5. Gabriel FauréRequiem
One of the nice things about being on EMI at the beginning of the 80s was they basically let you come in and get as many records as you liked. So I got an awful lot of classical records and worked my way through them. There’s only so many things on the contemporary catalogue that were that interesting. You could get a Wire record. You could get this and that, but a lot of that stuff wasn’t that interesting.
Obviously, being a requiem, this is music for the dead. It’s late 19th century, incredibly dynamic. I guess you’d say post-Beethoven, but more romantic, quite emotional. It goes from very, very simple, quiet, plain solo voice and it builds into this huge thing. It draws you in and completely absorbs you. It’s like sailing on the sea. There are quiet bits where everything’s still and then some storm comes and everything breaks into a furious tempest. It’s something that I’ve been listening to for 30 years. It’s something that I’ll often play when I’m going to bed, weirdly.