Mozart Requiem
St John's Smith Square, St John's Church Smith Square, SW1P 3HA , [Venue Details]Rimma Sushanskaya conducts Mozart’s Requiem, his final work, one of the most revered pieces in the classical repertoire.
The mysterious circumstances surrounding Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Requiem have lent the work an enduring aura of romance and intrigue. The real story of the Requiem is no less compelling, but ultimately it is the music itself that endures. The dramatic power of Mozart’s final composition highlights the austere and ultimately redemptive language of the text of the Catholic requiem mass.
In the summer of 1791, Count Franz Walsegg von Stuppach sent a messenger to Mozart with an anonymous commission for a requiem to honour Walsegg’s late wife. Walsegg, an amateur musician, had a habit of commissioning works from well-known composers and passing them off as his own (hence his desire for anonymity). Mozart, whose financial situation was always precarious, accepted the commission. By October 1791, in failing health, Mozart returned to the Requiem; he only completed the Introit, Kyrie, most of the Sequence, and the Offertory before his death.
More Information
Admission
Min: £15.00
Max: £30.00
Concessions: Please click here for more info
Event Type: seated
Seating: Reserved
Performer name: National Symphony Orchestra
Interval: Yes
Update /Errors ? If you find this listing needs updating, please, let us know: admin@halibuts.com
Or click for more: Classical Orchestral
Update /Errors ? Contact us.
Halibuts is the only place to find ALL London's live music.
Free for all to use, we track ~1,000 London venues and list every type of live music.
Click here to start using Halibuts.
Or download the Halibuts APP:
Mozart Requiem
Sunday, 9 Nov 2025 @7.30pm
St John's Smith Square, St John's Church Smith Square, SW1P 3HAMore Information
Rimma Sushanskaya conducts Mozart’s Requiem, his final work, one of the most revered pieces in the classical repertoire.
The mysterious circumstances surrounding Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Requiem have lent the work an enduring aura of romance and intrigue. The real story of the Requiem is no less compelling, but ultimately it is the music itself that endures. The dramatic power of Mozart’s final composition highlights the austere and ultimately redemptive language of the text of the Catholic requiem mass.
In the summer of 1791, Count Franz Walsegg von Stuppach sent a messenger to Mozart with an anonymous commission for a requiem to honour Walsegg’s late wife. Walsegg, an amateur musician, had a habit of commissioning works from well-known composers and passing them off as his own (hence his desire for anonymity). Mozart, whose financial situation was always precarious, accepted the commission. By October 1791, in failing health, Mozart returned to the Requiem; he only completed the Introit, Kyrie, most of the Sequence, and the Offertory before his death.
Admission
Min: £15.00
Max: £30.00
Concessions: Please click here for more info
Event Type: seated
Seating: Reserved
Performer name: National Symphony Orchestra
Interval: Yes
Halibuts is the only place to find ALL London's live music.
Free for all to use, we track ~1,000 London venues and list every type of live music.
Click here to start using Halibuts.
Or download the Halibuts APP: