I was surprised and delighted that the national Service of Remembrance in Westminster Abbey included an extract from Benjamin Britten's War Requiem. Britten took the Requiem Mass and interspersed it with settings of poems by Wilfred Owen, making a moving and solemn piece of work. It was commissioned for the consecration of the new Coventry Cathedral in 1962 and its first performance was all the more poignant for taking place in the new building which has a glass west wall through which can be seen the ruins of the old cathedral, destroyed by enemy action in November 1940, with the words 'Father Forgive' over the altar rebuilt from the rubble in the days following the raid.


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