Composer: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Performer: Rusquartet
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Etcetera
Release: 2019
Size: 329 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: cover
Requiem in D Minor, KV. 626
01. I. Introitus – Adagio
02. II. Kyrie – Allegro
03. III. Sequenz – Dies Irae Allegro assai
04. III. Sequenz – Tuba Mirum Andante
05. III. Sequenz – Rex Tremendae
06. III. Sequenz – Recordare
07. III. Sequenz – Confutaties Andante
08. III. Sequenz – Lacrimosa
09. IV. Offertorium – Domine Jesu Andante con moto
10. IV. Offertorium – Hostias Andante
11. V. Sanctus – Adagio
12. VI. Benedictus – Andante
13. VII. Agnus Dei
14. VIII. Communio – Lux Aeterna
Grande Sestetto Concertante after Sinfonia Concertante in E Flat Major, KV. 364
15. I. Allegro maestoso
16. II. Andante
17. III Presto
This CD combines two famous masterpieces by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in startling and clever arrangements for string quartet and string sextet, both dating from the early 19th century.
The Requiem in D minor KV 626 was conceived by Mozart for four vocal soloists, chorus and orchestra. He began composing it in 1791. When he died in December of that year, the Requiem remained unfinished. It was completed
and edited by Franz Xaver Süssmayr. This version was first published in 1800. Probably only a few years later- some sources suggest as early as 1802- the physician/composer/music publicist Peter Lichtenthal (1780-1853) used this score when he arranged the Requiem for string quartet. His daring arrangement, omitting the vocal soloists and chorus and thus also the words of the Mass for the Death, remained manuscript and was only published at the end of the 20th century.
Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante remained manuscript during his lifetime, and there are no reports of a performance. The first publication of the score was in 1802. Only six years later, in 1808, an anonymous arranger published a version for string sextet of KV 364, using the title Grande Sestetto Concertante, per due Violini, due Viole, Violoncello primo concertante e Violoncello secondo.
The choice of a string sextet is extraordinary, as this type of string ensemble had only recently for the very first time been used by Luigi Boccherini, who had published his six sextets op.23 in Paris in 1776. No other significant string sextets were known at the time of this arrangement, and it is not sure that the anonymous arranger had seen or heard the Boccherini pieces.
For the present performances by Rusquartet both arrangements have been revised and occasionally rearranged by the musicians and me, whenever we felt that this would improve the arrangement. Discrepancies between the
arrangements and the Neue Mozart Ausgabe scores were as a rule solved by changing the text according to the NMA.
For the Sinfonia Concertante the excellent edition of Gunther Schuller (Margun Music) was used.