Requiem (Lloyd Webber)
Andrew Lloyd Webber's Requiem is a requiem mass written in memory of the composer's father, William Lloyd Webber, who died in 1982. Many thought it a surprising turn for such a populist composer as Lloyd Webber to produce a piece of "serious" music. The music mixes Lloyd Webber's melodic and pop-oriented style with more complex, sophisticated and (at times) even austere forms.
Requiem won the 1986 Grammy Award for Best Classical Contemporary Composition.[1] The most popular segment of Requiem has been the Pie Jesu, which became a hit single and has been recorded by numerous artists.
Scoring and structure
The work is scored for chorus, three soloists (tenor, soprano, treble) and a large orchestra that includes organ, drum kit, and synthesizer. The work premiered on 24 February 1985[1] and featured performers including Lorin Maazel, Plácido Domingo, Sarah Brightman (Lloyd Webber's wife at the time) and Paul Miles-Kingston.
Instrumentation
- Voices: tenor, soprano, and treble soloists, and SATB choir (performed with boy sopranos and altos at the premiere)
- Woodwinds: 2 flutes (1st doubling alto flute, 2nd doubling piccolo and alto flute), 2 oboes (1st doubling oboe d'amore, 2nd doubling English horn), 2 clarinets (1st doubling E-flat clarinet, 2nd doubling bass clarinet), 2 saxophones (1st doubling soprano and tenor saxophones and alto flute, 2nd doubling alto and baritone saxophones and clarinet), 2 bassoons, and contrabassoon
- Brass: 4 horns, 3 trumpets, and 4 trombones
- Percussion: timpani & 4 percussionists playing side drum, bass drum, cymbals, triangle, small, medium, large and deep suspended cymbals, tambourine, deep military side drum, small ratchet rattle, glockenspiel, xylophone, gong, large gong, small bell, bells, chimes, bell tree, wood block, congas, maracas, marimba, high rototom, drum kit
- Keyboards: piano (doubling celesta), synthesizer (DX7), and organ
- Strings: harp, violas, violoncellos, and double basses
Structure
As is usual, Lloyd Webber did not set the Gradual and Tract texts of the Mass. He divides the Sanctus between two movements, including the Hosanna part with the Benedictus. He does not set the Agnus Dei separately, but rather combined the text of Pie Jesu, a motet derived from the final couplet of the usual Dies irae, with that of the Agnus Dei, commonly heard later in the standard Requiem Mass. He includes a text from the burial service, Libera me.
- Introit – Kyrie
- Sequence:
- Dies irae
- Recordare
- Ingemisco
- Offertory – Sanctus: Sanctus
- Sanctus: Hosanna – Benedictus
- Pie Jesu
- Communion – Libera me
Reception
Requiem won the 1986 Grammy Award for Best Classical Contemporary Composition.[1] Although the recorded piece has proven popular, the complete work is only very rarely performed live. This is perhaps due to the large forces required. On 23 April 2013 the London Evening Standard reported that Lloyd Webber is working on a rewrite of his Requiem.[citation needed]
On 20 July 2013, Lorin Maazel revisited Requiem at The Castleton Fesitval. Featured performers were soprano Joyce El-Khoury, tenor Tyler Nelson, and treble Tommy Richman.[citation needed]
Pie Jesu
The best-known part of Lloyd Webber's Requiem, the "Pie Jesu" segment, combines the traditional Pie Jesu text with that of the Agnus Dei from later in the standard Requiem Mass. It was originally performed by Sarah Brightman, who used it in a music video (set in World War II during the London Blitz).
Pie Jesu became a hit single and has been recorded frequently outside of the parent Requiem, including by Sarah Brightman, Jackie Evancho, Sissel Kyrkjebø, Marie Osmond, and Anna Netrebko. The Pie Jesu was voted number 91 in the Classic 100 Twentieth Century countdown in 2011 on the Australian ABC Classic FM radio station.
"Pie Jesu", performed by Sarah Brightman and Paul Miles-Kingston, was a certified Silver hit in the UK in 1985.[2] Brightman later rerecorded the track for her Classics album in 2001.
In his Requiem, Lloyd Webber combined the text of the traditional Pie Jesu with that of the version of the Agnus Dei formerly appointed to be used at Requiem Masses:
Pie Jesu, (×4) Qui tollis peccata mundi, Dona eis requiem. (×2) | Pious Jesu, Who takes away the sins of the world, Give them rest. |
Agnus Dei, (×4) Qui tollis peccata mundi, Dona eis requiem, (×2) Sempiternam (×2) Requiem. | Lamb of God, Who takes away the sins of the world, Give them rest, Everlasting Rest. |
Other recordings of the Lloyd Webber Pie Jesu
- Charlotte Church sang the Pie Jesu on her best-selling debut album, Voice of an Angel (1998).
- Angelis, a children's choir, sang Pie Jesu on their eponymous debut album Angelis (2006).
- Moe Koffman recorded the Pie Jesu on his recently re-issued album Music for the Night (1991) with Doug Riley.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Compositions". http://www.andrewlloydwebber.com. Retrieved 3 January 2012.
- ↑ "British certifications – Sarah Brightman & Paul Miles-Kingston – Pie Jesu". British Phonographic Industry. Enter Pie Jesu in the field Search. Select Title in the field Search by. Click Go