Brahms: An English Requiem Choir of King's College London
Album info
Album-Release:
2017
HRA-Release:
17.11.2017
Label: Delphian
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Vocal
Artist: Choir of King's College London
Composer: Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
- Johannes Brahms (1833 - 1897): Ein deutsches Requiem, Op. 45 (Version with Piano Duo Accompaniment) [Sung in English]:
- 1 I. Blessed Are They That Mourn 09:17
- 2 II. Behold, All Flesh Is as the Grass 13:50
- 3 III. Lord, Make Me to Know the Measure of My Days 10:00
- 4 IV. How Lovely Is Thy Dwelling Place 05:00
- 5 V. Ye Now Are Sorrowful 06:03
- 6 VI. Here on Earth Have We No Continuing Place 11:47
- 7 VII. Blessed Are the Dead Which Die in the Lord 09:15
Info for Brahms: An English Requiem
The newest recording from the Choir of King’s College London (Joseph Fort, director) will be released on the Delphian Records label on 17th November 2017. Titled ‘An English Requiem’, this recording revives the first English setting of Ein Deutsches Requiem by Johannes Brahms, as it would have been performed in nineteenth-century Britain.
Since its London premiere in 1871, Brahms’s Requiem has enjoyed immense popularity in Britain, in both its orchestral and chamber versions. But the setting we know today is not the one that nineteenth-century British audiences knew and loved. They would have been unlikely to have heard the work performed in German; rather, it was almost always sung in an English translation, which the writer G. A. Macfarren even christened ‘An English Requiem’ in 1873.
This is the first recording of the nineteenth-century English setting in which the Requiem was known by its earliest British audiences. Just as at the 1871 London premiere, the choir here is accompanied by piano duet instead of orchestra, with dynamic pianists James Baillieu and Richard Uttley performing this role. Soprano Mary Bevan and baritone Marcus Farnsworth complete the stellar cast of young soloists.
This recording is not just a revival of a nineteenth-century artefact; it should also make its listeners think. For listeners and critics today who are used to mainstream recordings of this piece sung in German by a massed chorus with full orchestral accompaniment, hearing the Requiem sung in English with piano accompaniment will certainly feel strange. But this strangeness is merely a result of an inflexible performance culture today that prioritises a single, ‘ideal’ version of a piece over its arrangements.
This was not the prevailing view in the nineteenth century. Nineteenth-century attitudes towards music were simply more flexible than ours are now, and perhaps more audience oriented. Translating a work into its audience’s native language and adapting it for the available players were commonplace practices, and these alterations were not seen as corruptions to an ideal original. In fact, they were crucial for music’s communication, as translating it guaranteed its comprehensibility. Brahms took for granted the different versions of his Requiem; after all, he had specifically chosen familiar texts in order that his audiences would know and understand them.
The danger today is that we prioritise music’s sounds over its message, that our preoccupation with single, original, ideal versions risks forgetting about music’s need to communicate with its audience. This recording puts forward an alternative possibility. The choir’s director, Joseph Fort, explains, ‘Brahms’s Requiem is a personal, heartfelt expression of comfort in the face of loss, whose message is as relevant today as it was when he wrote it 150 years ago. I hope that returning to the nineteenth-century English version for this recording enables our performance to speak directly and fervently to its audiences, to move them and to convince them.’
Mary Bevan, soprano
Marcus Farnsworth, baritone
James Baillieu, piano
Richard Uttley, piano
The Choir of King's College London
Joseph Fort, director
No biography found.
Booklet for Brahms: An English Requiem