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Adoramus te
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
Publisher: Albrecht Schneider
Description
Werkcharakter: A-cappella-Motette 4-stimmig (SATB) Lateinischer Passionstext: Adoramus te, Christe, et benedicimus tibi, quia per sanctam crucem tuam redemisti mundum. („Wir beten dich an, Christus, und wir preisen dich, denn durch dein heiliges Kreuz hast du die Welt erlöst.“) Vermutlich für die Karwoche / Karfreitag komponiert Eine der bekanntesten kurzen Palestrina-Motetten Musikalische Merkmale: Klarer, ruhiger Palestrina-Stil fließende Linien sehr kontrollierte Dissonanzbehandlung vollkommene Transparenz in der Polyphonie Gedämpft, demütig, keine großen dynamischen Gesten Klanglich sehr rein und meditiert – ideal für andachtsvolle Momente Schwierigkeitsgrad: Mittel Wichtig: Intonation in langen Legato-Phrasen Balance und Textverständlichkeit ruhige Atemführung, keine hektischen Einsätze Ein gutes intonatorisches Übungsstück für Chöre, die sich im stile antico sicher fühlen möchten. Einsatz im Konzert / Gottesdienst Besonders passend: Passionszeit Kreuzverehrung (Karfreitag) Stillere Abschnitte z. B. als Introïtus oder nach einer Lesung Auch als ruhiger Kontrastpunkt in gemischten Konzertprogrammen hervorragend Wirkung: tiefes Innehalten, „Auf den Kern reduzieren“ – ideal, um das Publikum in einen spirituellen Fokus zu führen. Kurzfazit: Ein kleines, aber meisterhaftes Juwel des stile antico: schlicht, aber klanglich vollkommen – Palestrina in seiner reinsten Form.
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What you should know about this piece
These notes help you place the piece — voicing, difficulty, licence model and the steps after purchase.
Understanding the voicing: SATB▾
The voicing tells you which vocal parts your choir will need to sing.
- SATBSoprano, Alto, Tenor, Bass — the classic mixed choir.This piece
- SSAThree women's voices: two sopranos and alto.
- SSAAFour women's voices: two sopranos and two altos.
- TTBBFour men's voices: two tenors and two basses.
- SABSoprano, Alto, Baritone — eases the tenor part and suits smaller choirs.
- SATBSATBDouble choir: two independent SATB choirs, often in dialogue.
- unisonUnison — for children's choirs, congregational singing or unison passages.
Understanding difficulty levels▾
The difficulty level gives you a feel for how many rehearsals your choir should plan for.
- BeginnerClear rhythms, familiar keys and singable intervals — works for young or newly formed choirs.
- MediumFor an experienced choir; some chromatic passages, key or metre changes. Around 6–10 rehearsals for a clean performance.
- HardClose harmonies, complex rhythms, wider ranges — needs disciplined rehearsing and vocally secure singers.This piece
- Very hardConcert-choir level: modulations, polyphony, extreme registers, demanding intonation and voice leading.
How the per-singer licence works▾
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Per-singer licence Current model
One licence per singer. Scales fairly with ensemble size; many pieces include volume discounts.
Minimum quantity: 20 licences.
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The licence covers rehearsing and performing through Chorilo. External performance rights (e.g. GEMA, PRS — where applicable) remain unaffected.
Using the piece in Chorilo▾
- 1
Buy the piece
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- 2
Distribute the licences
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- 3
Singers receive the music
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- 4
Rehearse and perform
Listen to voice-part audio in rehearsal, mark passages, isolate your voice — and have everything to hand at the concert.