Libera Me from "Requiem" (Faure) - Brass Band (arr. Rob Bushnell) by Gabriel Fauré, Gabriel Faure Sheet Music for Brass Band at Sheet Music Direct
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Libera Me from "Requiem" (Faure) - Brass Band (arr. Rob Bushnell) Digital Sheet Music
Cover Art for "Libera Me from "Requiem" (Faure) - Brass Band (arr. Rob Bushnell)" by Gabriel Fauré, Gabriel Faure

Libera Me from "Requiem" (Faure) - Brass Band (arr. Rob Bushnell)
by Gabriel Fauré, Gabriel Faure Brass Band - Digital Sheet Music

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Product Description

Composed between 1887 and 1890, Gabriel Faurés Requiem is not only one of his best-known works but one of the most popular piece of choral music in the Classical repertoire, coming 23rd in the Classic FMs Hall of Fame 2024. Believed to be a tribute to his father (who died in 1885), Fauré himself said My Requiem wasn't written for anything for pleasure, if I may call it that! It started life as a five-movement work but was later expanded to be the final seven-movement work we know today. The first version (which Fauré called un petit Requiem) was first performed on 16 January 1888, with Fauré conducting, a second version premiered on 21 January 1893 before the final version (reworked for full orchestra) was played on 12 July 1900; the Requiem was performed at the composers own funeral in 1924.

The Libera Me, or Deliver Me, was actually written in 1877 and is the sixth part of the Requiem.

Fauré once said of the work, Everything I managed to entertain by way of religious illusion I put into my Requiem, which moreover is dominated from beginning to end by a very human feeling of faith in eternal rest." Upon interview, he also said, It has been said that my Requiem does not express the fear of death and someone has called it a lullaby of death. But it is thus that I see death: as a happy deliverance, an aspiration towards happiness above, rather than as a painful experience. The music of Gounod has been criticised for its inclination towards human tenderness. But his nature predisposed him to feel this way: religious emotion took this form inside him. Is it not necessary to accept the artist's nature? As to my Requiem, perhaps I have also instinctively sought to escape from what is thought right and proper, after all the years of accompanying burial services on the organ! I know it all by heart. I wanted to write something different.

This arrangement is for the UK-style brass band, with alternative parts for horns in F and bass-clef lower brass. The tenor solo is featured on the euphonium. A recording of the original composition can be found here on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXwFNoBHCf0.

This product was created by a member of ArrangeMe, Hal Leonard's global self-publishing community of independent composers, arrangers, and songwriters. ArrangeMe allows for the publication of unique arrangements of both popular titles and original compositions from a wide variety of voices and backgrounds.