Art Song Terms Lotte Lehmann Was Renowned for Her Lieder Interpretations, but What Does the Word Lieder Mean? It Means Simply German Art Songs

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Art Song Terms Lotte Lehmann Was Renowned for Her Lieder Interpretations, but What Does the Word Lieder Mean? It Means Simply German Art Songs Art Song Terms Lotte Lehmann was renowned for her Lieder interpretations, but what does the word Lieder mean? It means simply German art songs. Art song's brief description: a poem set to music, usually for trained voice and piano with a duration of about three minutes. In German the word for such classical song is Lied (singular) and Lieder (plural). It is the German practice to capitalize their nouns. But this concise definition really doesn't touch the soul of Lieder. The elements (a quartet if you like: poet, composer, singer and pianist) work together, each complimenting the other. Many scholars have suggested that really great poetry shouldn't be set in song; it should stand on its own merits. And it is certainly true that epic poetry is seldom set to music. But lyric poetry, of whatever language, has inspired composers right down to our own times to set and even enhance a poem, often making it more accessible, highlighting elements that only music can. Lyric poetry tends to be short, concise, often deals with love, nature and other elements favored by the Romantic artists of the 18th and 19th Centuries. But though Lieder may have reached a climax in expression, appreciation and perfection during the 19th Century, art song is indeed still being written, performed and recorded today. In fact, this may be seen as another golden age of art song performance because it has become too expensive to record operas, thus many gifted singers record art song recitals instead. There is a dichotomy between the “bel canto” (beautiful singing) demands of opera, especially those of Bellini, Donizetti and Rossini, and the intimate, word-centered requirements of Lieder singing. For example, the Danish soprano Povla Frijsh (1881- 1960) wasn't blessed with the most beautiful of voices, but had a successful career as a recitalist because of the subtle way she could handle the demands of songs. Here it may be mentioned that not all opera singers are successful Lieder singers and vice versa. Let me quote J.B. Steane's “The Grand Tradition” where he writes of Lehmann: “She was able to a remarkable extent to sing opera with the intimacy of a Lieder singer, giving out a glorious stream of voice, yet attending imaginatively to the enunciation and coloring of the text....There surely never was an operatic artist with more of the natural feeling for the ways in which a phrase can be made meaningful and vivid, through the detailed, imaginative care for words.” Taking the other direction, let me quote the conductor Bruno Walter, often Lehmann's Lieder accompanist. He wrote, “It was admirable how Lotte Lehmann's dramatic feeling, to which she had formerly been inclined to yield almost to the point where she did violence to her voice, had gradually become restrained to fit the rendering of songs. Amazing, too, that her impetuous elemental personality should have found the way to the stylistic purity of the song by means of her own almost infallible instinct.” Thus you see that there are two distinct approaches to consider: bringing word sensitivity of the Lieder singer to opera, or the restraining of dramatic opera impulses for the recital stage. Lehmann accomplished both. A few terms: song “cycle” is a group of songs, usually by the same poet, that a composer conceives as being sung together. The so- called “Schwanengesang” (Swan-song cycle) of Schubert really wasn't meant by him to be sung together. These are just the final songs of Schubert's life that were collected together and published under that title. Good examples of song cycles that Lehmann sang are: Beethoven's “An die ferne Geliebte” (To the Distant Loved One); Schubert's “Schöne Müllerin” (The Beautiful Miller Maid) and his “Winterreise” (Winter Journey). These three are most often performed by male singers, voicing their thoughts of lost or distant love; when Lehmann sings them, she seems to identify with the longing and even desperation which a man in such a position would feel. She is like his muse, his mouthpiece able to express thoughts that he cannot. Lehmann also performed and recorded Schumann's “Dichterliebe” (Poet's Love) and “Frauenliebe und - leben” (Woman's Love and Life). These two song cycles are so successful as a group of songs that it is unusual to hear the individual songs. “Dichterliebe” is another man's Song Cycle that Lehmann made very much her own. And I don't mean that she tried to sound masculine. She was able to probe the meaning of the poet and feelings that are universally applicable to males and females. Lehmann first recorded “Frauenliebe und -leben” in 1928. Unfortunately for that recording it was arranged for instrumental trio and doesn't allow the singer the rapport that Lehmann enjoyed in performances with Bruno Walter or Paul Ulanowsky as pianists. There are fine recordings of all these performances available on CD. (See the Complete CD List). There is a definite story line here, from the innocent young girl who first sees the man of her dreams, through motherhood and finally the death of her beloved husband. Lehmann is able throughout this cycle to focus on the moment in the story and yet keep the feeling of the whole narrative alive. One moment in the final song stands out as especially poignant, when she sings “der Schleier fällt” (the veil falls) it seems as if she might not be able to finish the song. It is drama like this, taken perhaps from her well-developed stage acting techniques, that enabled Lehmann to breathe real life into such songs. Another term that one encounters in the field of art song or Lieder is: accompanist. Usually that is a pianist. And there is the perception that the pianist is just a voice in the background to support the singer. In good art song this isn't the case: the composer expects a duet of sorts between the piano and voice. The pianist does provide the chordal significance of the sung melody, but there is an interplay between the singer and pianist on many levels. The pianist may set the scene (as in an introductory section) or compliment on the piano what the singer does with the voice. Robert Schumann also used extensive postludes to sum up the thought of the poem. By the careful use of dynamics (loud and soft) the pianist can focus attention on dramatic moments or the intimate ones. The pianist (accompanist) must know the words of the poetry as well as the singer's notes. (We'll assume the pianist has learned his/her notes!). Sometimes the composers point of view towards the poetry is expressed in the piano part. Often elements of nature (water, storms, wind etc.) are written into the piano music. Lehmann worked mainly with four pianists: Ernø Balogh, Paul Ulanowsky, Bruno Walter (most famous as a conductor) and Gwendolyn Koldofsky. There are recordings available of each of these cooperative ventures. Though these pianists were art song specialists, early recording techniques allowed only one horn or one microphone to pick up the two artists and the true duet between the artists has been diminished. The horn or microphone was placed near the singer and thus the piano can sound like a light tinkling in the background of many Lehmann and other early recordings. But one thing you can hear in these old recordings: Lehmann frequently used rubato (the speeding up and slowing down within a phrase) which all her accompanists learned to anticipate. Let's look specifically at Lehmann's art song career. She began singing recitals in Hamburg and Vienna, and was soon invited to sing recitals during the Salzburg Festivals. But her Lieder recordings made in Germany were often marred by salon orchestra accompaniments, poorly played. There is beauty, a real bloom and freshness, in Lehmann's voice in the 1920's and 1930's and close attention to the recordings (mentally filtering out the corny accompaniments) will be repaid by the enjoyment her tone color painting of the poetry and her obvious love of the music. She was a poet herself, which you can read on this site. Few singers have such a deep understanding of the overall meaning of the poems they sing, as well as the ability to color the individual words with the feeling inherent in them. There was a kind of renaissance of Lieder singing in the 1930's. Lehmann was in the august company of other Lieder performers such as Elisabeth Schumann, Heinrich Schlusnus, Tiana Lemnitz, Gerhardt Hüsch, Elena Gerhardt, Karl Erb, Alexander Kipnis, and Lula Mysz-Gmeiner. Though many of these singers are almost forgotten today, their recordings deserve careful listening. Returning to Lehmann's Lieder career, it is interesting to note that away from Germany and Austria, her American recordings finally became that combination of piano and voice that composers had in mind when they wrote their songs. Though there was still only one microphone, and this placed close to Lehmann, the artistic result is far more satisfying. In the Discography in the you'll be able to trace the various Lieder recordings that Lehmann made and hear the definite artistic growth. Lehmann spoke of having been blessed with three careers. They overlapped: during her first career in opera she early on began performing and recording songs. After her retirement from opera she concentrated on song and began teaching. Finally, after her farewell appearances in 1951, she stopped singing and only taught. (For more information on Lehmann biographical matters, click on the bio). In the US Lehmann's fame after the WW II was as a Lieder performer.
Recommended publications
  • Boston Symphony Orchestra Concert Programs, Summer, 1947-1950
    BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCH ESTRA MUSIC DIRECTOR. AT TANGLEWOOD 1948 « The Steinway is the1 official pian~ Arkansas Philharmonic «—— Buffalo Philharmonic Chattanooga Symphony Cleveland Orchestra Columbus Philharmonic Dallas Symphony Detroit Symphony Duluth Civic Symphony El Paso Symphony s'teinway . instrument of the Ft. Wayne Symphony Harrisburg Symphony immortals ! For excellence of Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles Houston Symphony workmanship, resonance of tone, responsiveness Indianapolis Symphony Kansas City Symphony to the player's touch, and durability of construction, Los Angeles Symphony Louisville Philharmonic the Steinway, from the smallest, lowest priced Miami Symphony Minneapolis Symphony vertical, grand, to the Steinway concert the Nat. Orchestral Assoc, of N.Y. Nat. Symphony, Wash., D.C. overwhelming choice of concert artists New Jersey Symphony New Orleans Civic Symphony and symphony orchestras, has no equal. It is New York Philharmonic Symphony Philadelphia Orchestra the recognized standard by which all other Pittsburgh Symphony Portland Symphony pianos are judged. It is the best . Robin Hood Dell Concerts, Phila. Rochester Symphony and you cannot afford anything but the best. St. Louis Symphony San Antonio Symphony Seattle Symphony Stadium Concerts, N. Y. City in Massachusetts and New Hampshire Syracuse Symphony Vancouver Symphony new Steinway pianos are sold ONLY by M'Steinert & Sons Jerome F. Murphy, President 162 Boylston St., Boston Branches in Worcester, Springfield and Wellesley Hills # * 'Serkshire Festival SEASON 1948 Boston Symphony Orchestra SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY, Music Director Richard Burgin, Associate Conductor CONCERT BULLETIN historical and descriptive notes by John N. Burk COPYRIGHT, I948, BY BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, INC. The TRUSTEES of the BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, Inc. Henry B. Cabot President Henry B.
    [Show full text]
  • La Couleur Du Temps – the Colour of Time Salzburg Whitsun Festival 29 May – 1 June 2020
    SALZBURGER FESTSPIELE PFINGSTEN Künstlerische Leitung: Cecilia Bartoli La couleur du temps – The Colour of Time Pauline Viardot-Garcia (1821 – 1910) Photo: Uli Weber - Decca Salzburg Whitsun Festival 29 May – 1 June 2020 (SF, 30 December 2019) The life of Pauline Viardot-Garcia – singer, musical ambassador of Europe, outstanding pianist and composer – is the focus of the 2020 programme of the Salzburg Whitsun Festival. “The uncanny instinct Cecilia Bartoli has for the themes of our times is proven once again by her programme for the 2020 Salzburg Whitsun Festival, which focuses on Pauline Viardot. Orlando Figes has just written a bestseller about this woman. Using Viardot as an example, he describes the importance of art within the idea of Europe,” says Festival President Helga Rabl-Stadler. 1 SALZBURGER FESTSPIELE PFINGSTEN Künstlerische Leitung: Cecilia Bartoli Pauline Viardot not only made a name for herself as a singer, composer and pianist, but her happy marriage with the French theatre manager, author and art critic Louis Viardot furthered her career and enabled her to act as a great patron of the arts. Thus, she made unique efforts to save the autograph of Mozart’s Don Giovanni for posterity. Don Giovanni was among the manuscripts Constanze Mozart had sold to Johann Anton André in Offenbach in 1799. After his death in 1842, his daughter inherited the autograph and offered it to libraries in Vienna, Berlin and London – without success. In 1855 her cousin, the pianist Ernst Pauer, took out an advertisement in the London-based journal Musical World. Thereupon, Pauline Viardot-García bought the manuscript for 180 pounds.
    [Show full text]
  • Karl Goldmark on Early Recordings Discography of the 78 Rpm Recordings of Goldmark’S Compositions
    SZABÓ, Ferenc János (Institute for Musicology, RCH, Hungarian Academy of Sciences) 1 September, 2017 Carl Goldmark on Early Recordings. Discography of the 78 rpm recordings of Goldmark’s compositions. OTKA/NKFIH K108.306 Ferenc János Szabó Institute for Musicology (Research Centre for the Humanities, Hungarian Academy of Sciences) Karl Goldmark on Early Recordings Discography of the 78 rpm recordings of Goldmark’s compositions This discography is the first attempt to compile a systematic list of early recordings of Karl Goldmark’s compositions. Up to now, these early recordings were not in the focus of the musicological research. There are only a few Goldmark monographies1 or bibliographies2 and they do not discuss the sound recordings, except the latest one, written by Johannes Hofer, which listed many recordings and their reissues, mainly from the second half of the 20th and the first years of the 21st century.3 Even Goldmark himself did not mention the sound recordings of his works in his memoires.4 The early recordings of Goldmark’s works are mostly unknown, except some famous ones, for example the recordings from Die Königin von Saba made in Vienna after the highly successful revival directed by Gustav Mahler,5 and, of course, the recordings of Enrico Caruso which were reissued many times on LP and CD because of the popularity of the performer. The rest of the recordings are part only of the knowledge of the specialized gramophone disc collectors and opera aficionados who are interested in the recordings of opera singers of the past.6 Based on the recording dates, two waves of recording activity of Goldmark’s oeuvre can be distinguished during the first half of the twentieth century.
    [Show full text]
  • Bruno Walter (Ca
    [To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.] Erik Ryding and Rebecca Pechefsky Yale University Press New Haven and London Frontispiece: Bruno Walter (ca. ). Courtesy of Österreichisches Theatermuseum. Copyright © by Yale University. All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, including illustrations, in any form (beyond that copying permitted by Sections and of the U.S. Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public press), without written permission from the publishers. Designed by Sonia L. Shannon Set in Bulmer type by The Composing Room of Michigan, Grand Rapids, Mich. Printed in the United States of America by R. R. Donnelley,Harrisonburg, Va. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Ryding, Erik S., – Bruno Walter : a world elsewhere / by Erik Ryding and Rebecca Pechefsky. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references, filmography,and indexes. ISBN --- (cloth : alk. paper) . Walter, Bruno, ‒. Conductors (Music)— Biography. I. Pechefsky,Rebecca. II. Title. ML.W R .Ј—dc [B] - A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources. For Emily, Mary, and William In memoriam Rachel Kemper and Howard Pechefsky Contents Illustrations follow pages and Preface xi Acknowledgments xv Bruno Schlesinger Berlin, Cologne, Hamburg,– Kapellmeister Walter Breslau, Pressburg, Riga, Berlin,‒
    [Show full text]
  • Furtwängler Broadcasts/Recordings
    Furtwängler Broadcasts & Broadcast Recordings 1927-1954 1st version: February 20, 2002 Latest revision: July 5, 2019 This list of Furtwängler broadcasts/broadcast recordings is based on various private and official lists in my possession. Most of the lists were given to me by Frau Elisabeth Furtwängler during visits in Clarens in the 1970s. I have not tried to verify stations missing from the lists. I have given RRG (Reichsrundfunk Gesellschaft) as source for many WWII broadcasts, which were transmitted from Berlin, Vienna, Bayreuth, or Prague. Many of the dates of these broadcasts stem from an Italian list (from Bologna), written in perfect German! Broadcasts of commercial recordings (78 rpms and LPs) are not included. In November/December 2003, I was asked by Angelo Scottini, Piacenza, Italy, to include his list of Italian broadcasts. January 1, 2004, René Trémine gave permission to include all broadcasts mentioned in his Furtwängler concert listing 1906-1954. April 21, 2008, Norbert Kleekamp forwarded information on the Meistersinger broadcasts from Bayreuth August 1943. February 1, 2010, I included the recorded broadcasts in my discography up to 1945. November 2012, René Trémine sent me a list of amendments, added on January 10, 2013. February 18, 2018, I added broadcasts from the Danish Radio (DR), from the BBC, and from the RRG. March 9, 2018, a few amendments by Stéphane Topakian were added. A few corrections were added on March 25, 2018. March 27, 2018 some broadcasts from the Swedish Radio (SR) were added. Broadcasts up to the end of 1947 from the Austrian database ANNO were added July 1, 2018.
    [Show full text]
  • ARSC Journal
    SCHUMANN AND BRAHMS: LIEDER ON RECORD, 1901-1952. HMV RLS 1547003, 8 discs. SCHUMANN: Der Nussbaum (Fritz Schrlidter, tenor); Ich grolle nicht (Felia Litvinne, soprano); Ich hab' im Traum geweinet (Nicolai Figner, tenor, in Russian); Er, der Herrlichste von allen (Marie Knilpfer-Egli, sopra­ no); Intermezzo (Lilli Lehmann, soprano); Wanderlied (Willi Birrenkoven, tenor); Die beiden Grenadiere (Vittorio Arimondi, basso, in Italian); Volksliedchen, Der Schatzgraber, Der Soldat (Therese Behr-Schnabel, mezzo-soprano); Die Lotosblume, Du bist wie eine Blume (Giuseppe Borgatti, tenor, in Italian); Die Lotosblume, (Leo Slezak, tenor); Friili­ lingsnacht, Die Rose, die Lilie (Lydia Lipkowska, soprano, in Russian); Ich grolle nicht (Erik Schmedes, tenor); Frauenliebe und -leben (Julia Kulp, contralto); Die beiden Grenadiere (Feodor Chaliapin, basso, in Russian); Widmung (Frieda Hempel, soprano); Wanderlied, Du bist wie eine Blume (Friedrich Schorr, baritone); An den Sonnenschein, Volksliedchen, (Ursula van Diemen, soprano); Unterm Fenster (Lucrezia Bori, soprano; John McCormack, tenor, in English); So wahr die Sonne scheinet (Jo Vincent, soprano, Louis van Tulder, tenor); Die beiden Grenadiere, Lied eines Schmiedes (Sir George Henschel, baritone); In der Fremde (Alice Raveau, contralto, in French); Aus den 8stlichen Rosen (Richard Tauber, tenor); Ich will meine Seele tauchen, Im Rhein, im heiligen Strome (Thom Denijs, baritone); Zum Schluss, Fruhlingsnacht, Wer machte dich so krank?, Alte Laute (Elena Gerhardt, mezzo-soprano); Der Nussbaum, In
    [Show full text]
  • Norbeck, Peters & Ford
    Norbeck, Peters & Ford 59 Congress Street Saint Albans, VT 05478-1611 USA 1-802-524-7673; 1-800-654-5302 Fax: 1 888 819 4831 email: [email protected] website: www.norpete.com Auction Number 146 •- AUCTION Closing Date: Friday, 29 May, 2015 1001. AINO ACKTÉ: FAUST – Air des bijoux / LOHENGRIN – Einsam in trüben Tagen (in French). 10½” brown Parl. Odeon PO 93 (XPr 1-2/4-2), (w.Ackté’s signature embossed in shellac). M-A, superlative copy. MB 35 “It is difficult to realise that Ackté's sensational début at Covent Garden was as Salome in Richard Strauss' opera. Here she sings…with grace and excellent coloratura technique, and although she was Finnish, the style is typically French, and with immaculate diction. - John Freestone 1002. AGUSTARELLO AFFRE (The French Tamagno): ARMIDE – Plus j’observe ces lieux (Gluck) / MARCELLE DEMOUGEOT, AGUSTARELLO AFFRE, JUSTE NIVETTE: FAUST - Anges purs, anges radieux. 10½” brown & white French Odéon 97011/60895 (XP 4250/4267). A or better, choice copy has few faintest rubs, positively inaud. MB 15 1003. AGUSTARELLO AFFRE (The French Tamagno): SIGURD – Esprits, gardiens (Reyer) / L’ATTAQUE DU MOULIN – Adieux à la forêt (Bruneau). 10½” brown & gold / brown & white French Odéon 36682/36741 (XP 2460/2565). A to M-A, choice copy. MB 15 1004. AGUSTARELLO AFFRE (The French Tamagno): L’AFRICAINE – Pays merveilleux, 2s. 10½” brown & gold French Odéon 36695/72 (XP 2463/75). A to M-A, choice copy has, Sd.2 only, very few superficial pap.scuffs, barely visible & inaud. MB 15 1005. AGUSTARELLO AFFRE (The French Tamagno): GUILLAUME TELL – Asile héréditaire / LOHENGRIN – In fernem Land (in French).
    [Show full text]
  • 1941 Geschaeftsbericht.Pdf
    COMMERZBANK AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT GEGRUNDET 1870 HAMBURG- BERLIN • DAMN • JAHRESBERICHT UBER DAS 72. GESCHÄFTSJAHR 1941 FUR FUHRER UND VATERLAND GABEN IM JAHRE 1941 IHR LEBEN HIN UNSERE ARBEITSKAMERADEN HELMUT AUGSBURGER, ZWICKAU + HELMUT BLUM, HAMBURG + HERBERT • BRIESKORN, BERLIN + JOHANN-HINRICH COHRS, HAMBURG + FRIEDRICH DUSBERG, GUMMERSBACH + OTTO ENNEPER, DUSSELDORF + KARL ERB GIESSEN + ADOLF FENNER, HAMBURG + MAX FORBRICH, BERLIN + KARL FRENTOWSKI, BERLIN + HERBERT GRAUBMANN, HALLE + HEINRICH GROTH HAMBURG + GERHARD GROTHE, BERLIN + MANFRED GUSINDE, BERLIN HANS HARNEY, DUSSELDORF + ARNOLD HERRLING, HAMBURG + HEINZ HÖPFNER, BERLIN + HEINZ-GUNTHER HOHMANN, MULHEIM + WALTER HUBNER, STUTTGART + HANS HUMMEL, POTSDAM + EBERHARD KRIEG MAGDEBURG + MARTIN KROPP, DUSSELDORF + KURT KROPPA, BERLIN MAX LANGHUBER, MUNCHEN + WERNER LAUTH, MUNSTER + KURT LERSCH KONIGSBERG + HELMUTH LOHSE, BERLIN + LOTHAR MAGER, BERLIN SIEGFRIED MOLLER, CHEMNITZ + KARL NAGEL, HALBERSTADT + SIEGMUND OERTEL, LEIPZIG + WERNER OERZEN, BERLIN + ARNOLD ORMANNS DUSSELDORF + KARL OSTMANN, BOCHOLT + WILLI PECHMANN, BERLIN KURT PETERSEN, HAMBURG + RUDOLF ROSS, BERLIN + KARL SCHAFFER VELBERT + EITEL SCHIRMACHER, LUCKENWALDE +WERNER SCHMIDT, BERLIN • OTTO SCHOCK, KONIGSBERG +JOHANNES SCHWICHTENBERG,HAMBURG ALEX SCHWIEGER, BERLIN + WERNER SPECHT, WANNE + JOSEPH STROHE HAGEN + HERMANN TEBROCKE, WANNE + WERNER TEICHERT, HAMBURG KARL-HEINZ TONNETT, HAGEN +WOLFGANG VALENTIN, BERLIN +WILHELM VOLMER, HERFORD + ALFONS VONHOFF, FRANKFURT (MAIN) + KARL WENGER, KASSEL + PAUL WENIGER, HALLE
    [Show full text]
  • 423 Tonkünstlerfest (45. Jahrestagung) Stuttgart, 2. – 6. Juni 1909
    423 Tonkünstlerfest (45. Jahrestagung) Stuttgart, 2. – 6. Juni 1909 Festdirigenten: Max von Schillings (Konzert und Oper), Erich Band (Oper) Ch.: Kgl. Singchor, Stuttgarter Liederkranz, Lehrergesangverein Ens.: Kgl. Württemberg. Hofkapelle 1. Aufführung: Erste Opernvorstellung Stuttgart, Kgl. Hoftheater (Interimtheater), Mittwoch, 2. Juni, 19:00 Uhr Adolf Vogl: Maja, dramatische Dichtung mit Musik in 2 Aufzügen (UA: Stuttgart, 12. Januar 1908) Text: Adolf Vogl, nach Michael Beer: Der Paria, Trauerspiel 2. Aufführung: Erstes Kammermusik-Konzert Stuttgart, Liederhalle, Konzertsaal, Donnerstag, 3. Juni, 11:00 Uhr Konzertflügel: Bechstein 1. Knud Harder: Quartett für 2 Violinen, Bratsche und Ens.: Stuttgarter Streichquartett = Carl Violoncell op. 4 (UA) Wendling (V.), Dominik Jakob (V.), Alexander 1. Allegro moderato. Più vivo. Meno mosso Presuhn (Va.), Richard Seitz (Vc.) 2. Sehr langsam und innig. Lebhaft. Breit gezogen 3. Allegretto scherzando 4. Sostenuto ma vigoroso. Vivace (Rondo) 2. Othmar Schoeck: Lieder Sol.: Hedwig Schmitz-Schweicker, Othmar a) Abschied, aus op. 3 Schoeck (Kl.) Text: Ludwig Uhland (≡) b) „Ja du bist elend“, aus op. 13 Text: Heinrich Heine (≡) c) Marienlied, aus op. 6 Text: Novalis ( ≡) d) An die Entfernte, aus op. 5 Text: Nikolaus Lenau ( ≡) e) Die Kapelle, aus op. 3 Text: Ludwig Uhland (≡) f) Die Verlassene, aus op. 6 Text: Schwäbisches Volkslied „Wenn i zum Brünnle geh“ (≡) g) Erster Verlust, aus op. 15 Text: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe ( ≡) h) Auskunft, aus op. 8 Text: Hermann Hesse (≡) 3. Hans Pfitzner: Quintett für Pianoforte, 2 Violinen, Ens.: Münchner Kammermusikvereinigung = Bratsche und Violoncello op. 23 August Schmid-Lindner (Kl.), Wilhelm Sieben 1. Allegro ma non troppo (V.), Anton Huber (V.), Michael Raucheisen 2. Intermezzo. Mit ruhiger Grazie (Va.), Emmeran Stöber (Vc.) 3.
    [Show full text]
  • Current Review
    Current Review Barry McDaniel sings Schubert, Schumann, Wolf, Duparc, Ravel & Debussy aud 23.426 EAN: 4022143234261 4022143234261 Fanfare (Lynn René Bayley - 2012.08.08) Barry McDaniel was an American baritone who, like many classical singers of his generation, found it more congenial (and possibly easier) to make a career in Europe and, in his case, particularly Germany. He gave numerous Lieder recitals and opera performances in Stuttgart, Karlsruhe, Hanover, Brunswick, and Berlin, and appeared at least once (in 1964) at Bayreuth as Wolfram in Wieland Wagner’s production of Tannhäuser. Yet he, like so many other baritones both domestic and foreign who sang Lieder, toiled in the shadow of Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau. This two-CD recital hopes to set things straight by issuing recordings which McDaniel made in German radio studios between 1963 and 1974. At least in the Schubert and Schumann, his singing is exquisitely rounded and well finished in phrasing, his general interpretations sensitive and beautifully articulated, yet he makes very little vocal contrast in these songs. This places his singing into the “very good but not great” category, similar to Heinrich Schlusnus, Herbert Janssen, and Gerhard Hüsch. It is not on the higher level of such pioneers as Karl Erb or Alexander Kipnis, or the more acted-out form of Lieder singing that came to fruition right after World War II in the styles of Fischer-Dieskau, Souzay, or Hotter. It is a subtle distinction, and not every listener may feel the same way I do. It’s the difference between telling a story (the old school) vs.
    [Show full text]
  • The Recorded Heritage of Willem Mengelberg and Its Aesthetic Relevance
    Copyright 2014 Samir Ghiocel Golescu THE RECORDED HERITAGE OF WILLEM MENGELBERG AND ITS AESTHETIC RELEVANCE BY SAMIR GHIOCEL GOLESCU DISSERTATION Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Musical Arts in Music with a concentration in Performance and Literature in the Graduate College of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2014 Urbana, Illinois Doctoral Committee: Professor William Kinderman, Chair Professor Ian Hobson Associate Professor Sherban Lupu Assistant Professor Katherine Syer ABSTRACT This dissertation explores the art and interpretative aesthetics of the Dutch conductor Willem Mengelberg (1871-1951), as preserved in his sound recordings and, subsidiarily, in his writings. Emphasis is given to issues pertaining to 19th century performance practice, as well as to historical connections between Mengelberg and compositional/interpretative trends in Europe at the time. Mengelberg’s impact on musical life in Amsterdam, New York, and beyond will be considered. The relevance of Mengelberg’s recordings is assessed from both a documentary and aesthetic point of view. The quasi-entirety of Mengelberg’s rich body of recordings has been consulted, yet a few dozens of them have been chosen for an in-depth study meant to illuminate both their historical context and their contemporary relevance. ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS It is with gratitude that I acknowledge the help and support of the committee members, particularly long-time University of Illinois mentors Ian Hobson and William Kinderman, as well as previous mentors and close musical friends such as Florica Nitzulescu, Ioan Welt, Elena Andriescu, Isabelle Belance-Zank, Hubert Wendel, and Sergei Pavlov. I am indebted to Ingrid Ilinca for her help and support.
    [Show full text]
  • Hans Pfitzner 1 Hans Pfitzner
    Hans Pfitzner 1 Hans Pfitzner Hans Erich Pfitzner (* 5. Mai 1869 in Moskau; † 22. Mai 1949 in Salzburg) war ein deutscher Komponist und Dirigent. Leben Pfitzner war der Sohn eines Orchester-Violinisten und erhielt schon früh von seinem Vater Musikunterricht. Die Familie zog 1872 nach Frankfurt am Main um. Bereits mit elf Jahren komponierte der kleine Hans seine ersten Werke, 1884 entstanden die ersten überlieferten Lieder. Von 1886 bis 1890 studierte Pfitzner am Hoch’schen Konservatorium in Frankfurt Komposition bei Iwan Knorr und Klavier bei James Kwast. Er unterrichtete von 1892 bis 1893 am Koblenzer Konservatorium und wurde 1894 Kapellmeister-Volontär am Stadttheater in Mainz. 1895 kamen dort die ersten größeren Werke Pfitzners zur Hans Pfitzner, 1905 Uraufführung, die Oper Der arme Heinrich und die Schauspielmusik zu Das Fest auf Solhaug von Henrik Ibsen. 1897 übersiedelte er nach Berlin und wurde Lehrer am Stern’schen Konservatorium. Er heiratete 1898 Mimi Kwast, die Tochter seines ehemaligen Klavierlehrers. 1903 wurde Pfitzner erster Kapellmeister am Berliner Theater des Westens, sein erster Sohn Paul wurde geboren. An der Wiener Hofoper unter Gustav Mahler wurde 1905 Pfitzners zweite Oper Die Rose vom Liebesgarten aufgeführt. Sein zweiter Sohn Peter wurde 1906 geboren, seine Tochter Agnes 1908. Im gleichen Jahr zog die Familie nach Straßburg. Pfitzner leitete dort das Städtische Konservatorium und die Sinfoniekonzerte der Straßburger Philharmoniker. 1910 übernahm er zugleich die musikalische Leitung der Straßburger Oper, wo er auch als Regisseur wirkte. 1913 erfolgte seine Ernennung zum Professor. 1917 wurde im Münchner Prinzregententheater unter Bruno Walter die „Musikalische Legende“ Palestrina uraufgeführt, die als Pfitzners bedeutendstes Werk gilt.
    [Show full text]