Zwölf Stücke, Op. 80

Zwölf Stücke
Organ pieces by Max Reger

Reger in 1901
Catalogue Op. 80
Composed 1902 (1902) · 1904
Dedication
  • Paul Homeyer
  • Joseph Vockner
Published 1904 (1904)

Zwölf Stücke, Op. 80, is a group of twelve pieces for organ by Max Reger. He composed them in Munich in 1902 and 1904. They were published by C. F. Peters in Leipzig in September 1904.

History and movements

The pieces are character pieces of medium difficulty, as a contrast to his major organ works. Reger had written such works already as a student in Wiesbaden. He turned to the organ in Weiden. On a request of the publisher Henri Hinrichsen of C. F. Peters, Reger composed 15 pieces in Munich in 1902. Peters published twelve in Leipzig in August 1902 as Zwölf Stücke. Reger used the three still unpublished pieces (Fughette, Gigue, Intermezzo) and composed additional nine pieces in 1904, to form a similar set of works that can be played in sequence or individually.[1] In Reger's lifetime, performers often combined often movements from different collections.[2]

The twelve pieces were published by C. F. Peters in Leipzig in September 1904, in two books (Heft) of six pieces each. Reger dedicated the pieces of Heft 1 to Franz Grunicke, an organist in Berlin, and those of Heft 2 to Otto Burkert.[3]

The titles and keys are:

  1. Präludium (Prelude), E minor
  2. Fughette (Fugue), E minor
  3. Canzonetta (Canzonetta), G minor
  4. Gigue (Gigue), D minor
  5. Ave Maria, D-flat minor
  6. Intermezzo (Intermezzo), G minor
  7. Scherzo (Scherzo), F-sharp minor
  8. Romanze (Romance), A minor
  9. Perpetuum mobile (Perpetuum mobile), F minor
  10. Intermezzo, D major
  11. Toccata (Toccata), A minor
  12. Fuge (Fugue), A minor

In the edition of Reger's complete works by the Max-Reger-Institute, they were published in volumes 5–7.[4]

Recordings

The organist Hans-Jürgen Kaiser recorded ten of the twelve pieces in volume 11 of the complete organ works by Reger, along with the Chorale Preludes, Op. 79b, played on the Rieger-Sauer organ in the Fulda Cathedral,[5] while numbers 7 and 8 were played by Martin Wetzel on the Klais organ of the Trier Cathedral and appear on volume 8.[6]

References

Bibliography

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