in
Copenhagen, Denmark, depicting the "Nunc dimittis" scene The
Nunc Dimittis is the traditional "Gospel Canticle" of Night Prayer (
Compline), just as
Benedictus and
Magnificat are the traditional Gospel Canticles of Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer, respectively. A 1530 rhymed version by , "
Im Frieden dein, o Herre mein", with a melody by
Wolfgang Dachstein, was written in Strasbourg for that purpose.
Heinrich Schütz wrote at least two settings, one in
Musikalische Exequien (1636), the other in
Symphoniae sacrae II (1647). The feast day
Mariae Reinigung was observed in the Lutheran Church in
J. S. Bach's time. He composed several cantatas for the occasion, including
Mit Fried und Freud ich fahr dahin, BWV 125, a chorale cantata on
Martin Luther's paraphrase of the canticle, and
Ich habe genug, BWV 82. Many composers have set the text to music, usually coupled in the Anglican church with the
Magnificat, as both the Magnificat and the Nunc dimittis are sung (or said) during the Anglican service of
Evening Prayer according to the Book of Common Prayer, 1662. This prayer book merged the older offices of Vespers (Evening Prayer) and Compline (Night Prayer) into one service, which contained both Gospel canticles. In Common Worship, this is listed among "Canticles for Use at Funeral and Memorial Services" One of the most well-known
settings in England is a
plainchant theme by
Thomas Tallis. Herbert Howells composed 20 settings of this pair of canticles, including the
Gloucester Service (1947) and the
St Paul's Service (1951). A setting of the Nunc dimittis by
Charles Villiers Stanford was sung as the
recessional at the
funeral of Margaret Thatcher. Stanford wrote many settings of both the
Magnificat and
Nunc dimittis. The
Genevan Psalter used by
Calvinist churches also included the metrical versification for
Nunc Dimittis. The music was composed by
Louis Bourgeois and the lyrics were versified from the biblical text by
Clément Marot. A setting by British composer
Geoffrey Burgon is featured during the end credits of episodes in the 1979 television adaptation of
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.
Sergei Rachmaninoff wrote a setting of the Slavonic
Nunc dimittis text, Ны́не отпуща́еши (
Nyne otpushchayeshi), as the fifth movement of his
All-Night Vigil. It is known for its final measures, in which the basses sing a descending scale ending on the B♭ below the bass clef. The neoclassical electronic music group
Mannheim Steamroller used the text of
Nunc Dimittis in the song "Lumen" on their album
Fresh Aire V, that was otherwise based on
Johannes Kepler's novel
Somnium. ==Literary settings==