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Dies Irae

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Dies Irae

Sequence from the Mass for the Dead dealing with the Day of Judgement. The text is lengthy and apocalyptic, and has inspired dramatic settings as part of a Requiem by composers including Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Giuseppe Verdi, Hector Berlioz, and Benjamin Britten.

The Dies Irae was originally associated with a distinctive plainsong theme, which has since been frequently quoted by composers as a kind of universal leitmotif to imply death or Hell. Examples of its use include:

Granville Bantock, Witches' Dance in incidental music to Macbeth;

Hector Berlioz, Witches' Sabbath in Fantastic Symphony;

Luigi Dallapiccola, Canti di prigionia;

Peter Maxwell Davies, St Michael;

Franz Liszt, Totentanz for piano and orchestra;

Sergei Rachmaninov, Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini for piano and orchestra and Symphonic Dances, Op. 45;

Ottorino Respighi, Impressioni brasiliane;

Camille Saint-Saëns, Danse macabre for orchestra;

Ronald Stevenson, Passacaglia on DSCH;

Pyotr Tchaikovsky, Theme and Variations in Suite No. 3 for orchestra and song ‘In Dark Hell’;

Ralph Vaughan Williams, Five Tudor Portraits for chorus and orchestra (lament for Philip Sparrow).

A recent theory claims the Dies Irae as the ‘hidden’ theme of Edward Elgar's ‘Enigma’ Variations.


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The walls were all hung with black, but, instead of the white trimmings that usually set off that funereal upholstery, there was an enormous stave of music with the notes of the DIES IRAE, many times repeated.
 
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