Requiem (Bruckner)
Requiem | |
---|---|
by Anton Bruckner | |
The composer, c. 1860 | |
Key | D minor |
Catalogue | WAB 39 |
Form | Missa pro defunctis |
Dedication | In memory of Franz Sailer |
Performed | 15 September 1849 – St. Florian Monastery |
Published | 1930 |
Recorded | 1970 |
Movements | 6 |
Vocal | SATB choir and soloists |
Instrumental | orchestra and organ |
The Requiem in D minor, WAB 39, by Anton Bruckner is a setting of the Missa pro defunctis for mixed choir, vocal soloists, three trombones, one horn, strings and organ with figured bass,[1] written in memory of Franz Sailer, the notary of the St. Florian Monastery, who bequeathed Bruckner a Bösendorfer piano.[2] The Requiem was premiered on 15 September 1849, a year after Sailer's death.
Setting
- Introit: Requiem – Andante, D minor
- Sequence: Dies irae – Allegro, D minor
- Offertorium
- Domine – Andante, F major
- Hostias – Adagio, B-flat major: Chorale by divided man voices and trombones
- Quam olim – Con spirito, F minor: Double fugue, ending in F major
- Sanctus – Andante, D minor
- Benedictus – Andante, B-flat major - a solo horn replaces one of the trombones
- Agnus Dei and Communion
- Agnus Dei – Adagio, D minor
- Requiem – Adagio, D minor: Chorale a capella
- Cum sanctis – Alla breve, D minor, ending in D major
Total duration: about 37 minutes[1]
The Requiem is most likely Bruckner's "first truly large-scale composition and probably his first significant work."[3] "[It] is amazing what he achieved, especially if we look at the great double fugue of the Quam olim Abrahae, written at least six years before he even commenced his thorough contrapuntal studies with Simon Sechter!"[4] "The Requiem was Bruckner's first larger-scale composition and also his first work with orchestra. As a highly self-critical seventy-year-old, Bruckner passed judgement on the work as follows: 'It is not bad!'."[1]
There is clear influence of Mozart throughout the work.
[There] are many passages reminiscent of what was even then, in 1848/49, a past age (the very opening points irresistibly to Mozart's Requiem in the same key), and though the very inclusion of a figured bass for organ continuo strikes one as backward looking, there are already several flashes of the later, great Bruckner to come.[4]
"[Despite it] is by no means a perfect masterpiece... [it] can be said to be the first full demonstration that the young man was a composer of inestimable promise."[5]
[The] expressively reticent opening of the opening of the Requiem, with his softly shifting syncopations in the strings ... already faintly anticipates one or two of his own symphonic passages in the two earlier D minor symphonies, for instance Nos. '0' and 3... [We] cannot escape the solemn beauty of this music, which already has the authentic atmosphere of natural genius.[5]
During the years following the composition of the Requiem, Bruckner wrote a number of small choral works as well as two works on a larger canvas: a Magnificat (1852) and the Missa solemnis in B-flat minor (1854). Strangely enough these do not quite measure up to the qualities inherent in the earlier Requiem.[4]
Unlike the later Masses, Bruckner never revised this setting. Still, there are three different editions in the Gesamtausgabe: the first, by Robert Haas in 1930, added a lot of dynamics markings but ignored some of Bruckner's hairpins;[2] the second, by Leopold Nowak in 1966, corrected these oversights but retained antique clefs for the vocal parts,[6] (that is, different C-clefs for soprano, alto and tenor); the third edition, by Rüdiger Bornhöft in 1998, modernised the clefs (treble for all but bass) and corrected minor errors.
Selected discography
The Requiem remains still somewhat in the background of other Bruckner's works. Most of the about 20 recordings of it are live performances, which were not brought to the commercial market.
The LP recording by Schönzeler in 1970 was a pioneer. Matthew Best's CD recording is still, according to Hans Roelofs, currently the reference. Farnberger's recording (1997) with the St. Florianer Sängerknaben, which was recorded in the St. Florian Abbey, provides the listener with a whiff of authenticity. Out of the more recent recordings, Roelofs picks out Janssens' recording of 2006 with the Laudantes Consort, and Susana Acra-Brache's recording of 2010 with the Grupo Vocal Matisses.[7]
- Requiem & 4 Orchestral Pieces, Hans-Hubert Schönzeler conducting the Alexandra Choir and the London Philharmonic Orchestra, Robert Munns (Organ), LP: Unicorn UNS 210, 1970
- Requiem in D minor, Hans Michael Beuerle conducting the Laubacher Kantorei and the Instrumental-Ensemble Werner Keltsch, LP: Cantate 658 231, 1972.
This long out-of-print LP has recently been transferred to CD: Klassic Haus KHCD 2011-092 (with Psalm 146 by Wolfgang Riedelbauch).[8] - Anton Bruckner – Music of the St. Florian Period (II), Jürgen Jürgens conducting the Monteverdi-Chor and the Israel Chamber Orchestra, Werner Kaufmann (Organ), 1984; this historical, previously not issued performance has recently been transferred to CD: BSVD-0111, 2012
- Bruckner – Requiem, Matthew Best conducting the Corydon Singers and the English Chamber Orchestra, Thomas Trotter (organ), CD: Hyperion CDA66245, 1987 (with Psalm 112 and Psalm 114)
- Anton Bruckner in St. Florian – Requiem & Motetten, Franz Farnberger conducting the Instrumentalensemble St. Florian and the St. Florianer Sängerknaben, Andreas Etlinger (Organ) – CD Studio SM D2639 SM 44, 1997
- A history of the Requiem – Part III, Guy Janssens conducting the Laudantes Consort, Benoît Mernier (Organ) – CD: Cypres CYP 1654, 2006 (with Maurice Duruflé’s Requiem)
- Anton Bruckner: Requiem, Ave Maria, Te Deum, Susana Acra-Brache conducting the Grupo Vocal Matisses and the In-Art Orquestra – CD/DVD: Issue of the Ensemble Musica Sacra, 2010
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Anton Bruckner – Critical Complete Edition: Requiem, Masses & Te Deum
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Nowak
- ↑ Kinder, p. 8
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Four Pieces and Requiem – LP liner notes by Hans-Hubert Schönzeler, 1970
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Leaflet of Best's recording by Robert Simpson
- ↑ Bornhöft
- ↑ Roelofs' commented discography of Bruckner's Requiem
- ↑ Transfer to CD of the historical LP-recording of Psalm 146 and of the Requiem
Sources
- Rüdiger Bornhöft, Note to the Preface to Anton Bruckner: Sämtliche Werke: Band 14: Requiem D-Moll: Studienpartitur, Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner-Gesellschaft, Richard Rickett (translator), Vienna, 1998
- Paul Hawkshaw, "An anatomy of change: Anton Bruckner's Revisions to the Mass in F minor" Bruckner Studies edited by Timothy L. Jackson and Paul Hawkshaw, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1997
- Timothy Jackson, "Bruckner's 'Oktaven'", Music & Letters Vol. 78, No. 3, 1997
- Keith William Kinder, The Wind and Wind-Chorus Music of Anton Bruckner, Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut, 2000
- Leopold Nowak, Preface to Anton Bruckner: Sämtliche Werke: Band 14: Requiem d-Moll: Studienpartitur, Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner-Gesellschaft, Richard Rickett (translator), Vienna, 1966
- Hans Ferdinand Redlich, Preface to Mass in F minor (revision of 1881), Ernst Eulenburg, Ltd, London, 1967
- Hans-Hubert Schönzeler, Bruckner, Marion Boyars, London, 1978
- Robert Simpson, The Essence of Bruckner: An essay towards the understanding of his music, Victor Gollancz Ltd, London, 1967
- Cornelis van Zwol, Anton Bruckner – Leven en Werken, Thot, Bussum (Netherlands), 2012. ISBN 90-686-8590-2
- Derek Watson, Bruckner, J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd, London, 1996
External links
- Complete, commented discography by Hans Roelofs
- Full score of Bruckner's Requiem at IMSLP
- A digitalisation of LP Philips Fontana 6599 855 (1974): Friedrich Wolf's with the Choir and Orchestra of St Augustin, Vienna, and Martin Haselböck (Organ) can be heard on YouTube: Requiem, Dies irae, Offertorium, Sanctus & Benedictus, and Agnus Dei & Communion.
- A live performance (2012) by Maija Breiksa with the Biberist Contrapunkt Chor can be heard on YouTube: Anton Bruckner - Requiem in d-Moll WAB39