Robert M. Helmschrott: 12 Sonate da chiesa

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SKU: NEOS 12534-35 Category:
Veröffentlicht am: February 11, 2026

With the "12 Sonate da chiesa" (12 Church Sonatas), Robert M. Helmschrott presents a central work of his oeuvre, composed between 1984 and 1994. The cycle is far more than a homage to a historical genre: it is an artistic affirmation of the spiritual power of music and its ability to connect eras, cultures, and religions.

The traditional term "Sonata da chiesa" refers to the Baroque church sonata of the 17th and 18th centuries. Helmschrott deliberately adopts this designation—not as a historicist gesture, but as a point of departure for a creative engagement with music history. The movement titles—ranging from Alleluja, Psalmos, Antifona and Jubilus to Nomos, Hymnos, Elegie to Motetus or Aria —open a wide horizon: from Jewish Old Testament chant through Greco-Roman antiquity and the Christian Middle Ages to the early modern era. The Mediterranean cultural sphere forms the intellectual framework of the cycle.

Helmschrott understands “religious music” not as confined to a single confession, but as the expression of a humanistic vision. Jewish, Christian, and—implicitly—Islamic traditions are interwoven in a spirit of compassion and dialogue. Music thus becomes a space of understanding, sustained by reason, openness, and faith in the unifying power of love.

Formally, all twelve sonatas follow the two-part slow–fast structure characteristic of the later Baroque church sonata. The slow movements unfold meditative, contemplative soundscapes; the fast finales range from rhythmic vitality to jubilant ecstasy. A concertante dialogue between organ and various melodic instruments shapes the musical character: sharply contrasted passages, intimate exchanges, asymmetrical constellations, and at times the expressive monologue of a single instrument create a richly varied dramaturgy.

The architecture of the cycle follows a symbolic order. The number twelve—the product of the “perfect” numbers three and four—has played a central role in cultural history, from myth and mysticism to dodecaphony. Accordingly, the sonatas are arranged in four groups of three, each comprising two duos and a concluding trio; the final Sonata XII expands the instrumentation to seven performers, forming the sonic culmination of the cycle.

The tonal foundation is Helmschrott’s self-developed “Modus H,” an eight-note scale reminiscent of Olivier Messiaen’s modes of limited transposition, yet conceived independently. By combining elements of ancient church modes, the major–minor system, chromatic totality, and serial thinking, Helmschrott creates a language of remarkable color and depth: dense, dissonant harmonies and clusters stand alongside luminous consonant sonorities. Despite this diversity, the musical language remains cohesive and organic—every melodic and harmonic gesture is constructively interrelated.

In Sonata XII, Helmschrott makes a conscious statement by incorporating passages from Orlando di Lasso’s motet Timor et tremor. This quotation is not nostalgic, but structurally and spiritually grounded: the minor third, central to both Lasso’s chromatic writing and Helmschrott’s “Modus H,” forms the connecting link between Renaissance and present day. From the existential “fear and trembling” of the first movement, the music progresses toward a declarative "Non confundar" in radiant fortissimo—a sonic sign of trust and hope.

Robert M. Helmschrott (*1938), an award-winning composer, founder of the “Erdinger Orgelwoche” and the Munich concert series “Musica Sacra Viva,” and former President of the University of Music and Performing Arts Munich, regards the "12 Sonate da chiesa" as a summa of his artistic vision: rooted in tradition yet unmistakably contemporary, spiritually grounded yet dialogical in outlook, rigorously constructed and charged with expressive immediacy.

This album invites listeners to rediscover sacred music as a living presence—an echo of millennia of cultural memory and a resonant vision of unity in diversity.

Programme

Robert M. Helmschrott (*1938)
12 SONATE DA CHIESA
12 Kirchensonaten · 12 Church Sonatas
for organ and other instruments (1984–1994)

 

CD 1
total playing time: 79:27

Sonata da chiesa I for trombone and organ (1984)
Abbie Conant, trombone
Klemens Schnorr, organ

Sonata da chiesa II for oboe and organ (1985)
Michael Helmrath, oboe
Klemens Schnorr, organ

Sonata da chiesa III for two trumpets and organ (1985)
Hannes Läubin / Christian Höcherl, trumpets
Elisabeth Zawadke, organ

Sonata da chiesa IV for trumpet and organ (1985)
Jean-François Michel, trumpet
Klemens Schnorr, organ

Sonata da chiesa V for flute and organ (1988)
Claire Genewein, flute
Harald Feller, organ

Sonata da chiesa VI for trumpet, trombone and organ (1986)
Hannes Läublin, trumpet
Hansjörg Profanter, trombone
Klemens Schnorr, organ

Sonata da chiesa VII für cello and organ (1991) Part I
Rainer Ginzel, cello
Martha Schuster, organ

 

CD 2
total playing time: 79:49

Sonata da chiesa VII for cello and organ (1991) Part II
Rainer Ginzel, cello
Martha Schuster, organ

Sonata da chiesa VIII for violin and organ (1990)
Ana Chumachenco, violin
Edgar Krapp, organ

Sonata da chiesa IX for violin, cello and organ (1991)
Yuko Inagaki-Nothas, violin
Walter Nothas, cello
Robert M. Helmschrott, organ

Sonata da chiesa X for clarinet and organ (1991)
Ulf Rodenhäuser, clarinet
Gerhardt Blum, organ

Sonata da chiesa XI for horn and organ (1993)
Wolfgang Gaag, horn
Ulrich Knörr, organ

Sonata da chiesa XII for three trumpets, three trombones and organ (1994)
Hannes Läublin / Christian Höcherl / Quirin Willert, trumpets
Wolfram Arndt / Tobias Greismann / Bruno Feldkircher, trombones
Elisabeth Zawadke, organ

Biographies

Robert Maximilian Helmschrott (*1938) studied at the Munich University of Music. Founded the ‘Erdinger Orgelwoche’ in 1967. Scholarship holder of the German Academy Villa Massimo in Rome (1967–1969) and scholarship holder of the Cité des Arts in Paris (1975). Composition studies with Goffredo Petrassi in Siena and Luigi Dallapiccola in Florence (Italy), as early as 1955 with Pierre Froidebise in Liège (Belgium) and with Fritz Büchtger in Munich in 1961. Several national and international composition prizes. Founded the concert series ‘Musica Sacra Viva’, sacred music in Munich churches (1979). Professor, Vice President (1992–1995) and President (1995–2003) at the University of Music and Theatre Munich. Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany (1980); “Freundeszeichen” by the Catholic Academy in Bavaria (2007); Cultural Prize of the City of Weilheim (2014)

More information

catalogue number: NEOS 12534-25

EAN: 4260063125348

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