Orchestra of St. Luke’s: Brahms’s German Requiem | Carnegie Hall
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Event is Live
Carnegie Hall Presents

Orchestra of St. Luke’s

Brahms’s German Requiem
Thursday, May 9, 2024 8 PM Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage
Please note that due to illness, Bernard Labadie has withdrawn from this performance. Conducting in his place will be Xian Zhang. The program remains unchanged.
Xian Zhang by Benjamin Ealovega, Erin Morley by Monarca Studios, Andrè Schuen by Guido Werner
Orchestra of St. Luke’s concludes its 2023–2024 series with a glorious evening of Brahms choral works. The program opens with the first-ever Carnegie Hall performance of the composer’s Begräbnisgesang, a short and deeply personal early work, likely written in remembrance of Brahms’s close friend Robert Schumann. The magnificent German Requiem follows, treating audiences to a singular masterpiece of the choral repertoire that combines sacred music with a profoundly universal and humanistic spirit.

Performers

Orchestra of St. Luke's
Xian Zhang, Conductor
Erin Morley, Soprano
Andrè Schuen, Baritone
La Chapelle de Québec
Ensemble Altera

Program

ALL-BRAHMS PROGRAM

Begräbnisgesang

Ein deutsches Requiem

Event Duration

The printed program will last approximately 90 minutes with no intermission. Please note that there will be no late seating. 
Northwell
Sponsored by Northwell Health, Official Healthcare Partner of Carnegie Hall.
This concert is made possible, in part, by an endowment fund for choral music established by S. Donald Sussman in memory of Judith Arron and Robert Shaw.

At a Glance

Orchestra of St. Luke’s closes its season with a blockbuster Brahms program under conductor Xian Zhang that features two choral masterpieces: Begräbnisgesang and Ein deutsches Requiem. With the combined forces of La Chapelle de Québec, Ensemble Altera, baritone Andrè Schuen, and soprano Erin Morley, this pair of works showcases the broad scope of Brahms’s writing for the human voice. Begräbnisgesang takes a 16th-century hymn by Michael Weiße as its text. Brahms’s word painting throughout evokes a tapestry of choral writing traditions in its lamentations. Nearly a decade later, the composer set himself the task of writing a Requiem, not following the Latin Mass for the Dead, but a text of his own devising culled from biblical verses. The result is a truly “human requiem” that explores the myriad human responses to death. From grief to hope and decay to resurrection, Brahms’s epic score is as much a work for our time as it was for his own.

Bios

Orchestra of St. Luke’s

Orchestra of St. Luke’s (OSL) performs and produces in a variety of formats throughout New York City, including orchestra and chamber music series on each of Carnegie Hall’s ...

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Xian Zhang

The 2023–2024 season marks Xian Zhang’s eighth as music director of the New Jersey Symphony, which celebrated its centennial last season. She also serves as principal guest ...

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Erin Morley

One of today’s most sought-after lyric coloratura sopranos, Erin Morley has garnered critical acclaim worldwide and regularly appears on opera stages that include the Vienna and ...

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Andrè Schuen

Born in La Val in South Tyrol, Italy, baritone Andrè Schuen boasts a remarkable multilingual background, having grown up speaking Ladin, Italian, and German. Initially trained as a ...

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La Chapelle de Québec

Created in 1985 by Founding Conductor and Music Director Bernard Labadie, La Chapelle de Québec is one of North America’s premier voice ensembles. The group is made up ...

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Ensemble Altera

Ensemble Altera was founded to be the beating heart of professional choral music in the United States. Led by internationally celebrated countertenor Christopher Lowrey, the group has ...

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