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Kirsten Flagstad – Songs and Scenes Edvard GRIEG (1843–1907)
1. Efteraarsstormen, Op. 18 No. 4 [3:13]
2. Langs ei aa, Op. 33 No. 5 [2:22]
3. Mens jeg venter, Op. 60 No. 3 [2:52]
4. Fyremaal, Op. 33 No. 12 [3:36]
5. Med en vandlilje, Op. 25 No. 4 [2:30]
6. Prinsessen, EG 133 [3:09]
7. Jeg elsker deg, Op. 5 No. 3 [3:18]
8. En svane,Op. 25 No. 2[3:26]
9. Den sårede, Op. 33 No. 3 [4:06]
10. Tak for dit rad, Op. 21 No. 4 [1:13] Henry PURCELL (1659–1695)
Dido and Aeneas:
11. Thy hand Belinda …When I am laid in earth [4:48] Richard WAGNER (1813–1883)
Tannhäuser:
12. Allmächt’ge Jungfrau [5:58]
Tristan und Isolde:
13. Doch nun von Tristan! …Genau will ich’s vernehmen [10:35]
14. Mild und Leise (Liebestod) [7:04]
Götterdämmerung:
15. Starke Scheite schichtet mir dort (Immolation
Scene) [19:10]
Kirsten
Flagstad (soprano), Gerald Moore (piano) (1-6); Edwin McArthur
(piano) (7); Philharmonia Orchestra/Warwick
Braithwaite (8-11); Issay Dobrowen (12-13); Wilhelm Furtwängler
(14-15)
rec. 1935 (7); 1948 (1-6, 8-13); 1952 (14-15) REGIS RRC 1269 [77:27]
It might be argued that Kirsten Flagstad’s operatic repertoire
was limited, at least as recorded. The truth is that after her
breakthrough in 1935 she concentrated on a handful of roles,
mainly Wagner. However, during her first twenty years, when
she sang in her native Norway and occasionally in Sweden,
she appeared in a wide variety of roles, from operetta to
Elsa and Eva, the two most lyrical Wagner roles. In toto she
sang during her career, which lasted for more than forty
years, 74 roles: 45 in opera and 29 in operetta. She was
initially regarded as a small voiced, lyrical soprano. Only
gradually did she move into heavier repertoire. As early
as 1921 she sang her first Desdemona in Otello, Amelia
in Un ballo in maschera and Minnie in La fanciulla
del West. During the 1920s she also took on Micaela and
Marguerite, singing both roles more than forty times. By
1929 she was ready for Aida, Mimi in La bohème, Tosca
and Elsa. It is a pity that no recordings exist of her in
this repertoire – apart from Elsa, whose great solos she
recorded in 1937 and 1957. It could be argued, however, that
while there were many splendid Aidas in the 1930s, few could
challenge Flagstad in the Wagnerian field.
As a lieder singer it was natural for her to champion her great compatriot
Edvard Grieg, whom she recorded all through her career. On
this disc we have one very early example, the 1935 recording
of Jeg elsker dig, lyrical and youthful but with quite
noisy background. This song was also part of her international
farewell concert in the Royal Albert Hall 22 years later,
albeit then sung with orchestral accompaniment. She also
sang En svane (tr. 8) on that occasion. With the ever-sensitive
Gerald Moore at the piano each and every one of the six first
songs are little gems, invested with a feeling and freedom
of expression that come with long familiarity and conviction,
paired with her singing in her mother tongue. No little gem
but arguably Grieg’s best song is Med en vandlilje,
written in 1876. It was published in harness with five other
Ibsen settings as opus 25, a group also including En svane.
Both these songs are superbly sung here, as is Den sårede. I
have many excellent Grieg recordings and were I forced for
some reason to reduce my collection I would be hard-pressed
to choose between, say, von Otter, Groop, Håkan Hagegård,
the lovely Bodil Arnesen and, in the orchestral songs, Marita
Solberg. I definitely couldn’t imagine a separation from
Flagstad.
The only non-Wagner opera number on the disc, Dido’s lament
from Dido
and Aeneas, may come as a surprise to some readers.
I have had this recording for more than thirty years, first
on LP and then on CD. I regard it as one of the noblest
readings on record, even though period performance sticklers
may sniff. Recording it in 1948 she had not yet sung the
opera on stage. That was to come in 1951, whereupon this
became her most frequently performed opera, next to Tristan
und Isolde, of course, which she sang on no less than
182 occasions. Here we catch her on marvellous form in
the Isolde’s narrative and curse from the first act. The
effect is fired by Issay Dobrowen’s white-hot conducting
and Elisabeth Höngen’s inspired Brangäne. The sound is
big and thrilling, more immediate in fact than on the Liebestod,
culled from the complete 1952 recording with Furtwängler,
where Flagstad seems curiously recessed and the orchestra
murky. Not until I turned up the volume several steps did
I get a more satisfactory sound, especially in the Immolation
scene from Götterdämmerung, recorded at the same
time. Flagstad is in terrific form here, sounding marginally
more youthful than on the recording from 1948, also with
Furtwängler.
I have heard better transfers than here and the intervals between
the tracks are far too short. The end of the Tristan excerpt
is very blunt but that is the case with the other transfers
of this particular piece that I have, so it seems to have
been recorded that way.
James Murray contributes an interesting biography on the
great singer. Apart from the technical shortcomings that
I have mentioned
this is a highly desirable disc – especially at the Regis
budget price.
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