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More Mozart magic is coming to Birmingham

A busy classical music week ahead is dominated by the great composer, writes Christopher Morley

Colin Baines conducts the Birmingham Choral Union in the Mozart Requiem in the Elgar Concert Hall at the University of Birmingham's Bramall Music Building.

The Mozart Requiem is rather like a London bus: you wait for ages, and then three of them come along at once.

We heard a well-projected account from Birmingham University Musical Society forces under Simon Halsey little more than a week ago in Birmingham Town Hall.

But this weekend there will be two more performances happening in the city.

Tomorrow (Friday) the Adrian Boult Hall is the venue for a performance of the enigmatic masterpiece given by the Birmingham Conservatoire Chorus and Repertoire Orchestra under the baton of Philip Pickett.

The programme begins with another of the best-loved Requiems, that by Faure, consolatory where the Mozart is dramatic (6pm, details on 0121 245 4455).

On Saturday Colin Baines conducts the Birmingham Choral Union in the Mozart Requiem as the main offering of the BCU’s programme in the splendid Elgar Concert Hall in the new Bramall Music Building at the heart of the campus of University of Birmingham (7.30pm, details on 0121 345 0492).

Preceding the Requiem is Mendelssohn’s Psalm 42, a rarely-heard piece if you disregard its performance only a few weeks ago by CBSO forces under Edward Gardner at Symphony Hall.

No such danger of anything treading on the toes of the Birmingham Bach Choir, which presents an intriguingly eclectic programme ranging from the baroque (Bach, Scarlatti) to the contemporary (Kenneth Leighton, James MacMillan – whose motet The Song of the Lamb gives the title to the entire evening – and Eric Whitacre) at the Oratory in Hagley Road, Birmingham, on Saturday (7.30pm, details on 0121 705 4418).