Meine Seele erhebt den Herren
Meine Seele erhebt den Herren is Martin Luther's translation of the Magnificat canticle. It is traditionally sung to a German variant of the tonus peregrinus, a rather exceptional psalm tone in Gregorian chant. The tonus peregrinus is associated with the ninth mode or Aeolian mode. For the traditional setting of Luther's German Magnificat that is the minor mode for which the last note of the melodic formula is the tonic, a fifth below its opening note.
Traditional setting
The tonus peregrinus is an exceptional psalm tone in Gregorian chant: there it was most clearly associated with Psalm 113, traditionally sung in vespers. In Lutheranism, the tonus peregrinus is associated with the Magnificat : the traditional setting of Luther's German translation of the Magnificat is a German variant of the tonus peregrinus. Typical for all German variants of the tonus peregrinus, it starts with the same note as the tenor and then moves a minor third up before returning to the tenor note. Particular for the version associated with Luther's German translation of the Magnificat is that the same two notes are repeated at the start of the second half of the melodic formula.Usage by various composers
Johann Sebastian Bach adopted text and/or melody of Luther's German Magnificat in various compositions:- Magnificat
- Cantata BWV 10
- Chorale harmonisations BWV 323 and 324
- Fourth Schübler Chorale, BWV 648, which is an organ transcription of the fifth movement of BWV 10.
Other German Baroque composers that adopted Luther's German Magnificat in their compositions include Johann Hermann Schein, Samuel Scheidt, Heinrich Schütz, Johann Pachelbel, Dietrich Buxtehude, Johann Gottfried Walther and Johann Mattheson.