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MOZART’SREQUIEM The traditional version of Mozart’s Requiem, as handed to Count Franz von Walsegg early in 1792 in fulfilment of a commission accepted the previous summer,hasbeenthesubjectofintensemusicologicalandanalyticaldiscussion. This has centred on the authorship of sections of the Requiem which Mozart clearly did not complete himself, and where the contribution of Franz Xaver Süssmayrfigures,moreorless.CriticsofSüssmayr’sroleinthecompletionhave gone so far as to propose alternative solutions (in the last fifty years: Beyer, Landon, Maunder, Druce and Levin). In the present recording, the traditional Süssmayr completion has been used for reasons that are nowhere better expressedthaninthefollowingsummarybyChristophWolff(p.81): . . . the Süssmayr score deserves to be protected as the only contemporary historical, philological, and musical document of those Requiem portions which Mozart was unable to include in his draft score. To the listener, the Süssmayrscorerevealsanaestheticdimensionaswell,becauseitistheonly documentthatrepresentsthegenuinemusicaltruthoftheunfinishedwork. In fact, its rough juxtaposition and open intermingling of perfection and imperfection draws us directly into the realm and atmosphere of the inner Mozartcircletryingtocopewithanoverwhelminglegacy. Thefollowingnotestakethereaderthroughthestoryofthecompositionofthe Requiem, and make a case for the virtues of the traditional version in which SüssmayrbecameMozart’sprincipalcollaborator. The circumstances of the composition of the Requiem are less extraordinary than they are sometimes made out to be. Niemetschektouches on them in his chronicle of Mozart’s life, published in 1798, just seven years after the composer’sdeath.Hereliedonfirst‐witnessaccounts,includingthatofMozart’s widow,Contanze.Weread: Shortly before the coronation of emperor Leopold [August 1791], even beforeMozarthadreceivedtheordertotraveltoPrague[wheretheimperial commissioned La Clemenza di Tito would be performed as part of the celebrations],aletterwithoutsignaturewasbroughttohimbyanunknown messenger, which with many flattering remarks contained an enquiry as to whether he would be willing to undertake to write a Requiem Mass. What wouldbethecost,andhowlongwouldittaketocomplete? Mozart, who never made the least move without his wife’s knowledge, told herofthisremarkablerequest,andatthesametimeexpressedawishtotry his hand at this type of composition, the more so as the higher forms of churchmusichadalwaysappealedtohisgenius.Sheadvisedhimtoaccept theoffer.Hethereforerepliedtohisanonymouspatronthathewouldwrite aRequiemforagivensum;hecouldnotstateexactlyhowlongitwouldtake. He wished, however, to know where the work was to be delivered when ready. In a short while the same messenger appeared again, bringing back not only the sum stipulated but also the promise, as Mozart had been so modestinhisprice,thathewouldreceiveanotherpaymentonreceiptofthe composition. He should, moreover, write according to his own ideas and mood,butshouldnottroubletofindoutwhohadgiventheorder,asitwould assuredlybeinvain. This account mirrors an earlier report published in the Salzburger Intelligenzblatt of 7 January 1792 (see Landon (1988), p.160). The identity of themysteriouscommissionercomestolightinalaterdocumentwrittenin1839 by Anton Herzog (but brought into the public domain by Otto Deutsch only in 1964).Herzog’stestimonyisentirelycredible,sinceasayoungmanhehadbeen intheemployoftheverypersonwho‘hadgiventheorder’forthecommission, CountvonWalsegg. On 14 February 1791, death snatched from Herr Count von Walsegg his belovedwife,intheflowerofherlife.Hewantedtoerectadoublememorial toher,andhehadanexcellentidea.Hearranged...thatoneoftheverybest sculptorsinViennashouldmodelanepitaph;andMozartshouldcomposea Requiem, for which he [the Count] as usual reserved the sole right of possession. . . . the Requiem, which was supposed to be played every year on the anniversary of Madame Countess’s death, took longer than expected; for death surprised Mozart in the midst of this worthy task. What to do now? Who was going to dare imitate a Mozart? And yet the work had to be finished; forMozart’swidow,who(aswaswellknown)was notinthebest circumstances,wastohavereceivedonehundredducats. ...FinallySüssmayrwaspersuadedtocompletetheunfinishedgreatwork, and he admits . . . that during Mozart’s lifetime he often played and sang through with him the pieces that had already been composed, namely ‘Requiem’, ‘Kyrie’, ‘Dies irae’, ‘Domine’, and so forth, and that he [Mozart] very often discussed the completion of this work and communicated [to Süssmayr]thewayandthereasonsofhisorchestration.... AfterHerrCountWalsegghadreceivedthescoreoftheRequiem,hecopied the whole at once, in his usual fashion, note for note in his own very fair hand;andgaveitmovementbymovementtohisviolinistBenaro,sohecould copytheparts. Whenalltheindividualpartswerewrittenout,preparationsforperforming the Requiem were at once set in motion. But because in the region of Stuppach [the location of Walsegg’s estate] not all the necessary musicians could be brought together, it was arranged that the first performance take place in Wiener Neustadt. Among the musicians, the choice of the instrumentalandvocalsoloistswasmadefromamongthebestavailable;and soithappenedthatthesopranowassungbyFerenz[aboy?]fromNeustadt, thecontraltobyKernbeissfromSchottwien,thetenorbyKlein ofNeustadt, and the bass by Thuner of Gloggnitz ‐ these were the soloists. On 12 December1793thegeneralrehearsalwasheldintheevening,inthechoir‐ loft of the Cistercian Abbey and Parish Church of Neustadt; and on 14 Decemberat10o’clockinthemorningarequiemmemorialservicewasheld in that same church, during which this famous Requiem was given for the firsttimeinthefashionforwhichitwasintended. Thethreadsremainingtobeteasedoutoftheseaccountsare:Mozart’sstateof mind as he embarked on this his last (and unfinished)composition, the role of Süssmayr(andothers)inthecompletionoftheRequiem,andthestandingofthe work in the Mozart canon. On the first matter, Nissen, Constanze’s second husband,wrote: AfterMozart’sreturnfromPrague[October1791],hebeganatoncetowork ontheRequiemandtravailedwithexceptionaldiligenceandlivelyinterest; buthisillnesscontinuedanddepressedhim.Withdeepsorrowhiswifesaw his health gradually deteriorating. When, on a fine autumn day [in late October],shedrovewithhimtothePratertodistracthim,andthetwowere sitting alone, Mozart began to speak of death; he maintained that he was writingtheRequiemforhimself.Ashesaidthis,thetearscametohiseyes, and when she attempted to talk him out of those black thoughts, he answered:’No,no,Ifeelittoostrongly,Iwon’tlastmuchlonger:surelyIhave beenpoisoned!Ican’tfreemyselfofthesethoughts.’ ... On the day he died, he had the score of the Requiem brought to his bed. ‘Didn’tIsaybeforethatIwaswritingthisRequiemformyself?Thushespoke andlookedoverthewholeattentively,withtearsinhiseyes.Itwasthelast painfulfarewelltohisbelovedArt. ItisnotthoughttodaythatMozartwaspoisoned(Salieri,thougharival,wasnot amurderer).ButtowardstheendofOctober1791,Mozarthadcomplainedof‘a great languor oppressing him by degrees’ (information recorded by Vincent NovelloinJuly1829afteraconversationwithConstanze);bylateNovemberhe was bedridden; and early on the morning of 5 December he died. The contemporaryrecordofthecauseofdeathwasinflammatoryrheumaticfever,an illness Mozart had suffered more than once during his infancy and childhood. Mozarthadsomuchtoliveforthathisfrustrationatfallingterminallyillatthis point in his career was intolerable. He had recently been offered the post of KapellmeisteratStStephen’sCathedralinVienna,hehadcommissionspromised from the Vienna and Prague theatres, and his perilous financial circumstances werewithinsightofending.Hestruggledwithhisowndeathfarlessserenely than with his mother’s in 1778, which he had accepted as part of divine providence. AsforwhoreallywrotetheRequiem,thereisnodoubtthatitislargelythework of Mozart, though only some sections are in his hand. Franz Xaver Süssmayr (1766‐1803)istheprincipalsecondaryactor.SophieHaibel(Constanze’ssister) confirmsNissen’saccountthatSüssmayrreceivedinstructionsfromMozart: ...SüssmayrwasatMozart’sbedside.Thewell‐knownRequiemlayonthe quiltandMozartwasexplainingtohimhow,inhisopinion,heoughttofinish it,whenhewasgone...Hislastmovementwasanattempttoexpresswith hismouththedrumpassagesintheRequiem. Vincent Novello also records these events following his conversations with Constanzein1829: A short time before his death [Mozart] sang with Madame [Constanze] and Süssmayr the Requiem. Several of the movements oppressed him to tears. HewrotetheRecordareandprincipalpartsfirst,saying,‘IfIdonotlivethese areofthemostconsequence.’WhentheyhadfinishedhecalledSüssmayrto himanddesiredthatifhediedbeforehehadcompletedthework,thefugue hehadwrittenatthecommencement[Kyrie]mightberepeatedandpointed out where and how other parts should be filled up that were already sketched.Itwasinconsequenceofthis,thatSüssmayrafterwardswroteto Breitkopf of Leipzig that he had written the principal part of this Requiem, butasMadamejustlyobserved,anyonecouldhavewrittenwhathehaddone, after the sketching and precise directions of Mozart, and nothing Süssmayr everdid,beforeorafter,provedhimtohaveanytalentofasimilarkind. Ofcourse,Constanzehadtoensurethatthecommissionwascompleted,andin sofarasitwaspossible,asMozart’sownwork.ThemanuscriptsenttoCount vonWalseggevencarriedaforgeryofMozart’ssignature,pennedbySüssmayr, whosehandwasverysimilartoMozart’s.ConstanzewasrightthatSüssmayr’s talent was well below that of Mozart’s, but Süssmayr was not incorrect in claiming a significant level of authorship. As a matter of family honour, Constanze may well have been playing down the role of Süssmayr, whilst he, Süssmayr,mayhaveexaggeratedthelevelofhiscontribution. But what was the level of this contribution? To abbreviate a long and complex story: Mozart completed the opening movement (Requiem aeternam), and the vocalpartsoftheensuingfugue(Kyrieeleison)withindicationsofinstrumental scoring.HealsowrotethevocalmaterialofthemovementsoftheSequenz(Dies irae, Tuba mirum, Rex tremendae, Recordare, Confutatis, Lacrimosa – here stopping at bar 8), again indicating some details of the instrumentation, includingforinstancethetrombonesoloatthebeginningofTubamirum.The Offertorium’svocalmaterial(DomineJesuChristiandHostiasetpreces)isalso inhishand.Allthismaterialwasreviewedandthencompletedbyotherhands, not only Süssmayr’s (the principal contributor to the completion) but, at an earlier stage, also those of Franz Jacob Freystädtler (who orchestrated the Kyrie), and Joseph Eybler (who fleshed out the greater part of the instrumentation of the Sequenz movements). All three of these musicians had been pupils of Mozart, and members of an inner circle of professional acquaintancesonwhomConstanzecouldnaturallycalltodealwiththeproblem of completing the commission. Süssmayr’s predominance as the compositional assistantintheprojectemergesinthefinalmovements‐intheorchestrationof theOffertorium,andthenrathermoreproblematicallyinthecompositionofthe Sanctus,BenedictusandAgnusDei.Asthehistoricalrecordsuggests,thereturn to Mozart’s music for the closing Communio (which reprises the opening two movements of the score) followed an instruction left by the composer to Süssmayr. These later movements (Sanctus, Benedictus and Agnus Dei) have been the subject of particular debate among musicians and musicologists. Some have seen in them infelicities (voice‐leading crudities, short‐winded fugues, curious tonal planning, lack of invention), all said to be the inevitable and regrettable consequence of having a next‐to‐competent hack complete a masterwork. But this is to ignore the evidence for Mozart having discussed his ideas with Süssmayr,andtheexistenceofhissketches(singlemanuscriptleaves,onlyone ofwhichhassurvived).Itisalsotobesurprisedbytheobjectionsraisedtosome of the aspects of these movements. For instance the Benedictus has been described as being overscored inplaces (Druce, p.vii), suffering from harmonic stagnation (Druce, p.viii), and its instrumental opening being ‘particularly clumsy and inappropriate’ (Wolff, p.76). Similarly the Sanctus has been criticisedforitsperfunctorynature,andtheHosannaforcrudevoice‐leadingand brevity (Levin, p.5). These seem to be misplaced judgements. For example, Mozart does indeed write simple instrumental anticipations of vocal entries in Benedictussettings(seehisMissabrevisinBflat,K275).Thevocaldoublingby trombones is not inelegant when played on small‐bore instruments. And the tonal planning of the movement appears wholly competent, with its central dominantcadence,itssubdominantcolouratthereprise(withthetenorentry), not to mention its telling references, in the instrumental interludes, to the scoring and musical figures heard first in the opening movement of the score. This is too assured and inventive to be simply the work of a hack. As for the criticismlevelledattheHosannas,itisperhapsmoreastrokeofgeniusthatthey arenotinthesamekey(withthecustomarydacapoeffect),butindifferentkeys (DmajorandBflatmajor),theprogressionfromBflatmajor(secondHosannato Agnus) being decidedly more powerful in effect than a simple change of mode (from D major to D minor). The Sanctus with its first Hosanna was always set succinctly in the Viennese Mass tradition because it was necessary for the BenedictustoactasanElevationmotet,andtheElevationoftheHostcouldnot belongdelayedsincethe(silent)recitationoftheCanonoftheMass(thePrayer of Consecration) began immediately after the Sursum corda and Preface. It is morethanlikelythatSüssmayrandMozartknewexactlywhattheyweredoing innothavingtheBenedictusdelayedbyafirstHosannaanylongerthantheone thathascomedowntous. Christoph Wolff has suggested that in his Requiem ‘Mozart wanted to give the genre of sacred music, in which he had been rather inactive for so long, a completely new direction’ (p.75). This may be seen in the entirely vocal orientation of the score, the singular instrumentation (of the woodwind, only basset‐horns and bassoons are used, as in his Masonic music), the cross‐ references throughout the score (one of the more subtle examples being the melodicsimilarityoftheopeningbarsofDiesiraeandSanctus),thecontrapuntal rigour,andaspectsoftonalplanning.Theabsenceofaseparatefugal‘Amen’at theendoftheSequenz(forwhichthereisasketchofadozenbars)mayalsobea ‘newdirection’.Indeed,giventhesearingqualityoftheLacrimosa,itsconcluding and powerful plagal ‘Amen’ cadence seems entirely convincing, retaining the impactofthetext,ratherthanhavingitdissipatedina‘clever’fugue.Andwithin the realm of historical speculation, to which we are bound to return, a conversationmayhaveoccurredbetweenMozartandSüssmayrinwhichMozart voicedapreferenceforintegratingthe‘Amen’withintheLacrimosa,ratherthan makingitaseparatemovement,sketchnotwithstanding. These, and other arguments, strongly support the view that the traditional versionoftheRequiemdeserves,asWolffconcluded,‘tobeprotected’. And what of the Requiem’s musical qualities? Its demeanour is very different from that of Mozart’s earlier Salzburg church music, not least because this is a Masssettingforthedead.Theemphasisissquarelyonthevocalwriting,andon thorough‐going contrapuntal practice. At the same time, Mozart reveals a growing taste for choral homophony, as exemplified in sections of Rex tremendae, Confutatis, Lacrimosa and Hostias. (This interest in chordal declamationisafeatureofthesettingofAveverumcorpus(K618)writtensome months earlier.) The orchestral palette is decidedly darkened by the choice of basset‐horns and the absence of other woodwinds besides bassoons. The affiliation of this scoring with Mozart’s Masonic music is unmistakeable. Springing from the Viennese church tradition are the quotationof a plainchant lineat‘Tedecethymnus’(herethetonusperegrinus),theflamboyanttrombone solo at the commencement of Tuba mirum, coupled with its Sarastro‐like incantationsfromthebasssoloist,andthechoiceofDminorasakeyassociated withdeepsolemnity.Thedramaticcharacterisationofthemusicalsettingwasa quality immediately appreciated by Mozart’s contemporaries. It has never lost its powerful appeal. It owes much to the composer’s understanding and manipulationofcharacterinhismaturetheatremusic.ItalsoreflectsMozart’s stateofmindashecomposedtheRequiem,whichifnotfeveredbythoughtsof his own imminent death (at least not until his very final days), was certainly spurredonbyanambitiontore‐establishhimselfasachurchcomposerworthy ofhisnominationasKapellmeisterofStStephen’sCathedral. The Requiem Mass takes the traditional liturgical form of Introit (Requiem aeternam) followed immediately by Kyrie eleison. After the readings, the Sequenzwassung,atextofeighteenverses,hereinMozart’ssettingsplitupinto six discrete movements (Dies irae, Tuba mirum, Rex tremendae, Recordare, Confutatis,Lacrimosa).TheOffertoriumfollowed(DomineJesuChriste,withits central section Hostias et preces). After the Sursum corda and Preface, the movements Sanctus + Hosanna, Benedictus + Hosanna and Agnus Dei were performed without intervening liturgy. The Communio (lux aeterna and Cum sanctistuis)concludedtherite. ©EDWARDHIGGINBOTTOM,2011 Sources D.Druce(ed.),Mozart,Requiem,Novello,London,1993 R.D.Levin(ed.),Mozart,Requiem,Carus‐Verlag,Stuttgart,1996 H.C.R.Landon,Mozart’sLastYear,ThamesandHudson,GDR,1988 H.C.R.Landon(ed.),TheMozartCompanion,Schirmer,NewYork,1990 C.Wolff,‘TheCompositionandCompletionofMozart’sRequiem,1791‐1792’,inC.Eisen(ed.), MozartStudies,Oxford,1991,pp.61‐81