Programme
- Hippolyte et Aricie(1 mins)Bruit de tonnerre; Ritournelle
- Dardanus – Tambourins 1 & 2(3 mins)
- Castor et Pollux(5 mins)Air ‘Tristes apprêts’
- Symphony No. 2 in D major(12 mins)
- Dardanus(6 mins)Prelude and Air ‘Lieux funestes’
- ʱé(2 mins)Orage
- Les Indes Galantes – Chaconne(6 mins)
- interval
- Requiem in D minor (compl. Süssmayr)(48 mins)
Performers
- Samantha Clarkesoprano
- Claudia Hucklecontralto
- Nick Pritchardtenor
- William Thomasbass
- David Batesconductor
About This Event
‘Didn’t I tell you that I composed the Requiem for myself?’ Mozart may (or may not) have spoken those words on his death bed, but his choral masterpiece, the Requiem, commissioned by a mysterious cloaked figure, certainly offers a transfiguring experience. Written in the last month of Mozart’s life, it contrasts the fear of death with radiant hope and balances dark drama with sublime simplicity. It’s sung tonight by a cast of rising-star soloists, joined by some of the UK’s most talented young voices, the National Youth Chamber Choir. As a prelude, the concert’s first half includes a short symphony by Mozart’s contemporary Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges – the first composer of African ancestry to make waves in Europe – and a selection of dances, arias and storm-evocations drawn from operas by Jean-Philippe Rameau, the leading music-dramatist of this day.
Image: David Bates © Andy Staples