Recorded in August 2022 at concerts given in Hamburgs Elbphilharmonie by the Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg under Kent Nagano, this version of Johannes Brahmss celebrated choral masterpiece will come as a surprise to many. The German Requiem is heard not in its usual seven-movement version, but rather as it was first performed in Bremen Cathedral on 10th April 1868 (Good Friday) under Brahmss direction, without the fifth movement for soprano and choir that was completed later that year. On the other hand, there are numerous interludes, instrumental and vocal, secular and sacred, by Bach, Tartini, Schumann, and Handel including pieces that were then regarded as essential parts of a Good Friday concert. Such a programme might seem unusual today, but these musical additions shed new light on Brahmss work, which in this version manifests itself as what Umberto Eco might have described as an open work. Presenting the work in the form heard at the Bremen première is more than just a reconstruction: it enriches our understanding of this unique music.