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Maderna / Mdr Rundfunkchor Leipzig / Robert-Schum- Requiem (CD)

SKU: 845221052311
Regular price ¥153.00
Unit price
per
the album cover for Maderna / Mdr Rundfunkchor Leipzig / Robert-Schum - Requiem
the album cover for Maderna / Mdr Rundfunkchor Leipzig / Robert-Schum - Requiem

Bruno Maderna's Requiem was long considered lost and was indeed only premiered in the Teatro la Fenice in Venice in November 2009 - about 36 years after his death.In 1943, Maderna was called up for military service and fought as a partisan against Italy's erstwhile allies, the Germans. He was taken prisoner by the SS, who interrogated him in Dachau and released him shortly afterwards. 'At that moment, it was the only possibility to write a requiem and then to die', Maderna said later. The Requiem suggests an intensive study of the models in the genre, e.g. those by Giuseppe Verdi and Hector Berlioz. At the same time, as a 'War Requiem' the work is a pacifist manifesto.

Tracklist:

  1. Requiem, Pt. 1: Part I: Requiem
  2. Requiem, Pt. 1: Part I: Kyrie Eleison
  3. Requiem, Pt. 1: Part I: Dies Irae
  4. Requiem, Pt. 2: Part II: Domine Jesu
  5. Requiem, Pt. 2: Part II: Sanctus
  6. Requiem, Pt. 2: Part II: Benedictus
  7. Requiem, Pt. 2: Part II: Agnus Dei
  8. Requiem, Pt. 2: Part II: Lux Aeterna
  9. Requiem, Pt. 2: Part II: Libera Me
Format: New CD/Classical

Maderna / Mdr Rundfunkchor Leipzig / Robert-Schum- Requiem (CD)

SKU: 845221052311
Regular price ¥153.00
Unit price
per

Release Date: 10.09.2015

 
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> Due to the current limited nature of music titles, ALL CD & Vinyl purchases are limited to FOUR copies per customer, per item. If you place multiple orders for multiples of the same title, your subsequent orders will be canceled.

Bruno Maderna's Requiem was long considered lost and was indeed only premiered in the Teatro la Fenice in Venice in November 2009 - about 36 years after his death.In 1943, Maderna was called up for military service and fought as a partisan against Italy's erstwhile allies, the Germans. He was taken prisoner by the SS, who interrogated him in Dachau and released him shortly afterwards. 'At that moment, it was the only possibility to write a requiem and then to die', Maderna said later. The Requiem suggests an intensive study of the models in the genre, e.g. those by Giuseppe Verdi and Hector Berlioz. At the same time, as a 'War Requiem' the work is a pacifist manifesto.

Tracklist:

  1. Requiem, Pt. 1: Part I: Requiem
  2. Requiem, Pt. 1: Part I: Kyrie Eleison
  3. Requiem, Pt. 1: Part I: Dies Irae
  4. Requiem, Pt. 2: Part II: Domine Jesu
  5. Requiem, Pt. 2: Part II: Sanctus
  6. Requiem, Pt. 2: Part II: Benedictus
  7. Requiem, Pt. 2: Part II: Agnus Dei
  8. Requiem, Pt. 2: Part II: Lux Aeterna
  9. Requiem, Pt. 2: Part II: Libera Me