Nicolaus Bruhns

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Nicolaus (or Nikolaus) Bruhns (1665-1697) was a German organist and composer working in Husum.

Life

Nicolaus Bruhns was born between December 3 and 24, 1665, in Schwabstedt, around 15 kilometers south-east from Husum, where his father (maybe a student of Franz Tunder) was working as organist. He likely began learning music from his father, and in 1681 he moved to Lübeck to study the viola da gamba, violin, organ and composition.

His teacher Dietrich Buxtehude advised him to go to Kopenhagen. Nothing is known about Bruhns's time there, which started in 1686...perhaps he was a student of Christian Geist.

On March 30, 1689, Nicolaus Bruhns became the organist at the state church in Husum.

In 1740, Johann Mattheson wrote a curious tale in which Bruhns played his violin while sitting at the organ, playing the pedals and the violin at the same time.

Bruhns passed away on March 29, 1697, at only 31 years old.

Works

The first page of the Prelude in E Minor by Nicolaus Bruhns

The organ works by Bruhns survive in the following sources:

Surviving organ works by Nicolaus Bruhns
Source(s)[2] Title Incipit
Möller Manuscript f.97v-100r Praeludium in E Minor, Groß
{\relative e' { r8 e16 e' dis fis, gis d' cis }}
Schmahl Organ Tablatures
D-B Mus.ms. 30147 p.25-29
Praeludium in E Minor, Kleine
{\clef bass \key e \minor \relative e { \repeat tremolo 2 { e16 g } \repeat tremolo 2 { fis16 a } \repeat tremolo 2 { g16 b } \repeat tremolo 2 { a16 c } }}
Möller Manuscript f.54v
B-Bc 26659 f.25r-27v
D-B Mus.ms. 2683 f.26v-29v
D-B Am.B 462 p.56-63
D-B Am.B 430 p.56-63
D-B Mus.ms. 2681/1 f.28v-32r
Praeludium in G Major
{<< \relative g'' { r16 g fis e d c b a b} \\ \relative b' { r8 r16 g fis e d c d } >>}
DK-Kk mu 7503.0234 f.8v-9r Adagio in D Major (Frag.)
{\key d \major << \relative a' { r8 a d c c4. bes8 bes2*1/2 } \\ \relative d' { r2 d2 d2*1/2 } \\ \\ \relative a' { r2 a2~a4 } >>}
D-B Mus.ms. Bach P 802 p.162-175
Ornamented:
B-Bc 26659 f.28r-30r
D-B Mus.ms. 2683 f.30r-35r
D-B Am.B 462 p.64-75
D-B Am.B 430 p.64-75
D-B Mus.ms. 2681/1 f.32v-38v
Nun Komm, der Heiden Heiland
{\clef alto \relative g { g2 g fis bes a4 }}

In 2006, the Prelude in G Minor which had previously been attributed to Bruhns was found to have been similarities with Arnold Matthias Brunckhorst by Dietrich Kollmannsperger (see Arnold Matthias Brunckhorst#Prelude in G Minor). Following this, the number of fully-extant known präludia by Bruhns was reduced back to 3.

Editions

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Note: "Three praeludiua" does not include the Prelude in G Minor.

Listed in Chronological order:

  • Alexandre Guilmant, editor. Choral: Nun Komm der Heiden Heiland. Ecole Classique de L'orgue. Paris: Durand, 1900. [3]

(Ornamented)

Contains three Praeludia only.

  • Fritz Stein, editor. Nicolaus Bruhns: Gesammelte Werke. Erbe deutscher Musik. Zweite Reihe, Landschaftsdenkmale. Schleswig-Holstein und Hansestädte; vol. 1-2. Braunschweig: H. Litolff, 1939.

Contains three Praeludia and Nun Komm der Heiden Heiland (ornamented), as well as all surviving cantatas by him.

  • Klaus Beckmann, editor. Nikolaus Bruhns: Sämtliche Orgelwerke. Wiesbaden: Breitkopf & Härtel, 1972.
  • Harald Vogel, editor. Bruhns: Sämtliche Orgelwerke. Wiesbaden: Breitkopf & Härtel, 2008.[4]

References

Beckmann, Klaus, Die Norddeutsche Schule. Teil II: Blütezeit und Verfall. Mainz: Schott, 2009. 531-545.

  1. Beckmann, Klaus, Die Norddeutsche Schule. Teil II: Blütezeit und Verfall. Mainz: Schott, 2009. 535.
  2. Beckmann, Klaus (editor). Nicolaus Bruhns: Sämtliche Orgelwerke. Meister der Norddeutschen Orgelschule 13. [earlier edition, not including Brunckhorst] Mainz: Schott, 2004.
  3. IMSLP177215, accessed 21 July, 2023.
  4. www.breitkopf.com, accessed 21 July, 2023.
  5. www.schott-music.com, accessed July 21, 2023.