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Mozart: Requiem - Suzuki

Mozart: Requiem - Suzuki

BIS  BIS-2091 SACD

Stereo/Multichannel Hybrid

Classical - Vocal


MOZART, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756–91):
Requiem, KV 626 (1791) Completed and edited by Masato Suzuki (based on the autograph of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Joseph Eybler and Franz Xaver Süßmayr)
Vesperae solennes de Confessore, KV 339 (1780)
Tuba mirum from Requiem (bassoon version)

Instrumentation for the Requiem:
Corno di Bassetto I, II, Fagotto I, II, Clarino I, II, Timpani, Trombone I, II, III, Violino I, II, Viola, Soprano, Alto, Tenore, Basso, Continuo

Carolyn Sampson (soprano)
Marianne Beate Kielland (alto)
Makoto Sakurada (tenor)
Christian Immler (bass-baritone)
Bach Collegium Japan
Masaaki Suzuki (conductor)


Since its creation in 1791, Mozart’s Requiem has become one of the truly iconic works in the history of music. A prime reason for this is of course its musical qualities: as early as 1814 E.T.A. Hoffmann described the Requiem as ‘the most sublime achievement that the modern period has contributed to the church’. But even before that legends had begun to form around the work; that it was written to fulfil an anonymous commission – received through ‘an unknown, grey stranger’ – is the stuff of mystery novels, while the fact that Mozart fell ill and died while composing it has been exploited to great melodramatic effect.

Among the numerous myths, one thing that we know for certain is that its first performance took place only a few days after Mozart’s death, at a memorial service for the composer. The performers used the composer’s incomplete autograph, but very soon attempts to complete the work were set in motion by Mozart’s widow. She first engaged Joseph Eybler and later Franz Xaver Süßmayr for the task, and in 1800 the Requiem appeared in print, in Süßmayr’s completion.

This is still by far the most widely performed version, but it has also been severely criticized over the years, and many have tried to improve on it, or make their own versions based on the autograph. For this recording of the work, Masaaki Suzuki and the Bach Collegium Japan commissioned a new performing edition.

Masato Suzuki, himself a member of the BCJ and the son of Masaaki, has based his completion on Eybler’s and Süßmayr’s work, explaining his procedure in the liner notes to the disc. The recording was made at the Shoin Chapel in Kobe, where the team has previously recorded their complete cycle of Bach’s church cantatas. A stellar cast of soloists is headed by soprano Carolyn Sampson, who also shines in the famous soprano aria Laudate Dominum – one of the highlights of Vesperae solennes de confessore which conclude the disc.

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PCM recording

Recorded in December 2013 at the Kobe Shoin Women’s University Chapel, Japan, 24/96

Recording producer: Jens Braun (Take5 Music Production)

Sound engineer: Hans Kipfer (Take5 Music Production)

Tuning: Akimi Hayashi

Recording equipment: BIS’s recording teams use microphones from Neumann and Schoeps, audio electronics from RME, Lake People and DirectOut, MADI optical cabling technology, monitoring equipment from B&W, STAX and Sennheiser, and Sequoia and Pyramix digital audio workstations.

Post-production: Editing and mixing: Jens Braun

Executive producers: Robert Suff, Robert von Bahr