The cantata ' (Renunciation), WAB 14, is a cantata composed by Anton Bruckner in .
Bruckner composed the cantata for the name-day of Michael Arneth, the prior of the St. Florian Abbey. The piece was intended to be performed on Arneth's name-day. It is not known when it was performed.
Why Bruckner has chosen this unsound text for the name-day of his Maecenas remains unexplained. Perhaps he has put so into music his resignation following his father's death or Aloisia Bogner's refusal of his proposal of marriage.
The manuscript is stored in the archive of the St. Florian Abbey. A facsimile of the cantata was first issued in band II/2, pp. 47âÂÂ58 of the Göllerich/Auer biography. The cantata was thereafter issued by Ludwig Daxsperger in 1956. It is put in Band XXII/1 No. 2 of the '.
The work is based on the poem Amaranth by Oskar von Redwitz.
The 126-bar long work in B major is scored for choir or quartet, soprano or tenor soloist, and organ (or piano).
The cantata is a âÂÂspiritual songâ in three sections, in ABAâ² form:
The outer sections are in the form of Protestant chorale, with in bars 16âÂÂ19 (Die treu'ste Mutter groÃÂ!) and 110âÂÂ113 (In heimlicher Gefahr!) a direct quotation from "O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden".<br/>The expressive middle section, a solo for soprano or tenor in F major, is with large intervals and strong modulation. The contrapuntal accompaniment by the organ (or piano) has some reminiscences of the baroque opera.