Boston’s Handel and Haydn Society Opens‬ ‭ 210th Season with ‘Mozart Requiem’‬

H+H Orchestra and Chorus perform requiems by‬ Michael Haydn and Mozart at Symphony Hall‬

BOSTON‬‭ | Handel and Haydn Society‬‭ Artistic Director‬‭ Jonathan Cohen‬‭ and the H+H‬ Orchestra and Chorus return to Boston’s Symphony Hall on Friday, September 27 and Sunday,‬ September 29 to open H+H’s 210th consecutive season, a double feature of two moving‬ masterpieces performed on period instruments that the composers wrote for. The concert‬‭ begins with an H+H premiere, the Requiem of Michael Haydn (brother of H+H namesake Franz‬ Joseph Haydn). The featured work is Mozart’s beloved Requiem, his final composition and one‬ of the hallmarks of his musical legacy.‬

‭Throughout history many composers have set requiem texts used for funeral services. The H+H‬ Orchestra and Chorus trace the influence of Michael Haydn’s Requiem, a work that Mozart‬ performed as a young musician in Salzburg,‬‭ on Mozart’s‬‭ main event.‬‭ Left unfinished at the time‬‭ of his death, Mozart’s setting of the funeral Mass was completed by three of his students, and‬‭ later by other musicologists as new information became available. For the first time in 30 years,‬‭ H+H performs the completion by Robert D. Levin, a Mozart scholar, composer, and former‬‭ professor of music at Harvard University. Levin is well known to Boston audiences for his many‬ performances with H+H through the years.

“Mozart’s Requiem has an intriguing history made all the more poignant for the fact Mozart‬ began working on it as he knew his health was failing,” said Handel and Haydn Society Artistic‬‭ Director Jonathan Cohen.“The Requiem was completed by contemporaries of Mozart using‬ various sketches he left behind, although the style of the orchestration in these completions, in‬ my opinion, often feels ‘too thick’ with uncharacteristic orchestral doublings of the vocal lines.‬‭ Robert‬‭ Levin with great respect and sensitivity addressed‬‭ these issues, brought clarity and his‬‭ expert wealth of knowledge of Mozart's compositional style to his own completion. It’s an honor‬‭ to perform this extraordinary version to open H+H's season.”

‬To perform this heartfelt music, H+H welcomes‬‭ soprano‬‭ Lucy Crowe‬‭ back to the Symphony‬ Hall stage, and three soloists making an H+H debut:‬‭ mezzo-soprano‬‭ Beth Taylor‬‭,‬‭ tenor Duke‬‭ Kim‬‭, and‬‭ bass-baritone Brandon Cedel‬‭.‬‭

A prolific recitalist and in-demand soloist with opera companies and orchestras throughout the‬‭ world, soprano Lucy Crowe performed Brahms' Requiem with H+H in April 2024. Other recent‬‭ highlights include performances with the English National Opera, Teatro Real Madrid,‬‭ Bayerische Staatsoper, Munich, and the Metropolitan Opera, New York.‬‭

Lauded for her “strong presence” and “intriguing depth,” Glaswegian mezzo-soprano Beth‬‭ Taylor is in demand across Europe’s concert platforms. She has performed in title roles with‬ Deutsche Oper Berlin and Oper Frankfurt.‬

Tenor Duke Kim is a graduate of the Cafritz Young Artist Program at the Washington National‬ Opera and the 2021 Grand Finals Winner of The Metropolitan Opera Eric and Dominique‬‭ Laffont Competition. He has performed extensively in North and South America and Europe‬ including with the Washington National Opera, Teatro Colón, and Florentine Opera.‬

Bass-baritone Brandon Cedel is a graduate of the Metropolitan Opera’s Lindemann Young Artist‬ Development Program and is currently an Ensemble member of Oper Frankfurt. In addition to‬ performing in multiple new productions with Oper Frankfurt, highlights of Mr. Cedel’s recent‬‭ seasons include performances with Boston Lyric Opera, the Glyndebourne Festival, and his‬‭ Kennedy Center debut recital with the Vocal Arts Society in Washington, D.C.‬

“Mozart’s Requiem is widely acknowledged as one of the most powerful and moving‬‭ masterpieces ever composed," said David Snead, Philip and Marjorie Gerdine President and‬‭ CEO of the Handel and Haydn Society.“I am thrilled to experience this work paired with H+H’s‬‭ first-ever performances of the Requiem by Michael Haydn, our namesake’s brother. Hearing‬‭ these two pieces side-by-side will lend a fresh perspective on Mozart’s Requiem, even among‬‭ those who know it well.”

‭Musically Speaking‬
Forty-five minutes prior to each performance all guests are welcome to attend “Musically‬‭ Speaking” in Higginson Hall. Hosted by Teresa Neff, Ph.D., the Handel and Haydn Society’s‬‭ Christopher Hogwood Historically Informed Performance Fellow,“Musically Speaking” provides‬‭ background information and a lively discussion about the music and composers on the program.‬‭ In addition, guests will enjoy a period instrument demonstration in the main corridor off the‬‭ Massachusetts Ave. entrance on Friday from 7:00–7:15pm and Sunday from 2:30–2:45pm.‬

‭Concert Information‬
The Handel and Haydn Society presents MOZART REQUIEM at Symphony Hall, Friday,‬ September 27 at 7:30pm and Sunday, September 29 at 3:00pm. Individual tickets and‬ subscription packages are still available for purchase by calling 617.262.1815 or visiting‬handelandhaydn.org‬‭.‬

‭About the Handel and Haydn Society‬
Boston’s Grammy-winning Handel and Haydn Society performs Baroque and Classical music‬ with a freshness, a vitality, and a creativity that inspires all ages. Called “one of the most exciting‬‭ ensembles of historically informed performances in the world” (OperaWire), H+H has been‬‭ captivating audiences for 210 consecutive seasons (the most of any performing arts‬‭ organization in the United States), speaking to its singular success at welcoming new audiences‬‭ to this extraordinary music, generation after generation.‬‭

H+H performed the “Hallelujah” chorus from Handel’s Messiah in its first concert in 1815, gave‬‭ the American premiere in 1818, and ever since has been both a musical and a civic leader in‬‭ the Boston community. During the Civil War, H+H gave numerous concerts in support of the‬‭ Union Army (H+H member Julia Ward Howe wrote “The Battle Hymn of the Republic”) and on‬ January 1, 1863, H+H performed at the Grand Jubilee Concert celebrating the enactment of the‬‭ Emancipation Proclamation. Two years later, H+H performed at the memorial service for‬‭ Abraham Lincoln.‬‭

H+H’s Orchestra and Chorus delight more than 76,000 listeners annually through concerts at‬‭ Symphony Hall and other leading venues as well as radio broadcasts. Through the Karen S.‬‭ and George D. Levy Learning and Education Program, H+H supports seven youth choirs of‬‭ singers in grades 2–12, and provides thousands of complimentary tickets to students and‬‭ communities throughout Boston, ensuring the joy of music is accessible to all. H+H has‬‭ released 16 CDs on the CORO label and has toured nationally and internationally. In all these‬‭ ways, H+H fulfills its mission to inspire the intellect, touch the heart, elevate the soul, and‬‭ connect all of us with our shared humanity through transformative experiences with Baroque‬‭ and Classical music.