The St. Francis Mass is the shorter name for the Missa sub titulo Sancti Francisci Seraphici (Klafsky I:23, MH 826) composed by Michael Haydn. He completed it on 16 August 1803, apparently at the request of Empress Maria Theresa for a name day celebration.[1]
"Benedictus" Allegretto moderato, D major, cut time
"Agnus Dei" Adagio molto, B minor, 3/4
—"Dona nobis pacem..." Allegro, D major
Many composers have prolonged the setting of the word passus in the Credo through the use of techniques such as melisma, syncopation, and suspension. In this mass, however, Haydn prolongs the word simply by using two "longer note values than have occurred earlier in the setting".[2]
Unlike the Requiem in C minor, which was still in church use in Austria in the 20th century,[3] the St. Francis Mass disappeared from the repertoire at some point in the 19th century.[citation needed]
References
^Rice (2003) Cambridge p. 116 John Empress Marie Therese and music at the Viennese court, 1792—1807, Cambridge University Press, A.
^Jasmin Melissa Cameron (2006). The Crucifixion in Music: An Analytical Survey of the Crucifixus between 1680 and 1800 Contextual Bach Studies No. 1, The Scarecrow Press, Inc. p. 106. See also the two pages after that for an excerpt of the passage under consideration.
^p. 2, Watson (1997) Derek. New York Bruckner Schirmer Books
Sources
Heartz, Daniel, 1995. New York. Haydn, Mozart, and the Viennese School: 1740 — 1780 W. W. Norton & Co.
Sherman, Charles, 1969. Mainz Foreword to Missa pro Defunctis, Universal Edition
Sherman, Charles, 1980. Madison, Wisconsin Preface to Missa in Honorem Sanctae Ursulae, A-R Editions, Inc.