Premium Only Content

Requiem in D Minor, K 626, Mozart
Requiem in D Minor, K 626, requiem mass by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, left incomplete at his death on December 5, 1791. Until the late 20th century the work was most often heard as it had been completed by Mozart’s student Franz Xaver Süssmayr. Later completions have since been offered, and the most favorably received among these is one by American musicologist Robert D. Levin.
According to a contract that Mozart signed and an attorney witnessed, the requiem was commissioned by Franz, Graf (count) von Walsegg-Stuppach. The count, it seems, pretended to some compositional ability and liked to pass off the work of others as his own. The new requiem, intended as a tribute to the count’s wife, was part of that game. Therefore, he insisted that Mozart was neither to make copies of the score nor to reveal his involvement in it and that the first performance was reserved for the man who commissioned the piece.
At the time, Mozart was deeply engaged with the writing of two operas: The Magic Flute and La clemenza di Tito (“The Clemency of Titus”). Together the three assignments were too much for a man suffering from a succession of debilitating fevers. Most of his failing strength went into the operas, both of which were completed and staged. As for the requiem, he worked on it when strength permitted, and several friends came to his apartment December 4, 1791, to sing through the score-in-progress. Yet his condition worsened, and, by the time of Mozart’s death early the next morning, he had finished only the “Introit.” The “Kyrie,” “Sequence,” and “Offertorium” were sketched out. The last three movements— “Benedictus,” “Agnus Dei,” and “Communio”—remained unwritten, and nearly all the orchestration was incomplete.
Confining musical discussion to those portions of the requiem that are mostly from Mozart’s own mind, the orchestra most often focuses on the strings, with woodwinds featured when greater poignancy is needed and brass and timpani largely relied on for forceful moments. Particularly in the vocal writing, Mozart’s intricate contrapuntal layers show the influence of the Baroque masters J.S. Bach and George Frideric Handel.
Especially in the “Sequence,” Mozart underlines the power of the text by setting prominent trombone passages against the voices: chorus in the “Dies Irae” and soprano, alto, tenor, and bass soloists in the “Tuba Mirum.” It is the most prominent use of the trombone in Mozart’s entire catalog.
Please subscribe to my Substack Channel:
https://juxtaposition1.substack.com/podcast
-
0:54
Rehypothecation1
22 hours agoGeorge Lucas filmed a Satanic Ritual Murder at Altamont Concert
3803 -
LIVE
The Charlie Kirk Show
46 minutes agoAllie Beth Stuckey on the Charlie Kirk Revival | Kirk Cameron | 9.23.2025
7,718 watching -
LIVE
MattMorseTV
3 hours ago $4.88 earned🔴Trump's United Nations BOMBSHELL.🔴
1,317 watching -
LIVE
Steven Crowder
3 hours ago🔴We're Done Apologizing: Trump Torches Indian H-1B Visas & The United Nations
32,465 watching -
43:39
The Rubin Report
2 hours agoHost Goes Quiet as Press Sec Destroys Jimmy Kimmel Narrative w/ Facts in Under 1 Minute
20.7K12 -
LIVE
Side Scrollers Podcast
2 hours agoKimmel RETURNS + Twitch University + More! | Side Scrollers
255 watching -
LIVE
The Mel K Show
2 hours agoMORNINGS WITH MEL K Defining Liberty: Where the Constitution Stands in a Surveillance State 9-23-25
662 watching -
LIVE
The Shannon Joy Show
2 hours agoFree Speech, Free Markets & The Political Weaponization Of Charlie Kirk. Live With Matt Kibbe
168 watching -
LIVE
LFA TV
13 hours agoBREAKING NEWS ALL DAY! | TUESDAY 9/23/25
4,281 watching -
35:28
Grant Stinchfield
1 hour agoTylenol Tied to Autism? Or is it a Convenient Scapegoat?
5.02K1