Chorale Prelude

Baroque works

Definition

A short organ composition based on a hymn tune (chorale), in which the melody is presented in an elaborated or ornamented setting. Techniques include cantus firmus treatment, ornamented melody, chorale canon, chorale fugue, and chorale fantasia. Central to the Lutheran organ tradition and liturgical practice.

Historical Context

Developed in the German Protestant tradition as a way for organists to introduce congregational hymns. Samuel Scheidt and other early Baroque composers established the genre, which Buxtehude, Pachelbel, and Bach brought to its highest artistic level. Bach's Orgelbüchlein (BWV 599–644) contains 46 miniature chorale preludes, while his Leipzig Chorales (BWV 651–668) represent the form at its most expansive.

Works (30)

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