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Busch-Reisinger Museum Scrapbook, 1937-1941

ARCH.2013.5.3, Rendition: 793391

Mistral, mistral.magistral-small-2509

The image shows a program for an organ recital held at the Germanic Museum of Harvard University. The recital features Professor Fritz Heitmann, who is an organist at the Dom in Berlin. The program is titled "The Third part of the Klavier-Ubung (A German Organ Mass)" by Johann Sebastian Bach. It lists the following sequence of pieces to be performed:

  1. Prelude in E-flat Major pro Organo pleno
  2. The German Kyrie: "Glory be to the Father"
    a) Choral in Soprano, 2 Clav. e Pedale
    b) And to the Son
    c) And to the Holy Ghost
  3. The German Gloria: "Glory to God in the highest"
    a) Choral in all voices
    b) Fughetta (for manual)
  4. The Ten Commandments: "There are the Ten Holy Commandments"
    a) Choral in Unison, 2 Man. & Ped
    b) Fughetta (for manual)
  5. The Declaration of Faith: "We all believe in one God"
    a) Choral "for Organo Pleno"
  6. The Lord's Prayer: "Our Father who art in Heaven"
  7. The Baptism: "Christ, our Lord, unto Jordan came"
    a) two manuals and Cantor in Pedal
    b) adagio, for manual
  8. The Confession: "In sore distress I cry to thee"
    a) two manuals and Pedal, six voices
    b) adagio, for manual, four voices
  9. The Lord's Supper: "Jesus Christ, our Savior, who delivered us from the wrath of God"
    a) two manuals and Cantor in Pedal
    b) adagio, for manual, four voices
  10. Fugue in E-flat Major pro Organo pleno

Additional information at the bottom indicates that the Baroque organ was designed by G. Donald Harrison and the recital management was by Bernard R. La Berge, Inc. The program also notes that a recital will be given on Wednesday evening, April 19th, by Ernest White, featuring a program of modern music, including Hindemith. The address provided is 2 West 46th Street, New York.

Mistral, mistral.ministral-3-3b-instruct

The image shows a page from a program for an organ recital at the German Museum of Harvard University, featuring Professor Fritz Heitmann, an organist at the Dom in Berlin. The recital is scheduled for April 19, 1939.

The recital focuses on the "Third part of the Klavier-Übung" (A German Organ Mass) by John Sebastian Bach. The program includes the following pieces and sequences:

  1. Prelude in E flat Major (pro Organo pleno)
  2. The German Kyrie: Glory be to the Father (Canto fermo in Soprano, a 2 Clav. e Pedale)
  3. And to the Son (Canto fermo, a 2 Clav. e Pedale)
  4. And to the Holy Ghost (Cum Orgono pleno, Canto fermo in Basso, a 5 voci)
  5. The German Gloria: Glory be to God in the Highest (Cum Orgono pleno, Canto fermo in Alto, a 3 voci)
  6. Fughetta (for manual)
  7. The Ten Commandments: There are the Ten Holy Commandments (a) Canto fermo in Canone, 2 Man, & b) Fughetta (for manual)
  8. The Declaration of Faith: "We all believe in one God" (for Organo pleno)
  9. The Lord's Prayer: Our Father in Heaven (for Organo pleno)
  10. The Baptism: Christ, our Lord, came to Jordan (a) two manuals and Canto fermo in Pedal, b) also modo, for manual
  11. The Confession: In sore distress, I cry to Thee (a) Illo modo for Pedale doppio, six voices, b) Illo modo for manual, four voices
  12. The Lord's Supper: Jesus Christ, our Savior, who delivered us from the wrath of God (a) Illo modo for Pedale, b) Canto fermo in Pedal, four voices
  13. Fugue in E flat Major pro Organo pleno

Additionally, the program mentions that the organ was designed by G. Donald Harrison and includes a note about a recital by Ernest White, featuring modern music including a new sonata by Hindemith, scheduled for the Wednesday evening of April 26th.

The management of the event is listed as Bernard R. La Berge, Inc., located at 2 West 46th Street, New York.

Mistral, mistral.ministral-3-8b-instruct

The image is a page from a program for an organ recital held at Harvard University's Germanic Museum. The recital was given by Professor Fritz Heitmann, who was the organist at the Dom in Berlin. The event took place on April 19, 1939.

The recital was the third part of the Klavier-Übung (Practice for the Keyboard) and featured a German Organ Mass by Johann Sebastian Bach. The program included the following pieces:

  1. Prelude in E flat Major for Organo pleno
  2. The German Kyrie:
    • Glory be to the Father (Canto fermo in Soprano, a 2 Clav. e Pedale)
    • And to the Son (Canto fermo, a 2 Clav. e Pedale)
    • And to the Holy Ghost (Cum Organo pleno, Canto fermo in Basso, a 5 voci)
  3. The German Gloria:
    • Glory be to God in the Highest (Cum Organo pleno, Alto, three voices)
    • b) Fughetta (for manual)
  4. The Ten Commandments: There are the Ten Holy Commandments
    • a) Canto fermo in Canone, 2 Man, & Organo pleno
    • b) Fughetta (for manual)
  5. The Declaration of Faith: "We all believe in one God"
  6. The Lord’s Prayer: Our Father in Heaven
  7. The Baptism: Christ, our Lord, came to Jordan
    • a) two manuals and Canto fermo in Pedal
    • b) all modo, for manual
  8. The Confession: In sore Distress, try to them
    • a) two manuals and Pedal doppio, six voices
    • b) all modo for manual, four voices
  9. The Lord’s Supper: Jesus Christ, our Saviour, who delivered us from the wrath of God
    • a) Canto fermo in Pedal
    • b) Fugue, for manual, four voices
  10. Fugue in E flat Major for Organo pleno

The recital was held on a Baroque organ designed by G. Donald Harrison, with management by Bernard R. Laberge, Inc. The program notes mention that a recital will be given on Wednesday evening, April 26th, by Ernest White, featuring modern music, including a new sonata by Hindemith.

The management contact information provided is Bernard R. La Berge, Inc., located at 2 West 46th Street, New York.

Mistral, mistral.ministral-3-14b-instruct

The image is a program for an organ recital held at the Germanic Museum of Harvard University. The recital features Professor Fritz Heitmann, who was the organist at the Dom in Berlin. The event took place on April 19, 1939.

The recital is titled "The Third part of the Klavier-Ubung (A German Organ Mass)" by Johann Sebastian Bach. The program includes a sequence of pieces, each with specific details on the instrumentation and structure:

  1. Prelude in E flat Major pro Organo pleno
  2. The German Kyrie:
    • Glory be to the Father (Canto fermo in Soprano, a 2 Clav. e Pedale)
    • And to the Son (Canto fermo in Alto, a 2 Clav. e Pedale)
    • And to the Holy Ghost (Cum Organo pleno, Canto fermo in Basso, a 5 voci)
  3. The German Gloria:
    • Glory be to God in the highest (Cum Organo pleno, Canto fermo in Alto, a 5 voci)
    • Fughetta (for manual)
    • The Ten Commandments: There are the Ten Holy Commandments (Canto fermo in Canone, 2 Man. & Pedal)
  4. The Declaration of Faith: "We all believe in one God" (for Organo Pleno)
  5. The Lord’s Prayer: Our Father in heaven (for manual)
  6. The Baptism: Christ, our Lord, came to Jordan (two manuals and Canto fermo in Pedal, and also modo for manual)
  7. The Confession: In sore Distress (Trio for manual, Pedale doppio, six voices, and also modo for manual, four voices)
  8. The Lord’s Supper: Jesus Christ, our Saviour (Canto fermo in Alto, and Fugue for manual, four voices)
  9. Fugue in E flat Major pro Organo pleno

The recital was performed on a Baroque Organ designed by G. Donald Harrison, managed by Bernard R. La Berge, Inc., located at 2 West 46th Street, New York. There is also a note indicating that another recital would be given on Wednesday evening, April 26th, by Ernest White, featuring a program consisting entirely of modern music, including a new sonata by Hindemith.

Mistral, mistral.mistral-large-3-675b-instruct

The image is of a program for an organ recital held at the Germanic Museum at Harvard University. The recital was performed by Professor Fritz Heitmann, who was the organist at the St. Dom in Berlin. The event took place on April 19, 1937.

The program features works by Johann Sebastian Bach, specifically parts from "The Third Part of the Klavier-Übung":

  1. Prelude in E-flat Major (Preludio con Fuga)

    • Prelude in E Flat Major (Preludio pro Organo pleno)
      • The German Kyrie:
        • Kyrie, God Holy Father (Canto fermo in Soprano, a 2 Clav. e Pedale)
        • Christ, our Lord (Canto fermo in Tenore, a 2 Clav. e Pedale)
        • God Holy Ghost (Cum Organo pleno, Canto fermo in Basso, a 5 voci)
      • The German Gloria: Glory to God on High (Canto fermo in Alto, three voices)
      • Fughetta (for manual)
  2. The Ten Commandments

    • There are the Ten Holy Commandments (Canto fermo in Cantono, 2 Man. & Pedal)
    • Fughetta (for manual)
  3. The Declaration of Faith: "We all believe in one God"

    • For Organo Pleno
  4. The Lord's Prayer: Our Father

    • Christ, our Lord, come to Jordan (Canto fermo in Tenore, manual)
    • The Baptism:
      • a) Two manuals and Canto fermo in Pedal
      • b) Also modo, for manual
  5. The Confession

    • In sore distress I cry to Thee (Canto fermo in Pedale doppio, six voices)
      • a) Also modo for manual, four voices
  6. The Lord's Supper

    • Jesus Christ, our Savior, who delivered us from the wrath of God (Canto fermo in Pedal)
    • Fugue, for manual, four voices

The program also notes that the Baroque organ was designed by G. Donald Harrison and the executive management was by Bernard R. La Berge, Inc., located at 2 West 46th Street, New York.

Additionally, there is a note that on April 26th, there will be another recital at the same venue featuring modern music, including a new sonata by Hindemith. This recital will be given by Ernest White.

Mistral, us.mistral.pixtral-large-2502-v1:0

The image depicts a program for an organ recital held at the Germanic Museum of Harvard University. The event took place on April 19, 1939, and featured Professor Fritz Heitmann, the organist at the Dom of Berlin, performing "The Third Part of the Clavier-Übung: A German Organ Mass" by Johann Sebastian Bach.

The program includes the following pieces:

  1. Prelude in E Flat Major pro Organo pleno
  2. The German Kyrie:
    • a) "Glory be to the Father" (Canto fermo in Tenore, a 2 Clav. e Pedale)
    • b) "And to the Son" (Canto fermo in Alto, a 2 Clav. e Pedale)
    • c) "And to the Holy Ghost" (Canto fermo in Basso, a 3 voci)
  3. The German Gloria:
    • a) "Glory be to God on high" (Canto fermo in Alto, three voices)
    • b) "Praise Him" (for manual)
    • c) "Praise Him, all ye His Commandments" (Canto fermo in Canone, 2 Man. & Pedale)
    • d) "Praise Him" (for manual)
  4. The Declaration of Faith:
    • a) "We all believe in one God" (Canto fermo in Soprano, a 4 voci)
  5. The Lord's Prayer:
    • a) "Our Father in Heaven" (for manual)
  6. The Baptism:
    • a) "Christ, our Lord, came to Jordan" (Canto fermo in Pedale)
    • b) "To be baptized by John" (for manual)
  7. The Confession:
    • a) "In sin did my mother conceive me" (Canto fermo in Alto, six voices)
    • b) "I am heartily sorry" (for manual, four voices)
  8. The Lord's Supper:
    • a) "O Lord, I am not worthy" (Canto fermo in Pedale)
    • b) "That under the roof of my house" (for manual, four voices)
  9. Fugue in E Flat Major pro Organo pleno

The program also includes notes about the Baroque Organ and the management details:

  • Baroque Organ: Built by G. Donald Harrison
  • Executive Management: Bernard R. La Berge, Inc.
  • Management Address: 2 West 46th Street, New York

Additionally, it mentions that a recital will be given at Wanamaker's on April 26th by Ernest White, including entirely modern music, infilling a new loom by Harrison.

Azure OpenAI Service, gpt-4

This image shows a page from a program booklet for an organ recital. The top of the page reads "GERMANIC MUSEUM HARVARD UNIVERSITY ORGAN RECITAL Professor Fritz Heitmann Organist at the Dom in Berlin." It indicates that the recital included "The third part of the Klavier-Übung (A German Organ Mass)" by Johann Sebastian Bach, which consists of various parts such as the Prelude in E Flat Major, The German Gloria, The Ten Commandments, The Declaration of Faith, The Lord's Prayer, The Baptism, The Confession, and The Lord's Supper, followed by Fugue in E Flat Major. Each part lists the specific sub-parts or pieces that were to be played, some with musical notations for organ registrations or particular voicings.

Underneath is noted that the Baroque Organ was designed by G. Donald Harrison and a Management note for Bernard R. LaBerge, Inc. located at 2 West 46th Street, New York. There's handwriting on the page that appears to date the event to "April 19, 1939."

The page has a watermark of sorts and horizontal lines that indicate it may be a photographed or scanned copy of the original program. The right side of the image shows the edge of the book or booklet with several pages behind the displayed page. The overall tone of the paper is a light yellowish-brown, which could be due to aging or the lighting when the image was taken.

Azure OpenAI Service, gpt-4o-2024-05-13

The image features an open book displaying a printed program for an organ recital. The recital is hosted by the Germanic Museum at Harvard University and performed by Professor Fritz Heitmann. It features the Third part of the Klavier-Ubung (A German Organ Mass) by Johann Sebastian Bach.

The program includes:

  1. Prelude in E Flat Major (Pro Organo pleno)
  2. The German Kyrie: Glory be to the Father (Canto fermo in Soprano, 2 Clav. e Pedale)
  3. Adagio to the Son (Canto fermo in Tenor, 2 Clav. e Pedale)
  4. Come to the Holy Ghost (Organ solo, Canto fermo in Basso, 3 voci)
  5. The German Gloria: Glory be to God on High a) Canto fermo in Alto, three voices b) Fughetta (for manual)
  6. The Ten Commandments: There are the Ten Holy Commandments a) Canto fermo in Canone, 2 Man., & Pedal Fughetta (for manual)
  7. The Declaration of Faith: “I will believe in one God” (for Organ Pieno)
  8. The Lord’s Prayer: Out Father in Heaven (for manuals) a) two manuals and Canto fermo in Pedal b) solo mode (for manual)
  9. The Baptism: Christ, our Lord, came to Jordan (for Organ Pieno and Pedale doppio, six voices)
  10. The Confession: In sore Distress I cry to thee a) Organ solo, two manuals, four voices b) allio modo for manual, four voices
  11. The Lord’s Supper: Jesus Christ, our Savior, who delivered us from the marsh of God a) two manuals and Canto fermo in Pedal b) Fugue, four manuals, four voices
  12. Fugue in E Flat Major (pro Organo pleno)

The recital’s date is handwritten on the page: April 19, 1939.

At the bottom, it mentions "Management: Bernard R. La Berge, Inc. 2 West 46th Street — New York". There is a note about Baroque Organ design by G. Donald Harrison and a recital given by Ernest White, with a program consisting of modern music including a new Sonata by Hindemith.

Azure OpenAI Service, gpt-4.1-mini-2025-04-14

The image shows a printed program for an organ recital at the Germanic Museum at Harvard University. The recital features Professor Fritz Heitmann, described as the organist at the Dom in Berlin. The program lists the pieces to be performed, all from the third part of the "Klavier-Übung" (A German Organ Mass) by Johann Sebastian Bach. The pieces include:

  • Prelude in E Flat Major pro Organo Pleno
  • The German Kyrie (with several parts for soprano, tenor, and basso with descriptions of the musical arrangement)
  • The German Gloria (with parts for alto and manual)
  • The Ten Commandments (with arrangements for canon, manuals, pedal, and fughetta)
  • The Declaration of Faith ("We all believe in one God" for organ pleno)
  • The Lord’s Prayer (for manual)
  • The Baptism (with parts for two manuals and pedal, and manual only)
  • The Confession (for organ pleno with pedal and for manual)
  • The Lord’s Supper (with parts for manuals and pedal, and for manual only)
  • Fugue in E Flat Major pro Organo Pleno

At the bottom, the baroque organ is noted as designed by G. Donald Harrison, and the exclusive management is by Bernard R. Laberge, Inc., New York City. There is also a mention of an upcoming recital by Ernest White on Wednesday evening, April 26th, featuring modern music including a new Sonata by Hindemith.

The date "April 19, 1939" is handwritten in pencil on the right side of the program. The program is neatly placed on a light-colored page within a book or album.

Amazon, amazon.nova-lite-v1:0

The image is of an open book. The pages are cream-colored, and the cover is green. The book is titled "Germanic Museum Harvard University Organ Recital." The pages contain text about the recital, including the sequence of the music, the composer, and the organist. The recital is by Professor Fritz Heitmann, and the music is by Johann Sebastian Bach. The recital is part of the Klavier-Ubung, which is a German Organ Mass. The recital will be given on Wednesday evening, April 26th, by Ernest White, the program consisting entirely of modern music, including a new Sonata by Hindemith.