You are here

Church and city accounts

Reinhard Strohm

The church accounts of St Stephen’s survive only from 1404 onward and are incomplete; those of St Michael’s begin only in 1433.[51] These contain various expenditures for the payment of musical services. At St Michael’s, the positions of organist and schoolmaster were already firmly established by 1433; from 1444, a cantor (“Chorschuler”) also appears.[52] At St Stephen’s, the cantor received ½ tl. (120 d.) annually from 1404 for singing the “chlag”, that is, the Lamentations of Jeremiah on Good Friday (» A. Ch. Tenebrae on Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday).[53] Also during Holy Week, as was common practice, the entire Psalter was recited. For this, 12 pupils were employed (under the direction of the accusator), each receiving 36 d. They were also given breakfast worth 26 d. In 1420 and 1422, breakfast was also provided to “zwei Hütern bei dem grab” (two guards at the tomb).[54] These two Holy Week services involved long texts that were to be recited rather than sung melodically. What was rewarded was the solemnity and effort of preparation, not a musical embellishment. Many of the churchwarden’s expenditures at St Stephen’s were for “singing in” (or on) “the organ”, as organ playing was called. The organist received 3 tl. annually for playing the small organ. This was certainly a positive organ that could be moved within the church, as the organist’s main duties (and additional income) came from foundations associated with various altars.[55] The organist was also paid for tuning[56] and minor repairs to this organ. During processions in the city, the organist remained in the church, where he played for the station service. He received special payment when he had to “sing in the great organ”,[57] namely on the feast days of Ash Wednesday (“Faschantag”), Ascension Day, the Tuesday before Pentecost, Pentecost, Midsummer Day (24 June), and the Feast of St Peter (22 February). These were evidently popular services. The organ playing may, as elsewhere, have alternated with the choir of priests and pupils. That the organist played Gregorian chants is suggested, among other things, by a payment in 1407 of 8 s. to the organist Hanns “umb ain Gradual” (for a Gradual), which he had probably purchased.[58]

The Viennese city accounts[59] provide evidence of festive organ playing during Masses at events organised by the city council (» E. Städtisches Musikleben). An organ was probably available at the town hall; since no official town organist is mentioned, church organists were probably called upon. In the 1420s, the city council paid the organist of St Stephen’s an annual salary of 8 tl. and listed him among the city’s employees, along with the “organ master” (at that time Jörg Beheim), who received 6 tl. This arrangement did not last: in 1436, it was noted that henceforth the churchwarden should pay the organist from the church funds;[60] however, occasional annual payments of 60 d. each continued for organ playing to the Te Deum. Apart from that, the St Stephen’s organist now lived on his salary from the churchwarden’s office (3 tl. for playing the small organ) and his many festive playing duties for both church and city council (» E. Städtisches Musikleben).

[51] Accounts of the churchwarden’s office of St Stephen’s (in the Vienna City and State Archive), see Uhlirz 1902. Extracts from the account books of St Michael’s in Schütz 1980.

[52] Schütz 1980, 124. Schütz 1980, 15, mistakenly equates the schoolmaster with one of the two cantors.

[53] See Uhlirz 1902, 251 and elsewhere. Knapp 2004, 268, interprets this as a Marienklage (Lament of Mary), which is less likely from a liturgical perspective.

[54] Uhlirz 1902, 364, 384. The Easter sepulchre was an artistically crafted sculpture.

[55] On the locations of the organs, see also Ebenbauer 2005, 40 f.

[56] Uhlirz 1902, 337 (1417).

[57] For example, 1415: Uhlirz 1902, 299.

[58] Uhlirz 1902, 267 (1407).

[59] Vienna City and State Archive, 1.1.1. B 1/ Main Treasury Accounts, Series 1 (1424) etc.: hereafter abbreviated as OKAR 1 (1424) etc. (» A-Wsa OKAR 1-55).

[60] A-Wsa OKAR 4 (1436), fol. 25r, and in contrast 60 d. for Te deum in OKAR 5 (1438), fol. 62r.