl Museum in Wagrain.

The above is an excerpt from Wikipedia. For the full article, click here.

List of choral works

 
Click here to search for this composer on CPDL

Settings of text by Joseph Mohr

Publications

  • 1878 - Cäcilia - Katholische Gesang- und Gebetbuch - Regenburg, New York, and Cincinnati
  • 1878 - Cantiones sacrae, a collection of hymns and devotional chants - Regenburg, New York, and Cincinnati (somewhat different music than the above)

External links

add web links here