We often find solace in music. I have often heard the famous Bach Air from the Orchestral Suite No. 3 or the Barber Adagio for Strings performed at gatherings of mourners. Today I was reminded of a choral work by Johannes Brahms, Geistliches Lied, op. 30, known in English-speaking areas as “Let Nothing Ever Grieve Thee.” Brahms set Paul Fleming’s 16th-century poem “Lass dich nur nicht nichts dauren” to music as a very young man. The poem opens with
Let nothing afflict you
with grief;
be calm!
As God ordains,
so may my will
be content.
An arrangement of the Brahms for brass ensemble by Tom Smee is performed here by the Millar Brass Ensemble.