Brahms--Ein deutsches Requiem
Brahms's monumental Ein deutsches Requiem
has engaged audiences and critical musicians alike from the time
of its premiere. Perhaps one of the
reasons for the immediate and enduring popularity of the Requiem
is the care that Brahms took to create a specifically nonsectarian religious
work. Malcolm MacDonald has written that the text which Brahms chose from
Martin Luther’s German translation of the Bible, "essentially
addresses the feelings of the bereaved, in a consolatory
meditation on the common destiny of the dead and the living."
During rehearsals for the premiere of the work
in its first version at the Bremen Cathedral, Karl Martin Reinthaler, who was
preparing the chorus, wrote to Brahms to express his concern that no specific
reference to Christ's redemptive purpose was contained in the
Requiem. Brahms's reply makes it clear that the omission was intentional:
As regards the title, I will confess I should gladly have
left out "German" and substituted "Human."
Also that I knowingly and intentionally dispensed with passages
such as St. John's Gospel Ch[apter] 3 verse lb ("For God so
loved the world, that he gave his only-begotten Son, that whosoever
believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life").
Audiences have found that Brahms's message of comfort
for the living transcended religious dogma and spoke on a personal
level whatever the listener's spiritual beliefs.
Most of Ein deutsches Requiem was written with intense effort in the two
years that followed the death of his mother on February 2,1865. By April of
that year he had sent what were to be the first and fourth movements of the
Requiem Clara Schumann, internationally acclaimed pianist, widow of the
composer Robert Schumann, and Brahms’ lifelong friend and confidante.
While Brahms never confirmed that his mother's death was the primary
motivation for composing a work that he hoped would have transcendent
meaning, Clara Schumann stated that her circle all assumed that the
death of Christiane Brahms was indeed the composer's inspiration.
Whatever the motivation, intentions alone do not create an enduring
masterpiece. Brahms's skillful choice of text, brilliant macrocosmic
construction, and attention to details of melodic design, complex
counterpoint, long-range harmonic tension, and superb orchestration,
however, do combine to fulfill Robert Schumann's prophecy that when
Brahms "waves his magic wand where the power of great orchestral
and choral masses will aid him, then we shall be shown still more
wonderful glimpses into the secrets of the spirit-world."
The overall form of Ein deutsches Requiem proceeds from the
character created when Brahms assembled and arranged his texts.
An overall arch or palindrome is embodied in the seven-movement
structure. The middle of the palindrome, "Wie lieblich sind
deine Wohnungen" (fourth movement, "How amiable are thy
tabernacles"), is a lyric and joyful vision of all who
"reside in the courts of the Lord." By placing this movement
at the center of the work, Brahms reinforces the idea that his
Requiem will celebrate a living spirit rather than mourn
the passing of the corporeal vessel of that spirit.
Working outward, one finds the texture of the third and fifth
movements defined by the prominent place given to the soloists,
The second and sixth movements share a monumental character that
results from the powerful sonorities used and the driving force
created by harmonic tension. The prayerful and contemplative nature
of the opening chants "Selig sind, die da Leid tragen"
("Blessed are they that mourn"} is mirrored in the final
chorus "Selig sind die Toten" ("Blessed are the dead").
One also hears an exact recall of one of the most important motifs
from the opening chorus in the final measures of the closing chorus.
And finally, Brahms manipulates this setting of Revelations 14:13
to repeat the word "selig" so that the last word of the
Requiem is the same as the first, completing the palindrome
unequivocally.
Turning from the overall design, one finds a wealth of inspired
detail. The range of compositional methods that Brahms employs
is nothing short of awe-inspiring for professional musicians and
audiences alike. A description of some of the more important
formal, harmonic, and melodic ideas found in each of the movements
follows:
I "Selig sind, die da Leid tragen"
Brahms creates a structure, relatively static harmonically, that
incorporates a ritornello (a recurring instrumental motive)
into a motet-like chorus. The character of repose and prayer
associated with music a cappella (for choir alone--in
its original sense "in the chapel") permeates both
this and the final recapitulatory chorus.
The orchestration of the first movement is noteworthy for
excluding the violins. Cellos in three parts and divided violas
present the opening ritornello over
string basses to create a rich sonority that complements the ideals of both
comfort and mourning. That ritornello
leads to the homophonic opening choral presentation, which will be recalled in
the last movement. The opening textual statement is followed by a sudden shift
to the key of D-flat as the chorus sings "Die mit Tränen säen, werden mit Freuden
ernten" ("They that sow in tears shall reap in joy"}.
The musical ideas associated with that text are presented twice,
with the ritornello marking the verses, before the
initial choral statement returns.
II. "Denn alles Fleisch, es ist wie Gras"
The second movement opens with a march that defines the
presentation of the text "All flesh is as grass...the
grass withereth...."
The march’s forward movement pairs with a powerful harmonic design that
features the brightening effect of switching from the minor to the major mode.
The opening B-flat minor march is interrupted by the optimistic description of
the farmer who waits for the rain to nourish his crops. That optimism is marked
by the shift to G-flat major. An even more powerful transformation of modes
occurs at the words "Aber das Herrn Wort," where the shift from
B-flat minor to B-flat major is accompanied by triumphant brass signaling the
final polyphonic chorus of praise "Die Erlöseten des Herrn."
III. "Herr, lehre doch mich"
Brahms employs his soloists quite differently than one had come to expect in a Requiem
Mass setting of the 18th or 19th century. Rather than integrate a solo quartet
into a large, symphonically conceived structure as Haydn and Beethoven did,
Brahms presents his soloists in a more personal manner, treating each as if
they were singing orchestrated Lieder. Each phrase that the soloist sings in
this movement is followed by a presentation of the same material by the chorus,
intensifying the effect. The final fugue is preceded by one of
the most beautiful moments of the Requiem.The text "My hope is
in thee" is set in slowly rising triplet figures that build to a powerful
climax, launching a fugue on the text "But the souls of the righteous are
in the hand of God."
IV. "Wie lieblich sind deine Wohnungen"
The central movement is perhaps the most direct in its presentation of
material and emotions. Similar in style to many of Brahms’ vocal quartets,
this movement transfigures the charms of a Brahms lied to create a
comforting elegy.
V. "Ihr habt nun Traurigkeit"
The fifth movement was added in 1869, after the premiere. A simple song
structure in ABA form supports a lyrical melodic figure in the soprano solo
line. The sense of repose may have seemed necessary to Brahms to set up the
enormous statement that follows in the sixth movement.
VI. "Denn wir haben hie keine bleibende Statt"
In this overwhelming description of victory over death, Brahms' use
of long-range harmonic planning rivals that of Beethoven in the
Fifth Symphony. The opening is in the key of C minor but rarely
settles into that key: the ear is left wanting to hear its final
"resting place," the tonic chord, as the chorus sings
"Here we have no continuing city, but we seek one to come." That the
word painting is intended becomes clear as the movement progresses.
The baritone solo describes the mystery of the resurrection of
the dead, moving into the rather distant key of F-sharp minor. At the words
"We shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye"
the key changes, abruptly modulating through a powerfully orchestrated G major
chord to the first completely unambiguous appearance of C minor as the chorus
sings, "Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is thy sting? O
grave, where is thy victory?" However, this turns out to be only a
preliminary pronouncement of redemption. The final taunting line flung at
death, "Wo ist dein Sieg?" ("Where is thy victory?"), sung
in fortissimo chords over the entire orchestra, turns out to be merely an
introduction to a C-major fugue of praise to the God who has created all
things. Nearly 150 measures long, the fugue is a marvel of perfection that
thrusts us forward into both the spiritual and the harmonic "resting
place" the composition has been seeking from the first two chords.
VII. “Selig sind die Toten"
The final movement completes the overall palindromic form of
Ein deutsches Requiem while bringing us the final rest sought at
the beginning of the previous movement. "Yea, saith the Spirit,
that they may rest from their labors; and their works do follow them":
Brahms' choice of text and the character he creates
in this motet-like setting bring the work full circle, There is a return to the
opening key of F major, and the text is powerfully reminiscent of the opening
movement.
Notes ©2006 by Patrick Gardner