Piece for Bruckner concert (long)

Anselm

New member
Hi folks

I conduct my local choral society in England. In November, we're performing Bruckner's E minor mass (with wind, not organ). I'm looking for about 90 minutes of music in total. The Mass lasts about 40 minutes, and I've got three other pieces lasting about 20-25 minutes (see below), so obviously I need more. I'd like this/these to have some clear connection with Bruckner or specifically with this piece, rather than just being random.

I need some 20 minutes' worth of music that fits the following conditions:
1. No choir (all of the pieces in the concert so far are choral, and I don't want to give them any more to do).
2. Uses only the resources available for this concert. This effectively means one or more instrumental pieces, using all or some of the instruments used in the Mass, namely: two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets and three trombones. I thought of the Strauss Serenade for 13 wind instruments, but this adds two flutes and a double bass (for all of two bars!!!) to this combination.

So far we're doing:

- Schubert, Standchen D921 "Zogernd leise" (SSAA chorus, alto solo and piano): a late piece which can be taken to represent his much larger late works (especially the 8th and 9th symphonies) whose scale and harmonic procedures influenced Bruckner's large-scale works.
- Wagner, one or both pilgrim choruses from Acts I and III of Tannhauser (TTBB chorus and (if we're performing both choruses) cor anglais, soprano solo and piano): Tannhauser was the first Wagner work Bruckner heard, and it blew him away, introducing him to the revolutionary possibilities of what was then modern music.
- Palestrina, Kyrie from the Missa Brevis: representative of Bruckner's beloved Renaissance music that influenced him so highly; also representative of the Palestrina style that influenced this work in particular, under the influence of the Cecilians; also, and most specifically, he quoted the theme from the Kyrie in his Sanctus.

I've tried thinking along the lines of "by Bruckner" (useless), influence ON Bruckner and influence OF Bruckner. Any ideas?

Many thanks

Anselm
 

Contratrombone64

Admiral of Fugues
Mozart's Divertimento No. 10 is scored for Strings and two horns ... (see attached), you didn't mean this one did you by mistake?
 
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