Skip to content

Johannes Brahms' A German Requiem (Ein deutsches Requiem) is a monumental seven-movement choral work (c. 1865–1868). The score includes prominent roles for soprano and baritone soloists as well as the chorus.

This is not the requiem of Roman Catholic tradition, sung in Latin but a requiem that draws from an assemblage of biblical texts focused on spiritual healing, sung in colloquial German. In this way, Brahms offers us a requiem designed to give comfort to the living, instead of a prescribed prayer for the departed. It is a humanist rather than an overtly Christian piece.

At its premiere in 1868, Brahms finally found the triumph he sought. His Requiem not only achieved great international success but also triggered a shift in maturity that was to mark Brahms’ work and career from then on. Likely inspired by the death of his mother and perhaps Robert Schumann, it is considered one of the greatest choral works of the 19th century.

East Bridge Chorale – Johannes Brahms: A German Requiem

Sun 8 November

ART31

ART31 takes its name from Article 31 of the UN Convention on the Rights of a Child, which states that ‘Children have the right to relax and play, and to join in a wide range of cultural, artistic and other recreational activities’.

ART31 is a vision created with, by, and for young people in Kent, championing the belief that all children and young people have an entitlement to access high quality arts and culture, to empower them to achieve their creative potential, and to genuinely engage young people as equal partners in any decision making that affects them.

The ART31 Youth Board is made up of young people from across Kent aged 13-25 who steer its governance, and influence policy and practice across the county and beyond, challenging the creative sector to examine existing ways of working and integrate young people into the core of their practice.

Our projects with young people

Film tickets

Results
Clear
See what other events are happening at the Gulbenkian
What's on Link icon