Schein was one of the first to absorb the innovations of the Italian Baroque—
monody, the
stile concertato,
figured bass—and use them effectively in a German
Lutheran context. While Schütz made more than one trip to Italy, Schein apparently spent his entire life in Germany, making his grasp of the Italianate style all the more remarkable. His early concertato music seems to have been modeled on
Lodovico Grossi da Viadana's
Cento concerti ecclesiastici, which were available in an edition prepared in Germany. Unlike Schütz, who concentrated mainly on sacred music (although it must be borne in mind that at least two operas composed by him, among other secular works, have been lost), Schein wrote sacred and secular music in approximately equal quantities, and almost all of it was vocal. In his secular vocal music he wrote all of his own texts. Throughout his life he published alternating collections of sacred and secular music, in accordance with an intention he stated early on — in the preface to the
Banchetto musicale — to publish alternately music for use in worship and social gatherings. The contrast between the two kinds of music can be quite extreme. While some of his sacred music uses the most sophisticated techniques of the Italian
madrigal for a
devotional purpose, such as the motet
Wie lieblich sind deine Wohnungen setting verses from
Psalm 84, several of his secular collections include such things as drinking songs of a surprising simplicity and humor. Some of his works attain an expressive intensity matched in Germany only by those of Schütz, for example the spectacular ''Fontana d'Israel
or Israel's Brünnlein'' (1623), in which Schein declared his intent to exhaust the possibilities of German
word-painting "in the style of the Italian madrigal." Possibly his most famous collection was his only collection of instrumental music, the
Banchetto musicale (
Musical banquet) (1617) which contains twenty separate variation
suites; they are among the earliest, and most perfect, representatives of the form. Most likely they were composed as dinner music for the courts of
Weissenfels and Weimar, and were intended to be performed on
viols. They consist of dances: a
pavan-
galliard (a normal early Baroque pair), a
courante, and then an
allemande-tripla. Each suite in the
Banchetto is unified by mode as well as by theme. ==Published works==