Later, the War Requiem was incorporated into a movie with the same name. The movie, which would have otherwise been silent, is a strange, dark work. Most of it seems completely pointless, which leaves one wondering if that was the intention -- to show how pointless war is.
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For the text of the War Requiem,
Britten interspersed the Latin Mass for the Dead with nine poems written
by Wilfred Owen (pictured at left), a World War I footsoldier who
was killed a week before the Armistice. In total contrast to The
Spirit of England, written by Britten's compatriot Edward Elgar,
the War Requiem was a decidedly antiwar piece. The Spirit of
England was also an epic work in which poetry was set to music, but
it brought forth quite a different message.
View the complete text of the War Requiem Wilfred Owen's poetry is strange, and interesting. On the following page, we discuss the English text, as well as the significance of the particular poems that Britten chose to use.
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For the first performance, and the recording that we have used, the main orchestra and choir was conducted by Meredith Davies, while the chamber orchestra was conducted by Britten.