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		    Robert SCHUMANN (1810-1856)
 
              CD 1  
              Dichterliebe Op. 48 (1840)
 3 recordings;
 Aksel Schiøtz (tenor); Gerald Moore (piano) (recorded 10 January 1946, studio) [26:22]
 Charles Panzera (baritone); Alfred Cortot (piano) (recorded 17 June 1935, studio) [25:13]
 Gerhard Hüsch (baritone); Hanns Udo Müller (piano) (recorded 29, 30 January 1936, studio) [26:59] 
 
              CD 2  
              Frauenliebe und -leben, Op. 42 (1840)
 3 recordings;
 Lotte Lehmann (soprano); Paul Ulanowsky (piano) (recorded 20 January 1946, New York, live) [21:40]
 Marian Anderson (alto); Franz Rupp (piano) (recorded 29, 30 March 1950, studio) [21:01]
 
              Kathleen Ferrier (alto); Bruno Walter (piano) (recorded 7 September 
              1949, Edinburgh Festival, live) [20:43]  
             
            MUSIC & ARTS CD-1235(2   [78:35 + 62:24]  		  
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                 This is an intriguing idea, one that sometimes crops up in 
                  discs. We have three recordings each of these two song-cycles, 
                  so there are six singers, six pianists, four studio cycles and 
                  two live, and none previously unreleased.  
                   
                  All in fact will be familiar to collectors though I fancy that 
                  the recordings of Dichterliebe will be the most well known. 
                  Aksel Schiøtz’s 1946 recording with Gerald Moore was last heard 
                  by me on the big box devoted to the singer on Danacord 
                  [DACOCD 451-460] in a transfer that preserved more shellac hiss 
                  but also a more open sound. Tully Potter wrote the notes for 
                  that box and reprises the job for this disc. Schiøtz had a few 
                  years earlier recorded the cycle with Folmer Jensen but as I 
                  wrote in my review of that Danacord box there really is very 
                  little to choose between them. He catches the right colour of 
                  melancholy, the shading and shaping of lines and if he never 
                  penetrates quite to the emotional heart of things he nevertheless 
                  provides an exemplary example of nuanced and imaginative singing. 
                  The next singer, Charles Panzera, is known to have admired Schiøtz 
                  almost without reservation. The baritone set down his recording 
                  in 1935 with Cortot as his studio partner, whose playing of 
                  the postludes, in particular, has gone down in discographic 
                  history. This famous set preserves a performance of compelling 
                  intimacy and understanding, marvellous colour and an avoidance 
                  of extremes and exaggerations – one of the most centrally recommendable 
                  of all such sets. The final Dichterliebe was recorded 
                  the following year and features the only German pairing – that 
                  of Gerhard Hüsch and Hanns Udo Müller. As with the Moore recording, 
                  Müller – later to be killed in an Allied bombing raid – is a 
                  touch reticently balanced but judged metrically he is a more 
                  limpet like accompanist than the non-specialist Cortot. Elegant, 
                  confident and controlled – these are some of the features of 
                  this eminent reading, finely transferred.  
                   
                  The second disc offers three female voices in Frauenliebe 
                  und -leben. Lotte Lehmann’s live recital is with Paul Ulanowsky 
                  at Town Hall in New York in 1946. The recording was not especially 
                  good, with a subterranean piano sound and some acetate damage, 
                  but Lani Spahr has done his best to make it sound acceptable. 
                  Lehmann’s very intimate, portamento-laden style is just about 
                  audible and imparts a richly expressive though very choppily 
                  phrased wisdom to the cycle. She was well past her best by this 
                  point. Marian Anderson’s studio recording comes as balm after 
                  the dingy sound accorded Lehmann. Anderson is by far the more 
                  stoic, occasionally statuesque Schumann interpreter, less inclined 
                  to wear emotions on her sleeve, but possessing a powerful interior 
                  introspective quality – and that voice is heard in fine estate. 
                  Finally we have Ferrier in Edinburgh with Bruno Walter – note 
                  therefore that this is not the John Newmark studio recording. 
                  The sound here is cramped but significantly better than the 
                  Lehmann. Potter has a go at another (named) critic for the latter’s 
                  dismissal of Walter’s piano playing but it’s surely legitimate 
                  to point out that it is badly compromised technically, whilst 
                  also noting its essential humanity.  
                   
                  There are links to the texts in the booklet, should you need 
                  them. The two discs then, preserve six variably successful, 
                  variably recorded documents from six singers of outstanding 
                  qualities, though recorded again at different stages in their 
                  own musical journeys. On the whole the Dichterliebe performances 
                  are the more generally recommendable, for a variety of artistic 
                  and technical reasons, but the diptych makes for imperishable 
                  listening whatever deficiencies may also have been preserved. 
                   
                   
                  Jonathan Woolf 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                   
                 
               
             
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