


The Lacrimosa is a setting of the Latin text from the Requiem Mass for soprano, SATB choir, and orchestra. 626, and is one of the most popular pieces from the work. It is the eleventh and final movement of his Requiem Mass in D minor, K. Lacrimosa is a musical composition by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The Lacrimosa, eight bars of his Requiem’s final words, was composed as a mark of that day’s tears and mourning. Sssmayr is the only word that is used throughout the movement. The second position is where Mozart wrote the first eight bars of the Lacrimosa and never had anything to say after that. The first position was made up of Mozart’s full outline of the first eight bars of the Lacrimosa, as well as the SATB parts for the rest of it, and S*ssmayr’s orchestral composition for him. The first movement, Requiem aeternam, was the only one that was completed. Mozart wrote the work not long before he died, only to finish the first few bars of the Lacrimosa. It was composed in 1791, the year of Mozart’s death, and first published in 1800. The piece is one of the most popular and well-known of the Requiem, and is often performed as a stand-alone work. Lacrimosa is a composition by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, part of his Requiem in D minor.
