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Two performances of Bunk's oratorio Groß ist Gottes Herrlichkeit with the Evangelischer Oratorienchor der Pfalz under the direction of LKMD Jochen Steuerwald will take place on 16 and 17 November in Zweibrücken and Speyer. The announcement text states: "Under the impression of the war experiences of the Second World War and as a reaction to the bombing of his home town of Rotterdam, ... Gerard Bunk ... began to compose a large oratorio in praise of God's creation based on words from the Old Testament. ... The threat to peace and creation is more relevant today than ever before. Therefore, in addition to the praise of creation, the performance should also be a sign for contemplation and reflection."

On 7 October, songs written by Gerard Bunk between 1907 and 1910 will be sung by the Lied class of the Peter Cornelius Conservatory in Mainz: In stiller Nacht (Friedrich Spee) and Es flüstert in dämmriger Stunde (Heinrich Seidel) from op. 21; Eisnacht (Clara Müller) and Das Hummelchen (Heinrich Seidel) from op. 22; Hör ich das Liedchen klingen and Es treibt mich hin (both Heinrich Heine) from op. 24; Was ist's, o Vater and Ich habe ihn im Schlafe (both Adelbert von Chamisso) from op. 37. Falko Hönisch also performs Meine Liebste op. 42 No. 4 (Friedrich Rückert; 1912) with Beate Schmuck on the piano, head of the Lied class. The baritone and director of the Music Academy in Sankt Goar has already recorded almost all of the Bunk songs (Gerard Bunk YouTube channel).

Bunk's Legend for Organ and Brass Quartet op. 55a, composed at Christmas 1914 − in the Bielefeld environment of the "Posaunengeneral" ("Brass General") Johannes Kuhlo and written at the same time as the later so-called "Christmas peace" during the First World War − was published by Bärenreiter in July 2022.

Baritone Falko Hönisch and pianist André Dolabella have recorded almost all of Gerard Bunk's nearly ninety lieder with piano. The extensive project was funded by the Deutscher Musikrat − listen to it on the Gerard Bunk YouTube channel.

Bunk's song Dorfkirche im Sommer, written in 1909 on the heretical text of Detlev von Liliencron, was first published as a facsimile of the manuscript in the third issue 2022 of the journal Ars Organi.