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            Richard STRAUSS 
              (1864-1949)  
              Ständchen, op.17 no.2 (1887) [2:32]  
              Leises Lied, op.39 no.1 (1898) [2:59]  
              Wiegenliedchen, op.49 no.3 (1901) [2:23]  
              Rote Rosen (1880) [2:09]  
              Die Erwachte Rose (1883) [3:00]  
              Malven, AV304 (1948) [2:57]  
              Mädchenblumen, op.22 (1888) [8:46]  
              Fünf Lieder, op.48 (1900) [11:14]  
              Schlagende Herzen, op.29 no.2 (1895) [1:34]  
              Muttertänderlei, op.43 no.2 (1899) [2:36]  
              Das Bächlein, op.88 no.1 [1:20]  
              Amor, op.68 no.5 (1918) [3:34]  
              Kleine Lieder, op.69 nos.1-3 (1918) [7:32]  
              Drei Lieder der Ophelia, op.67 nos.1-3 (1918) [7:30]  
                
              Gillian Keith (soprano)  
              Simon Lepper (piano)  
              rec. Music Room, Champs Hill, Sussex, England, 29-30 April, 1 May 
              2009. DDD  
                
              CHAMPS HILL RECORDS CHRCD 018 [60:06]   
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                  According to the accompanying booklet notes, Richard Strauss 
                  once said: "I thank my Almighty Creator for the gift and inspiration 
                  of the female voice." Music lovers since have had Strauss himself 
                  to thank as creator of countless gifts of inspiration written 
                  for the female voice: not only incredible operatic roles like 
                  Salome and Elektra, but lieder like Cäcilie, Morgen! 
                  and the so-called Four Last Songs. This recital by Canadian 
                  soprano Gillian Keith features Strauss's real last song, 
                  Malven, and an entertaining selection of others, well 
                  known and relatively neglected. The CD title 'Bei Strauss' is 
                  presumably a playful reference to Gershwin's song 'By Strauss': 
                  music-theatre being what it is, Gershwin was decidedly not 
                  alluding to Richard.  
                     
                  Strauss's numerous songs date predominantly from his earlier 
                  years; after the Great War he focused primarily on opera and 
                  orchestra. Thus the music here belongs to the great Germanic 
                  Lieder tradition established by Schubert, Schumann and 
                  Brahms and sits stylistically between those and Wolf and Mahler: 
                  late-Romantically tuneful and passionate, with later ones expressively 
                  intensified by chromaticism and harmonic ambiguity.  
                     
                  A whole hour performing Strauss is no easy task for any singer, 
                  but Keith emerges with considerable credit. From the beginning 
                  the quality of her clear, light, lyrical voice is apparent, 
                  and she controls it marvellously, literally breathing life into 
                  phrases with thoughtful air control. Her voice is probably best 
                  suited to the Baroque repertoire of which most of her discography 
                  consists. She does not sound quite demented enough in the Ophelia 
                  settings - the only really dark corners of this recital - but 
                  generally she brings plenty of apt emotion to Strauss's settings, 
                  tastefully understated and always resolutely supported by Simon 
                  Lepper's near-immaculate piano.  
                     
                  Keith does have a slight accent at times, but avoids most of 
                  the linguistic potholes that toss and jolt the great majority 
                  of non-native singers: vowel length, distinguishing between 
                  final -'er' -'e', lip-rounding, vowel frontness and so on. Her 
                  diction is usually excellent, with just an occasional vocal 
                  mis-colourisation or indistinct initial or medial consonant. 
                  To all intents and purposes, however, she is thoroughly convincing 
                  and communicates the emotional content of the poet's text - 
                  as mincing as it sometimes is - and Strauss's ravishing music 
                  to great effect.  
                     
                  CDs devoted entirely to Strauss's songs are relatively infrequent 
                  - sopranos in particular have tended to prefer the operatic 
                  arias, presumably to make a bigger artistic and commercial impact, 
                  or, like Keith's fellow Canadian Lynne Fortin last year, to 
                  include some Strauss in a pick 'n' mix recital (see review). 
                  Keith's German is certainly better than acclaimed Strauss interpreter 
                  Jessye Norman's (Philips 000450502), and her accounts more nuanced. 
                  Norman's voice, in turn, is undoubtedly better suited to the 
                  power and stamina required of Strauss's operatic and orchestral 
                  songs. On the other hand, Keith does not have the native-language 
                  advantage or indeed quite the emotional range of Diana Damrau, 
                  yet Damrau's recital last year on Virgin Classics (6286640) 
                  has orchestral accompaniment and a sufficiently divergent programme 
                  to make both CDs significant additions to the Strauss lieder 
                  discography. Keith's voice is quite similar to American Kiera 
                  Duffy, soprano on the most recent volume 5 of Hyperion's excellent 
                  multi-singer 'Strauss: The Complete Songs' series (CDA 67746). 
                  The Hyperion helpfully features Mädchenblumen for 
                  direct comparison, though Duffy's enunciation is unfailingly 
                  clear.  
                     
                  At any rate, on a song-by-song basis Keith has substantial competition. 
                  Yet in at least one or two instances she has exactly what it 
                  takes, with Lepper's help, to make her interpretation as good 
                  as it gets. The perennial favourite Ständchen, for 
                  example, or 'Freundliches [sic] Vision' and 'Winterweihe' 
                  from op.48. Nowhere, though, is she anything like disappointing.  
                   
                   
                  The recording is rather on the quiet side, but sound and general 
                  technical quality is very good. The booklet contains excellent 
                  notes on the individual songs by the ever-dependable Malcolm 
                  MacDonald, biographies and full song texts in German and English. 
                  The track-list is slightly misleading, giving the impression 
                  that Strauss's op.69 consists only of the three songs Keith 
                  sings, rather than five, and that his op.67 is entitled Three 
                  Songs of Ophelia, whereas they comprise only the first half 
                  of a six-song cycle.    
                   
                  Byzantion  
                  Collected reviews and contact at reviews.gramma.co.uk 
                   
                     
                
                           
                  
                 
                 
             
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