The Requiem of Reconciliation was a collaborative work written to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II. It sets the Catholic mass for the dead in fourteen sections, each written by a different composer from a country involved in the war.[1] It was commissioned by the Internationale Bachakademie Stuttgart in Stuttgart, Germany, and first performed by the Gächinger Kantorei, the Kraków Chamber Choir and the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Helmuth Rilling. A two-CD set documenting this performance was released in 1995.[2]
Sections of the work
- Prolog: Hör (by Luciano Berio, Italy)[3]
- Introitus and Kyrie (by Friedrich Cerha, Austria)
- Dies irae (by Paul-Heinz Dittrich, Germany)
- Judex ergo (by Marek Kopelent, Czech Republic)
- Juste judex (by John Harbison, US)
- Confutatis (by Arne Nordheim, Norway)
- Interludium (by Bernard Rands, UK/US)
- Offertorium (by Marc-André Dalbavie, France)
- Sanctus (by Judith Weir, UK)
- Agnus Dei (by Krzysztof Penderecki, Poland)
- Communio I (by Wolfgang Rihm, Germany)
- Communio II: Lux aeterna (by Alfred Schnittke, Russia, left incomplete due to illness and completed by Gennadi Rozhdestvensky)
- Responsorium (by Joji Yuasa, Japan)
- Epilog: Inscription on a Grave in Cornwall (by György Kurtág, Hungary)
References
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