April 20, 2026
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First recording of an early 19th century Portuguese radical chamber version of Mozart’s Requiem

First recording of an early 19th century Portuguese radical chamber version of Mozart's Requiem
Mozart's Requiem from Ricardo Bernardes & Americantiga Ensemble, onHora recordings.

When faced with an established masterpiece that requires performing forces outside their capabilities many ensembles can only look on enviously. Mozart’s Requiem does not make outrageous demands, but its requirements are still a cut above the average church service. A new recording from a Portuguese record label brings to light one creative solution.

In the Cathedral of Évora in Portugal the rediscovery of a manuscript of an arrangement of Mozart’s Requiem dating from the early 19th century has brought this intriguing version to light. The work is scored for four singers and small instrumental ensemble, with the vocal parts being simply based on the Süssmayr edition. But the instrumental accompaniment is pared down simply to the instruments of the basso continuo (cello, bassoons, double-bass and organ), with the solo cello (rabecão peque-no) assuming a leading role.

Ricardo Bernardes and Americantiga Ensemble decided to investigate this chamber version in 2020, under the constraints imposed by the pandemic, which mirrored. They performed it in Lisbon and at subsequent concerts, leading to the recording on Americantiga label.

As Bernardes explains:

“The greatest challenge in the performance and in the interpretation of this repertoire lies, inevitably, in the constant comparison with the “canonical” orchestral version of Mozart’s Requiem. The extreme reduction of forces – five low instruments and four singers – exposes every musical line with uncompromising clarity, with-out the support of a full orchestral and choral texture. From a technical perspective, this demands a high level of precision, particularly in the highly virtuosic cello part, and in achieving a careful balance between voices and continuo, which here assumes almost orchestral functions. The challenge was to establish a distinct identity for this version, avoiding any perception of it as a merely impoverished adaptation. On the contrary, it was necessary to embrace fully its chamber character, valuing contrapuntal clarity, textual expressiveness and harmonic boldness, and to demonstrate that this historical reading offers a legitimate, alternative and artistically rich perspective on a work that is widely known.”

Further details from the onHora website


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