secular songs.  One with    a   particular  resonance,  and a   particular  irony,  was Innsbruck,  ich muss    dich
lassen  (“Innsbruck,    I   now must    leave   thee”), a   song    composed    by  Heinrich    Isaac   (ca.    1450–1517)  during
his period  of  service to  the “Kaiser”    (Caesar),   Maximilian  I,  the Holy    Roman   Emperor,    one of  whose
capitals    was the Austrian    city    of  Innsbruck.  Ex. 18-3    contains    Isaac’s original    setting,    underlaid   both    with
the original    text    and with    the clever  Lutheran    contrafactum,   in  which   the sentiments  of  the very    worldly
original    words   are,    with    only    a   few adjustments,    “universalized” and assimilated to  a   typical expression
of  Lutheran    contempt    for the (or rather  “this”) world.
Finally,    there   were    newly   composed    chorales,   but composed    as  far as  possible    to  resemble    traditional
melodies.   Many    of  the most    famous  tunes   are attributed  to  Luther  himself,    probably    as  an  honorific.  The
most    famous  one of  all,    with    an  attribution to  Luther  that    dates   from    within  his lifetime    and is  therefore
possibly    trustworthy,    is  Ein’    feste   Burg    ist unser   Gott    (famous in  English as  “A  Mighty  Fortress”), a
hearty  Verkündigungslied   (“faith-proclaiming song”)  as  Luther  termed  it, for which   he  adapted a   text    from
his own translation of  Psalm   46  (“God   is  our refuge  and strength”   in  the King    James   version).   The
melody, it  has been    plausibly   suggested,  was adapted from    the formula-stock   of  the Meistersingers—the
contemporaneous German  guild-musicians (see    chapter 4). Fig.    18-2    shows   the famous  hymn    as  it
appeared    in  its first   published   source, a   book    of  “new,   improved    sacred  songs”  (Geistliche Lieder  auffs
new gebessert)  issued  in  1533    by  the printer Joseph  Klug    in  Wittenberg, Luther’s    own town.   Like    almost
all the newly   composed    chorales,   it  follows the “bar”   form    of  the Hofweise.
EX. 18-2 Christ lag in  Todesbanden compared    with    Victimae    paschali    and Christ  ist erstanden