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             The Art of Susan Graham  
              CD 1: Opera Arias by Mozart and Gluck  
              CD 2: Songs and Operetta Arias by Brahms, Debussy, Berg, Poulenc, 
              Messager, Simons, Hahn, Mahler, Moore  
              CD 3: Orchestral Songs Cycles by Chausson, Ravel, Debussy/Adams 
               
              CD 4: French Operetta Arias by Simons, Messager, Yvain, Honegger, 
              Hahn   
              CD 5: Opera Arias and Songs by Handel, Berlioz, Ives, Heggie 
               
              CD 6: Songs by Ned Rorem  
                
              Susan Graham (mezzo)  
              Pierre-Laurent Aimard (piano)  
              Malcolm Martineau (piano)  
              Ensemble Oriol  
              BBC Symphony Orchestra/Yan Pascal Tortelier  
              City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra/Yves Abel  
              Les Arts Florissants/William Christie  
              Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment/Harry Bicket  
              Orchestre de l’Opéra de Lyon/Kent Nagano  
              Orchestre de l’Opéra de Lyon/John Nelson 
              San Francisco Opera Orchestra/Patrick Summers  
              Full track details at end of review. DDD  
                
              WARNER CLASSICS 2564 68625-6 [384:15]   
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               This is a generous and rewarding collection. 
                It offers almost six and a half hours of music although the details 
                on the box state over an hour less music. This agreeably comprehensive 
                programme ranges from Handel and Mozart opera arias to Mahler 
                and Berg lieder, from Ravel and Debussy orchestral 
                songs to cabaret songs from contemporary composer Ned Rorem and 
                Ben Moore. Graham’s Grammy award-winning performances of Charles 
                Ives’ Songs is the highlight of the disc for me. My only 
                disappointment was that it was seemingly not possible to include 
                any works from the pen of Richard Strauss; a composer for whom 
                I believe Graham has a special affinity.  
                 
                A few biographical details of the may prove useful. Graham was 
                born in 1960 at Roswell in the state of New Mexico. She was brought 
                up in Midland, Texas where she graduated from the Texas Tech University 
                at Lubbock. It was a pivotal occasion when she went up to New 
                York City to study at the Manhattan School of Music. The hard-working 
                Graham has made a highly successful international career in recital 
                and has become a leading star in the world’s greatest opera houses. 
                 
                 
                Graham’s artistic prowess and characterisation have made her a 
                popular choice in what have become signature ‘trouser roles’; 
                notably Cherubino from Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro and 
                Octavian in Richard Strauss’s Der Rosenkavalier. In 1991 
                she made her New York Metropolitan Opera debut in Mozart’s The 
                Magic Flute followed by her Covent Garden debut in 1994 in 
                the title role of Massenet's Chérubin. Surprisingly Graham 
                had to wait until 2003 for her Carnegie Hall recital debut and 
                it was 2006 before she finally appeared at a BBC Proms Concert. 
                A renowned specialist in the French song repertoire Graham has 
                been honoured by the French Government with their prestigious 
                Commandeur dans l'ordre des Arts et des Lettres. For her 
                Charles Ives disc of the Songs - Concord Sonata on Warner 
                Classics, Susan Graham with pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard won 
                the 2005 Grammy for ‘Best Classical Vocal Performance’.  
                   
                The opening disc of the set titled ‘Il tenero momento’ 
                contains a selection of twelve opera arias by Mozart and Gluck. 
                In these ‘trouser roles’ Graham displays her undoubted aptitude 
                for the genre. I was impressed by the fine support from the Orchestra 
                of the Age of Enlightenment under Harry Bicket. From Gluck’s opera 
                Paride ed Elena (1770) I particularly enjoyed Graham’s 
                smooth and expressive rendition of Paride’s aria O del mio 
                dolce ardor bramato oggetto! (Oh, dear object of my sweet 
                passion!). Here the mezzo-soprano easily soars to float like 
                an eagle. With Iphigénie’s aria Non, cet affreux devoir je 
                ne puis le remplir… Je t’implore et je tremble (No, I cannot 
                fulfil this dreadful duty… Trembling, I implore thee) from 
                Gluck’s Iphigénie en Tauride (1779) Graham demonstrates 
                her wonderful flair for dramatic expression. She is so very comfortable 
                in her high range and excellent under pressure. Of the Mozart 
                scores the most pleasing was Cherubino’s aria Non so più cosa 
                son, cosa faccio (I don’t know what I am, what I’m doing) 
                from The Marriage of Figaro (1786). Graham’s tones are 
                consistently smooth and never in danger of being shrill. I marvelled 
                at her glorious creamy timbre together with splendid diction. 
                This disc of Mozart and Gluck opera arias is another high point 
                of the set. Superbly recorded the crystal clear sound secures 
                an impressive balance between singer and orchestra.  
                   
                Disc two is an appealing recital titled ‘Susan Graham at Carnegie 
                Hall’ given in 2003. The recital was recorded live with Malcolm 
                Martineau accompanying the mezzo-soprano. The programme comprises 
                a wide-ranging assortment of thirty songs and operetta arias. 
                In the eight song selection from Brahms’s Zigeunerlieder 
                (Gypsy Songs), Op.103 (1887/88) arranged for voice and 
                piano I especially enjoyed the contrasting character of the final 
                two songs. In Kommt dir manchmal in den Sinn, mein süßes Lieb 
                (Do you sometimes remember, my sweet) the tender rendering 
                borders on the melancholy and in Rote Abendwolken ziehn am 
                Firmament (Red evening clouds drift in the sky) one 
                is aware of the score’s robust and determined character. From 
                Debussy’s Proses lyriques (Lyrical Prose) setting 
                his own verse from 1892/93 the first song De rêve (About 
                a dream) is the pick of the crop; sung with such tenderness 
                and expression. The interpretation just radiates colour and benefits 
                from superb piano accompaniment. Sad and emotional De fleurs 
                (About flowers) is a most affecting song with the soloist 
                conveying suggestions of vulnerability. Technically excellent, 
                Martineau manages to play so slowly towards the conclusion yet 
                stops short of grinding to a halt. Graham delivers a brisk and 
                summery rendition of De soir (About evening) that 
                feels remarkably uplifting. Of Berg’s splendid set Sieben Frühe 
                Lieder (Seven Early Songs) from 1905/08 I enjoyed immensely 
                the atmospheric and colourful Nacht (Night), the 
                song Die Nachtigall (The Nightingale) reaches dramatic 
                heights from a tender platform and the Liebesode (Ode 
                to love) just exudes passion and romance. Another performance 
                to cherish is Graham’s interpretation of Hahn’s 1913 pastoral 
                song setting À Chloris (To Chloris) to a text by 
                Théophile de Viau which serves as homage to the Baroque. We hear 
                magnificent heartfelt singing of the impressive vocal line from 
                Graham and exceptional accompaniment from Martineau. The Mahler 
                song the serious Liebst du um Conceit (If you love for 
                beauty) is the last of his cycle of Five Rückert Lieder 
                from 1901/2. Sung here with dedication and immense passion 
                this is a fine achievement that the audience clearly greatly appreciated. 
                In this live recording Graham explains from the stage that this 
                is the first time that she and Martineau have performed the song 
                together. The final song of the disc is the New York premiere 
                of Sexy Lady written especially for Susan Graham by Ben 
                Moore in 2001. Bright and amusing this exuberant cabaret song 
                with elements of the pastiche receives rapturous applause.  
                 
                Released with the title Poèmes de l'amour soon after winning 
                her Grammy for ‘Best Classical Vocal Performance’ the 
                third disc consists of orchestral song-cycles by composers: Chausson, 
                Ravel and Claude Debussy/John Adams. Susan Graham recorded them 
                in 2004 at London’s Maida Vale studios with the BBC Symphony Orchestra 
                under Yan Pascal Tortelier. Generously mellow and densely atmospheric 
                these orchestral songs generally inhabit a similar sound-world. 
                They are all about mood-painting and Graham reigns supreme here. 
                Technically the mezzo-soprano never seems challenged and the songs 
                suit her tessitura splendidly.  
                 
                Chausson’s Poème de l’amour et de la mer (Poem of Love 
                and of the Sea) to a Maurice Bouchor text was composed 
                in 1882/92. At times the orchestral accompaniment to the song 
                La Fleur des beaux (The Flower of the waters) reminded 
                me of Elgar’s Sea Pictures, Op. 37. it is evocative of 
                a gently swaying boat anchored in a quiet bay. On occasions the 
                sea breeze picks up and in a squall the water becomes increasingly 
                choppy as if anticipating the onset of a storm. Wind instruments 
                and strings blend together to create a soft mellow quality for 
                the short orchestral Interlude. Generally warm and sultry 
                the song La Mort de l’amour (The death of love) 
                is an atmospheric and romantic nocturne convincingly suggestive 
                of a shimmering seascape. Graham expertly conveys the contrasting 
                moods that range from severe tension to intense passion.  
                 
                Ravel wrote the seductive Shéhérazade in 1903 to three 
                poems by his Parisian friend Tristan Klingsor, a pseudonym of 
                the poet Léon Leclère. With a humid and almost stifling atmosphere 
                all three songs easily evoke the sound, sight and smells of Eastern 
                exoticism.  
                 
                Le Livre de Baudelaire (The Book of Baudelaire) 
                by Debussy is one of his early works. The songs are taken from 
                Debussy’s settings of his Cinq poèmes de Charles Baudelaire 
                (The five poems of Charles Baudelaire) after French 
                poet Charles Baudelaire's collection Les fleurs du mal (The 
                Flowers of Evil). Originally composed in 1887/89 for 
                solo piano these four settings were orchestrated by John Adams 
                in 1993. A fifth song La mort des amants is not included 
                here. I especially enjoyed Graham’s delightful rendition of the 
                song Le Jet d’eau (The fountain) together with its 
                light and affectionate orchestral accompaniment. Calm and gently 
                rocking with a slight melancholic tinge the support from the BBC 
                Symphony Orchestra is outstanding in the final song Recueillement 
                (Meditation).  
                   
                French operetta arias is the theme of disc four. It offers a total 
                of seventeen works by Moisés Simons, André Messager, Maurice Yvain, 
                Arthur Honegger and Reynaldo Hahn. Here I was struck just how 
                supremely talented the composer’s André Messager and Reynaldo 
                Hahn are in this genre. This disc was titled ‘C'est ça la vie, 
                c'est ça l'amour: French Operetta Arias’ on 
                its release. Recorded in 2001 in Birmingham, England, Graham is 
                given sterling orchestral support from the CBSO under Yves Abel. 
                The following songs are notable. From the Moïses Simons’ operetta 
                Toi c'est moi (You are me) fun and entertainment 
                abound in the excellent Latin-infused song C’est ça la vie, 
                c’est ça l’amour! (That’s life, that’s love!). Messager’s 
                song J’ai deux amants (I have two lovers) from L’amour 
                masqué comes across as operatic in the late-romantic Italian 
                style of Puccini. Graham gives a delightful performance in Messager’s 
                Ô mon bel inconnu (O My Handsome Stranger) from 
                the operetta of the same name. I love the solo violin and clarinet 
                accompaniment. For some reason we are not told the identity of 
                the supporting singers on this track. Messager’s Les hommes 
                sont biens tous les mêmes (Men are all the same) and 
                L’amour est un oiseau rebelle (Love is a rebellious 
                bird), and also Hahn’s Air de la Lettre (Letter 
                aria) are typically light-hearted and wonderfully uplifting. 
                I was struck by the mournful cello part in Messager’s splendid 
                Mon rêve (My dream) from L'Amour Masqué (Masked 
                love) and I especially enjoyed the melodic and delightfully 
                stirring final song Vagabonde (Roaming) from 
                Moisés Simons’ Toi c'est moi (You are me). In spite 
                of the generally slight nature of these charming operetta arias 
                Graham displaying her noted generous affection maintains total 
                involvement.  
                   
                A collection of twenty-four opera arias and songs from several 
                recordings make up the contents of the fifth disc from the composers 
                George Frideric Handel, Hector Berlioz, Charles Ives and Jake 
                Heggie. Susan Graham’s performances of seventeen songs by Charles 
                Ives won her a Grammy in 2004 for ‘Best Classical Vocal Performance’. 
                The award-winning disc was coupled with the Ives Concord Sonata 
                played by Pierre-Laurent Aimard who accompanies Graham here 
                on the Ives songs. The remaining seven songs are taken from other 
                releases and could have been programmed better. Throwing together 
                heavy opera arias by Handel and Berlioz with songs from Charles 
                Ives seems a strange mix that doesn’t sit entirely comfortably. 
                 
                 
                The two Handel arias were recorded live at the Opéra de Paris 
                Garnier. From Handel’s 1735 opera seria Alcina Susan Graham 
                does not seem comfortable with the technical challenges provided 
                by the aria Di te mi rido (I laugh you to scorn). 
                The Texan bred singer fares better with the aria Mi lusinga 
                il dolce affetto (My tender passion bewitches me) delivering 
                a delightfully tender and affecting interpretation. Here William 
                Christie directs the impressive period instrument chamber orchestra 
                Les Arts Florissants with subtlety and a natural feeling for the 
                music.  
                 
                From the Berlioz’s 1846 dramatic legend The Damnation of Faust 
                Marguerite’s aria Autrefois un roi de Thule (Once upon 
                a time, a King of Thule) is an atmospheric piece beautifully 
                sung and performed. It would be remiss not to mention the impressive 
                support from Kent Nagano and the Orchestre de l’Opéra de Lyon. 
                Noteworthy are the low strings that play splendidly throughout. 
                No details are given of the recording venue. Beatrice’s beautiful 
                air Dieu! Que viens-je d’entendre? (Heavens! What have 
                I just heard?) from Berlioz’s 1862 comic opera Beatrice 
                and Benedict demands broad emotional contrasts from the performer. 
                Adroitly performed by the New Mexican-born singer who demonstrates 
                her innate aptitude for theatre and characterisation. On this 
                song the Orchestre de l’Opéra de Lyon is conducted by John Nelson. 
                We are not told where this performance was recorded.  
                 
                The highlight of the disc and of the whole set is the award-winning 
                collection of seventeen Charles Ives songs that Susan Graham recorded 
                with pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard in 2003 at the Vienna Konzerthaus. 
                Varied in style, expression and length these songs, a treasure 
                trove of invention and discovery, are well worth getting to know. 
                I enjoyed the Ives setting of his own text The Things Our Fathers 
                Loved (1917) where the gentle mood is broken only by the weightier 
                central section. Occupying a dreamy sound-world the beautiful 
                1921 setting The Housatonic at Stockbridge of a Robert 
                Underwood Johnson text builds to a robust closing section. In 
                the Louis Untermeyer setting Swimmers from 1915 Graham 
                paints a squally quality that together with the more aggressive 
                rhythms adroitly depicts a storm at sea. Another setting of the 
                composer’s own words Memories (A—Very Pleasant, B — 
                Rather Sad) from 1897 begins upbeat, jolly and humorous and 
                even includes some whistling. From 0:34 the mood changes drastically 
                to one of calm, tinged with melancholy.  
                 
                Extremely brief and quirky the Maurice Morris setting Ann Street 
                from 1921 illustrates the street of the same name in New York 
                City and contains a couple of barked announcements by a male voice. 
                To a text from Czech poet Adolf Heyduk (translated N. Macfarren) 
                Songs My Mother Taught Me (1895) is a splendid example 
                of Graham’s consummate ability to convey peaceful and soft textures. 
                Of a convincing carnival atmosphere the joyous Ives setting of 
                his own text The Circus Band (1894) just struts along without 
                a care in the world. I found the yearning Ives setting from 1921 
                ‘A sound of a distant horn’ rather comforting. By contrast 
                September the brief and strident 1920 Rossetti setting 
                (after Folgore da San Geminiano) contains traces of the austere. 
                The absorbing Ives 1907 setting of his own text Soliloquy 
                (or A Study in Sevenths and Other Things) exudes tenderness, 
                bordering on the serene, quickly developing a degree of dissonance. 
                Containing an infusion of rugged power a distinct nostalgic quality 
                envelops the song A Farewell to Land (1909) to a Lord Byron 
                text. The final Ives song is Thoreau a 1915 setting of 
                his own verse with the soloist narrating the first forty seconds. 
                So typical of Ives this is an achingly tender and wistful score. 
                 
                 
                All three Jake Heggie arias are extracts from his first opera 
                Dead Man Walking (1998/2000). The libretto by Terrence 
                McNally is based on Sister Helen Prejean's successful 1993 book 
                Dead Man Walking which draws attention to the campaign 
                for the abolition of capital punishment. I recall the 1995 Tim 
                Robbins film version of Dead Man Walking starring Susan 
                Sarandon and Sean Penn. Featuring Susan Graham as the nun Sister 
                Helen this live recording is taken from the 2000 premiere run 
                of the opera at the War Memorial Hall Opera House, San Francisco 
                with the San Francisco Opera Orchestra and Chorus under Patrick 
                Summers. The first aria This journey to Christ from act 
                one inhabits eclectic territory over a bed of rich orchestral 
                writing that reminded me of a Nino Rota film score. From act two 
                Who will walk with me? is interesting and has a generally 
                sultry and exotic quality. I was struck by the forceful performance 
                of Graham in He will gather us around from act one. This 
                is an a cappella piece that has a slight feel of a Negro 
                spiritual.  
                   
                The sixth and final disc in the box is a collection of thirty-two 
                songs by American composer Ned Rorem recorded in 1999 at the Teldec 
                Studios in Berlin. The ‘Songs of Ned Rorem’ was released 
                in 2000 by Susan Graham with Malcolm Martineau as her piano accompanist 
                together with the Ensemble Oriol appearing on a couple of the 
                songs. I enjoyed Graham’s warmly atmospheric interpretation of 
                Sonnet - an appealing setting of a Witter Bynner verse 
                from the fourth set of Rorem’s Santa Fe Songs (1980). Undoubtedly 
                the inclusion of both the piano and strings makes a significant 
                contribution to the success of the score. In the 1963 setting 
                of the much used Lord Alfred Tennyson poem Now Sleeps the Crimson 
                Petal I enjoyed Graham’s convincing and expressive feeling 
                for the glorious text. With the setting of the well known verse 
                by Stephen Foster Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair the 
                mezzo performs with utmost care and confidence. Mainly located 
                in her upper registers the attractive Ode: Je te salue, 
                heureuse Paix (1953) uses a Pierre de Ronsard text. Graham 
                sings this attractive song with generous affection and a profound 
                assurance. I wasn’t expecting the spiky rhythms of the early song 
                setting Alleluia (1946). To a Walt Whitman text I enjoyed 
                the soft and gentle character of Look Down, Fair Moon (1957) 
                with its contrasting central section of increased weight and intensity. 
                In Far-Far-Away (1963) an Alfred Tennyson setting notable 
                are the interesting changes of space and rhythms. Also impressive 
                is the Walt Whitman setting Sometimes with One I Love (1957) 
                for its yearning quality and suggestions of austerity. The 1947 
                setting of Robert Frost’s verse Stopping by Woods on a Snowy 
                Evening is given a soft and tender rendition containing a 
                convincingly fresh outdoors feel. From 1963 the setting That 
                Shadow, My Likeness a Walt Whitman text is sung by Graham 
                with a slow and sultry character and long vocal lines.  
                 
                Susan Graham has an enthusiastic international following and this 
                impressive six disc set should not disappoint her fans. She certainly 
                possesses an exceptional talent for communicating songs. This 
                coupled with a smooth and creamy timbre. A tendency to roll her 
                Rs will prove an annoying mannerism for many. At times though 
                she sounds a touch jaded in songs that do not provide her with 
                sufficient variety of texture and expression. One or two of these 
                place a harsh test on her lowest registers. Graham seems at her 
                most comfortable in the mid to top of her range.  
                 
                There is an interesting little essay on Susan Graham in the booklet. 
                Sadly no texts are provided. So once again a major record company 
                presents a considerable vocal collection where the purchaser is 
                allowed to hear the sound of the words but not to understand their 
                meaning. In addition there is virtually no background information 
                about any of the works contained in the set.  
                   
                Michael Cookson  
                   
                Full track details: 
                   
                The Art of Susan Graham  
                CD 1   
                Opera Arias   
                Christoph Willibald GLUCK (1714–1787) 
                 
                Paride ed Elena (Ranieri Calzabigi) - Paris and Helen (prem. 1770) 
                 
                1. O del mio dolce ardor bramato oggetto!/Oh, dear object of my 
                sweet passion! (Paride) [3.26] 
                Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756–91) 
                 
                Le nozze di Figaro (Lorenzo da Ponte after Beaumarchais) - The 
                Marriage of Figaro (prem. 1786)  
                2) Non so più cosa son, cosa faccio/I don’t know what I am, what 
                I’m doing (Cherubino) [2.48] 
                La clemenza di Tito (Caterino Mazzolà after Metastasio) - The 
                Clemency of Titus (prem. 1791)  
                3) Parto, ma tu, ben mio/I go, but you, my dearest (Sesto) [6.36] 
                Christoph Willibald GLUCK (1714–1787) 
                 
                Iphigénie en Tauride (Nicolas-François Guillard after Euripides) 
                - Iphigenia in Tauris (prem. 1779)  
                4) Non, je n’espère plus … Ô toi qui prolongeas mes jours/No, 
                I have no more hope … O thou who prolonged my life (Iphigénie) 
                [3.19]  
                5) Ô malheureuse Iphigénie!/O unhappy Iphigenia! (Iphigénie) [4.03] 
                 
                6) Non, cet affreux devoir je ne puis le remplir … Je t’implore 
                et je tremble/No, I cannot fulfil this dreadful duty … Trembling, 
                I implore thee (Iphigénie) [3.54]  
                Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756–1791) 
                 
                The Marriage of Figaro (prem. 1786)  
                7) Voi che sapete che cosa è amor/You ladies who know what love 
                is (Cherubino) [2.53]  
                La clemenza di Tito  
                8) Deh, per questo istante solo/Ah, for just one moment (Sesto) 
                [6.43]  
                Christoph Willibald GLUCK (1714–1787) 
                 
                Orphée et Eurydice (Ranieri Calzabigi, trans. Pierre-Louis Moline) 
                - Orpheus and Eurydice (prem. 1762)  
                9) Qu’entends-je? Qu’a-t-il dit? … Amour, viens rendre à mon âme/What’s 
                this I hear? What did he say? … Love, restore to my soul (Orphée) 
                [7.20] 
                Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756–1791) 
                 
                Idomeneo (Giambattista Varesco) (prem. 1781)  
                10) Non ho colpa, e mi condanni/I am blameless, yet you condemn 
                me (Idamante) [6.27]  
                Christoph Willibald GLUCK (1714–1787) 
                 
                Orphée et Eurydice (Ranieri Calzabigi, trans. Pierre-Louis Moline) 
                - Orpheus and Eurydice (prem. 1762)  
                11) J’ai perdu mon Eurydice/I have lost my Eurydice (Orphée) [4.19] 
                 
                Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756–91) 
                 
                Lucio Silla (Giovanni de Gamerra) (prem. 1772)  
                12) Dunque sperar poss’io … Il tenero momento/So can I still hope 
                … The tender moment (Cecilio) [10.18]  
                Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment/Harry Bicket  
                rec. 29 August-2 September 2000, Air Studios, London, England. 
                 
                CD 2   
                Songs and Operetta Arias  
                Johannes BRAHMS (1833–1897) 
                 
                Zigeunerlieder, Op.103 (Trad.) - Gypsy Songs (1887–88)  
                1) I He, Zigeuner, greife in die Saiten ein!/Hey, Gypsy, strum 
                your strings! [1.11]  
                2) II Hochgetürmte Rimaflut/Mighty waters of the Rima [1.22]  
                3) III Wisst ihr, wann mein Kindchen am allerschönsten ist?/Do 
                you know when my sweetheart is loveliest? [1.35]  
                4) IV Lieber Gott, du weißt, wie oft bereut ich hab/Dear God, 
                you know how often I have regretted [1.40]  
                5) V Brauner Bursche führt zum Tanze/A bronzed lad leads to the 
                dance [1.45]  
                6) VI Röslein dreie in der Reihe blüh’n so rot/Three little roses 
                in a row bloom so red [2.02]  
                7) VII Kommt dir manchmal in den Sinn, mein süßes Lieb/Do you 
                sometimes remember, my sweet [2.17]  
                8) VIII Rote Abendwolken ziehn am Firmament/Red evening clouds 
                drift in the sky [1.38]  
                Claude DEBUSSY (1862–1918) 
                 
                Proses lyriques (Debussy) - Lyrical Prose (1892/93)  
                9) I De rêve/About a dream [6.30]  
                10) II De grève/About the shore [3.38]  
                11) III De fleurs/About flowers [5.46]  
                12) IV De soir/About evening [4.33]  
                Alban BERG (1885–1935)  
                Sieben Frühe Lieder (1905/08) - Seven Early Songs  
                13) I Nacht/Night (Carl Hauptmann) [3.37]  
                14) II Schilflied/Song amid the reeds (Nikolaus Lenau) [1.53] 
                 
                15) III Die Nachtigall/The nightingale (Theodor Storm) [1.54] 
                 
                16) IV Traumgekrönt/Crowned in dreams (Rainer Maria Rilke) [2.14] 
                 
                17) V Im Zimmer/In the room (Johannes Schlaf) [1.12]  
                18) VI Liebesode/Ode to love (Otto Erich Hartleben) [1.20]  
                19) VII Sommertage/Summer days (Paul Hohenberg) [1.38]  
                Francis POULENC (1899–1963) 
                 
                Quatre Poèmes de Guillaume Apollinaire (c. 1931) - Four Poems 
                by Guillaume Apollinaire  
                20) I Languidly/The eel [1.16]  
                21) II Carte postale/Postcard [1.22]  
                22) III Avant le cinéma/Before the cinema [0.51]  
                23) IV 1904 [1.21]  
                André MESSAGER (1853–1929) 
                 
                Les P’tites Michu (Albert Vanloo et Georges Duval) - The Little 
                Michus (1897)  
                24) Vois-tu, je m’en veux à moi-même/You see, I blame myself (Blanche-Marie) 
                [3.00]  
                L’Amour masqué (Sacha Guitry) - Masked Love (1923)  
                25) J’ai deux amants/I have two lovers (Elle) [2.39]  
                Moïses SIMONS (1888–1945) 
                 
                Toi c’est moi (Bertal-Maubon et Chamfleury) - You Are Me (1934) 
                 
                26) C’est ça la vie, c’est ça l’amour!/That’s life, that’s love! 
                [2.39]  
                Reynaldo HAHN (1874–1947) 
                 
                27) À Chloris/To Chloris (Théophile de Viau) (1913) [3.45]  
                Claude DEBUSSY (1862–1918) 
                 
                28) Fantoches/Marionettes (Paul Verlaine) [1.33]  
                Gustav MAHLER (1860–1911) 
                 
                29) Liebst du um Schönheit/If you love for beauty (Rückert-Lieder) 
                (1901/2) [3.10]  
                Ben MOORE (b.1960)  
                30) Sexy Lady (2001) [5.09]  
                Malcolm Martineau (piano)  
                rec. live, 14 April 2003, Carnegie Hall, New York, USA.  
                CD 3   
                Orchestral Songs Cycles   
                Ernest CHAUSSON (1855–1899) 
                 
                Poème de l’amour et de la mer (Maurice Bouchor) - Poem of Love 
                and of the Sea (1882/92)  
                1) I La Fleur des beaux/The flower of the waters [12.05]  
                2) II Interlude [2.30]  
                3) III La Mort de l’amour/The death of love [13.12]  
                Maurice RAVEL (1875–1937) 
                 
                Shéhérazade (Tristan Klingsor) (1903)  
                4) I Asie/Asia [9.37]  
                5) II La Flûte enchantée/The enchanted flute [2.55]  
                6) III L’Indifférent/The indifferent one [4.16]  
                Claude DEBUSSY (1862–1918) orch. 
                John Adams (b.1947)  
                Le Livre de Baudelaire (Cinq Poèmes de Charles Baudelaire I–IV) 
                - The Book of Baudelaire (orig. 1887/89)  
                7) I Le Balcon/The balcony [8.13]  
                8) II Harmonie du soir/Evening harmony [3.55]  
                9) III Le Jet d’eau/The fountain [5.52]  
                10) IV Recueillement/Meditation [5.09]  
                BBC Symphony Orchestra/Yan Pascal Tortelier  
                rec. 15, 19-2 December 2004, BBC Maida Vale Studios, London, England 
                 
                CD 4 
                French Operetta Arias   
                Moïses SIMONS (1888–1945) 
                 
                Toi c’est moi (Bertal-Maubon et Chamfleury) - You Are Me (1934) 
                 
                1) C’est ça la vie, c’est ça l’amour!/That’s life, that’s love! 
                (Viviane) [3.48]  
                André MESSAGER (1853–1929) 
                 
                L’Amour masqué (Sacha Guitry) - Masked Love (1923)  
                2) J’ai deux amants/I have two lovers (Elle) [2.31]  
                Maurice YVAIN (1891–1965) 
                 
                Yes (Albert Willemetz, Pierre Soulaine et René Pujol)  
                3) Yes (Totte) [3.07]  
                Arthur HONNEGER (1892–1955) 
                 
                Les Aventures du roi Pausole (Albert Willemetz d’après Pierre 
                Louÿs) - The Adventures of King Pausole (1929/30)  
                4) Si vous saviez/If you knew (Diane) [4.32]  
                Reynaldo HAHN (1874–1947) 
                 
                Ô mon bel inconnu (Sacha Guitry) (1933) - O My Handsome Stranger 
                5) Ô mon bel inconnu/O My Handsome Stranger (Marie-Anne, Antoinette, 
                Félicie) [3.59]  
                André MESSAGER (1853–1929) 
                 
                Fortunio (Robert de Flers et Gaston de Caillavet) (1907)  
                6) Je ne vois rien … Lorsque je n’étais qu’une enfant/I can see 
                nothing … When I was but a child (Jacqueline) [5.30]  
                Coups de roulis (Albert Willemetz d’après Maurice Larrouy) (1928) 
                - Pitching and Rolling  
                7) Les hommes sont biens tous les mêmes/Men are all the same (Béatrice) 
                [1.57]  
                Reynaldo HAHN (1874–1947) 
                 
                Brummell (R. Dieudonné et “Rip”) (1930)  
                8) Air de la Lettre/Letter aria (Lady Eversharp) [3.58]  
                André MESSAGER (1853–1929) 
                 
                Passionnément (Maurice Hennequin et Albert Willemetz) (1926) - 
                Passionately  
                9) “L’amour est un oiseau rebelle”/“Love is a rebellious bird” 
                (Julia) [2.51]  
                Les P’tites Michu (Albert Vanloo et Georges Duval) (1897) - The 
                Little Michus  
                10) Vois-tu, je m’en veux à moi-même/You see, I blame myself (Blanche-Marie) 
                [2.32]  
                Reynaldo HAHN (1874–1947) 
                 
                Mozart (Sacha Guitry) (1925)  
                11) Être adoré/To be adored (Mozart) [4:30]  
                André MESSAGER (1853–1929) 
                 
                La Petite Fonctionnaire (Alfred Capus et Xavier Roux) (1921) - 
                The Little Office-Worker  
                12) Je regrette mon Pressigny/I miss my Pressigny (Suzanne) [2.30] 
                 
                Les Dragons de l’Impératrice (1905) - The Empress’s Dragons 
                13) Amour! Amour! quel est donc ton pouvoir/Love! Love! What power 
                do you yield (Lucrèce) [3.15]  
                L’Amour masqué (Sacha Guitry) (1923) - Masked Love 
                14) Mon rêve/My dream (Elle) [4.02]  
                Reynaldo HAHN (1874–1947) 
                 
                Ô mon bel inconnu (Sacha Guitry) (1933) - O My Handsome Stranger 
                 
                15) C’est très vilain d’être infidèle/It’s very naughty to be 
                unfaithful (Antoinette) [3.41]  
                Ciboulette (Robert de Flers et Francis de Croisset) (1923)  
                16) C’est pas Paris, c’est sa banlieue/It’s not Paris, but it’s 
                not far off (Ciboulette) [2.53]  
                Moïses SIMONS (1888–1945) 
                 
                Toi c’est moi (Bertal-Maubon et Chamfleury) (1934) - You Are Me 
                 
                17) Vagabonde (Viviane) [3.08]  
                City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra/Yves Abel  
                rec. 24-29 June 2001, CBSO Centre, Birmingham, England.  
                CD 5   
                Opera Arias and Songs  
                George Frideric HANDEL (1685–1759) 
                 
                Alcina (Anon. after Ariosto) (prem. 1735)  
                1) Di te mi rido/I laugh you to scorn (Ruggiero) [4.14]  
                2) Mi lusinga il dolce affetto/My tender passion bewitches me 
                (Ruggiero) [7.24]  
                Les Arts Florissants/William Christie  
                rec. live, June 1999 at Opéra de Paris Garnier, Paris, France 
                 
                Hector BERLIOZ (1803–1869) 
                 
                La Damnation de Faust (Berlioz & Almire Gandonnière after 
                Goethe) - The Damnation of Faust (prem. 1846)  
                3) Autrefois un roi de Thulé/Once upon a time, a King of Thule 
                (Marguerite) [5.27]  
                Orchestre de l’Opéra de Lyon/Kent Nagano  
                rec. No details given  
                Béatrice et Bénédict (Berlioz after Shakespeare) - Beatrice and 
                Benedict (prem. 1862)  
                4) Dieu! Que viens-je d’entendre?/Heavens! What have I just heard? 
                (Béatrice) [9.50]  
                Orchestre de l’Opéra de Lyon/John Nelson  
                rec. No details given  
                Charles IVES (1874–1954)  
                Songs  
                5) The Things Our Fathers Loved (Ives) (1917) [2.01]  
                6) The Housatonic at Stockbridge (Robert Underwood Johnson) (1921) 
                [3.53]  
                7) Swimmers (Louis Untermeyer) (1915) [1.37]  
                8) Memories (A — Very Pleasant, B — Rather Sad) (Ives) (1897) 
                [2.26]  
                9) Ann Street (Maurice Morris) (1921) [0.54]  
                10) Serenity (A unison chant) (Whittier) (1909) [2.18]  
                11) “1, 2, 3” (Ives) (1921) [0.37]  
                12) Songs My Mother Taught Me (Adolf Heyduk, trans. Natalia Macfarren) 
                (1895) [3.27]  
                13) The Circus Band (Ives) (1894) [2.23]  
                14) The Cage (Ives) (1906) [0.46]  
                15) The Indians (Charles Sprague) (1921) [1.58]  
                16) Like a Sick Eagle (John Keats) (1920) [1.52]  
                17) “A sound of a distant horn” (Ives) (1921) [0.53]  
                18) September (Dante Gabriel Rossetti after Folgore da San Geminiano) 
                (1920) [0.50]  
                19) Soliloquy (or A Study in Sevenths and Other Things) (Ives) 
                (1907) [0.57]  
                20) A Farewell to Land (Lord Byron) (1909) [1.43]  
                21) Thoreau (Ives) (1915) [2.16]  
                Pierre-Laurent Aimard (piano)  
                rec. 6-8 November 2003, Große Saal, Konzerthaus, Vienna, Austria. 
                 
                Jake HEGGIE (b.1961)  
                Dead Man Walking (Terrence McNally) (1998/2000)  
                22) This journey. This journey to Christ [2.46]  
                23) Who will walk with me? [2.14]  
                24) “He will gather us around” [1.12]  
                Susan Graham (mezzo)  
                San Francisco Opera Orchestra/Patrick Summers  
                rec. live, 7, 13 October 2000, War Memorial Hall Opera House, 
                San Francisco USA.  
                CD 6  
                Ned ROREM (b.1923)  
                01) Sonnet (Santa Fe Songs IV) (Witter Bynner) (1980)[1.59]  
                02) Clouds (Paul Goodman) (1953) [2.08]  
                03) Early in the Morning (Robert Hillyer) (1954) [2.00]  
                04) The Serpent (Theodore Roethke) (1972) [2.06]  
                05) Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal (Alfred Tennyson) (1963) [4.19] 
                 
                06) Opus 101 (Santa Fe Songs II) (Witter Bynner) (1980)[2.54] 
                 
                07) I Strolled Across an Open Field (Theodore Roethke) (1959) 
                [1.06]  
                08) To a Young Girl (William Butler Yeats) (1951) [1.33]  
                09) Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair (after Stephen Foster) [2.38] 
                 
                10) Ode: Je te salue, heureuse Paix (Pierre de Ronsard) (1953) 
                [1.39]  
                11) For Poulenc (Frank O’Hara) (1963) [2.33]  
                12) Little Elegy (Elinor Wylie) (1949)[1.18]  
                13) Alleluia (1946) [2.49]  
                14) Look Down, Fair Moon (Walt Whitman) (1957) [1.16]  
                15) O You Whom I Often and Silently Come (Walt Whitman) (1957)[0.32] 
                 
                16) I Will Always Love You (Frank O’Hara) (1990) [2.23]  
                17) The Tulip Tree (Paul Goodman) (1953) [1.32]  
                18) The Wintry Mind (Santa Fe Songs VIII) (Witter Bynner) (1980) 
                [2.34]  
                19) I am Rose (Gertrude Stein) (1955)[0.27]  
                20) The Lordly Hudson (Paul Goodman) (1947) [2.23]  
                21) O Do Not Love Too Long (William Butler Yeats) (1951) [1.23] 
                 
                22) Far-Far-Away (Alfred Tennyson) (1963) [1.49]  
                23) For Susan (Paul Goodman) (1953) [1.09]  
                24) A Journey (Andrew Glaze) (1976) [1.26]  
                25) Sometimes with One I Love (Walt Whitman) (1957) [1.33]  
                26) Love (Thomas Lodge) (1953) [1.48]  
                27) Orchids (Theodore Roethke) (1959) [2.09]  
                28) Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening (Robert Frost) (1947) 
                [1.53]  
                29) Do I Love You More Than a Day? (Jack Larson) (1962) [1.34] 
                 
                30) Ferry Me Across the Water (Christina Rossetti) (1978) [1.34] 
                 
                31) The Sowers (Santa Fe Songs XII) (Witter Bynner) (1980) [1.45] 
                 
                32) That Shadow, My Likeness (Walt Whitman) (1963) [1.50]  
                Malcolm Martineau (piano)  
                Ensemble Oriol: (Christiane Plath (violin); Sebastian Gottschick 
                (viola); Friedeman Ludwig (cello))  
                rec. September 1999, Teldec Studio, Berlin, Germany 
             
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