Bent over his writing desk, full of sorrow over his loss, Brahms wanted to write music that would nevertheless offer some support: hope for those near him, comfort for the living – and not with a sombre funeral march. Initially, he gave his composition the title "Ein menschliches Requiem" (A Human Requiem). The monumental composition for orchestra and choir that would become Ein deutsches Requiem (A German Requiem) lies far from that intimate beginning. But Brahms did not forget his initial plan: he even transcribed a version for piano 4-hands, soloists and choir: transparent, intimate, colourful and, most importantly, very personal. In search of the man who was Brahms, Vlaams Radiokoor weaves some childhood memories of his good friend Schumann in between the movements of the Requiem. In his Kinderszenen, Schumann in turn combined various short works that were close to his heart and through which he thought back, filled with nostalgia, to his own childhood. © Evil Penguin Classic Records