Firstly let me say
that there is one absolute masterpiece
here, the setting of Der Kirchlof
im Frühling from the Seven
Spring Songs. It’s cast as a kind
of Passacaglia, somewhat reminiscent
of Sammartini, and shows some kinship
with the Bach Chaconne from the Second
Partita. Its impact is quite overwhelming
and if the vocal line might be thought
somewhat independent of the piano part
Schoeck very subtly ensures that harmonically
they draw together at graphic cadential
points. I have to admit I’ve played
little else recently except this brief
two and a half minute setting. The performance
was given in 1953 by Silvia Gähwiller
with the composer as accompanist, a
role he performs throughout this disc
of historic performances from the archives.
It’s another in Jecklin’s really outstanding
series devoted to Schoeck and will be
a place of pilgrimage for admirers of
the composer’s lieder. There is an extensive
collection of his lieder in contemporary
performances on this label but this
is something altogether different.
Gähwiller is one
of a number of Schoeck singers to be
captured on these rare live discs. First
chronologically we have Elisabeth Gehri
on some rather worn sounding acetates
from 1942. The voice is somewhat backward
in the first song and there is indeed
some blasting on high notes but the
second song is better focused and balanced,
its Wagnerian inheritance clearly evident.
It’s doubly valuable to have this as
the soprano had to retire shortly afterwards
following a serious illness.
The Gähwiller
songs date from later but are much more
boxily recorded, presumably on tape.
She is an adept singer, maybe a touch
hard but capable of verdancy, which
is just as well in these nature settings
– and of course she is excellent in
Der Kirchlof im Frühling.
We are immediately onto a real hero
of the Schoeck discography, the Swiss
Ernst Haefliger. His contribution is
brief – three songs of which only one
is substantial - but it’s enough to
grant us the chance to hear his fresh
voice, forward and generous, and the
exquisitely controlled head voice he
floats in Der Waldsee. There’s
some scratch on these 1946 acetates.
Schoeck’s wife Hilde
joins him for Four Songs from Das
Holder Bescheiden. Of these Jecklin
has already issued the very long Besuch
in Urach but it makes more sense
in this context. There’s some bad mechanical
hum in these 1951 performances and a
recessed sound quality as well but the
husband and wife team make a formidable
pairing. Finally, in good sound, a rather
anomalous 1960 postscript of arias from
the early singspiel Erwin und Elmire.
These are operetta-ish things –
think frothy Vienna – but are very nicely
and adroitly sung and performed. Schoeck
had been dead three years when they
were broadcast.
The aural problems
duly noted, this is an important disc
of Schoeck historic performances, as
usual very well annotated and with full
German/English texts.
Jonathan Woolf
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