Mass No.3, Op.7a (Haller, Michael)

Sheet Music

Scores

PDF scanned by Rob Peters
Rob Peters (2012/7/20)

Engraver Leipzig: Oscar Brandstetter
Publisher. Info. Regensburg: Friedrich Pustet, 1915. Plate F.P. 990.
Copyright
Misc. Notes Title page has "Editio XLIII" possibly meaning this is the 43rd edition(?).
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Arrangements and Transcriptions

For SA, SAB, or SATB Voices and Organ

PDF scanned by Jeffrey Quick
Jaquick (2015/12/14)

Editor James A. Reilly (1854-1940)
Publisher. Info. Boston: McLaughlin & Reilly Co, No.L871, 1935. Plate M. & R.Co. 871-20
Copyright
Misc. Notes This score is marked "Op. 7b" so it is unclear whether the TB parts originate with Haller or Reilly. There are small differences in underlay from the Pustet edition, especially in the Kyrie, but it is the same music.
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General Information

Work Title Missa Tertia
Alternative. Title
Composer Haller, Michael
Opus/Catalogue NumberOp./Cat. No. Op.7a
I-Catalogue NumberI-Cat. No. IMH 4
Key F major
Movements/SectionsMov'ts/Sec's 7 sections
  1. Kyrie
  2. Gloria
  3. Credo
  4. Sanctus
  5. Benedictus
  6. Agnus Dei I
  7. Agnus Dei II
First Publication. 1897? – Regensburg: Friedrich Pustet
Librettist traditional
Language Latin
Composer Time PeriodComp. Period Romantic
Piece Style Romantic
Instrumentation 2 equal voices, organ

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It seems this might be a revision of Haller's Op.7 "Missa tertia (F) ad duas voces cum organo vel harmonio comitante" (published in 1876, per Hofmeister's Monatsbericht (1876), p.277). The first occurrence of Op.7a appears as "Missa tertia f. vierstimmigen Männerchor eingerichtet v. P. Th. Marxer, Op. 3" per Hofmeister's Monatsbericht (1897), p.59. A plate number of 990 would correspond to the mid to late 1890s.

Only one library listed in Worldcat (maybe more in KVK) has a copy of the 1876-published Missa tertia (as of 2014 August); there was another, 1885, edition published in the United States.

Indeed, many of his masses occur in multiple forms in HMB that seem to be revisions indicated by increasing letters. So yes, at a guess, Mass No.3 is actually Op.7 published in 1876 and this should appear under that page (if we can confirm that they -are- the same work modulo revision, again...)