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Berlioz - Requiem: ’Grande Messe des Morts’ | Brilliant Classics 93946

Berlioz - Requiem: ’Grande Messe des Morts’

New Item

Label: Brilliant Classics

Cat No: 93946

Barcode: 5028421939469

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 2

Genre: Vocal/Choral

Release Date: 24th August 2009

This product has now been deleted. Information is for reference only.

Contents

Artists

Keith Lewis (tenor)
Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra & Chorus

Conductor

Eliahu Inbal

Works

Berlioz, Hector

Grande Messe des Morts (Requiem), op.5

Artists

Keith Lewis (tenor)
Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra & Chorus

Conductor

Eliahu Inbal

About

Haunted by the absence of God’ is how the Berlioz biographer David Cairns described the Grande Messe des morts. Written at a time and in a country where there was no place for God after the Revolution, it is a work of genuine mourning and high drama.

In 1837, Berlioz was commissioned by the French Interior Ministry to write something that could be used for major public ceremonies. He had already composed a Messe solenelle in 1824, and he turned to this work for both material and inspiration. The resulting Requiem is one of the largest religious works of all time – and in length compares with Verdi’s Requiem and Britten’s War Requiem. Berlioz, like Bruckner, saw his work scored for massive choral and instrumental forces, as almost architectural in structure. He certainly wanted to fill every possible part of the cathedral or church with sound.

This remarkable work looks back as well as forwards – the influence of past masters such as Gossec and Cherubini hovers over the Requiem, but there is also a break with tradition. This is a deeply personal work. It is violent, frightening, and often uncomfortable. Berlioz wrote, ‘The poetry of the Prose des morts so intoxicated and exalted me that nothing presented itself to my mind with any clarity: my head was seething, I felt quite dizzy.

It is also, for all its grandeur, an austere work. The massive choral and orchestral sections present a forbidding if impressive façade and this is only broken in one section which allows the tenor soloist a brief moment in the spotlight. This austerity no doubt reflects the influence of Cherubini, whose C minor Requiem of 1815 has no soloists.

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