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            Andrea Kalivodová: The Paths of Love 
              Bohuslav MARTINU 
              (1890-1959) 
              Songs on One Page, H294 [7:05] 
              Song on Two Pages, H302 No 1 [1:15] 
              Leos JANÁCEK 
              (1854-1928) 
              Moravian Folk Poetry in Song, seven excerpts [9:31] 
              Jan KUNC (1883-1976) 
              Kacenka Stood on the Danube’s Shore, Op 14 [10:01] 
              Antonín DVORÁK 
              (1841-1904) 
              Gypsy Melodies, Op 55 (sung in Slovak) [13:06] 
              Petr EBEN (1929-2007) 
              The Most Secret Songs, for low voice and piano [13:46] 
              Otakar OSTRCIL 
              (1879-1935) 
              Orphan Child, Op 8 [11:01] 
                
              Andrea Kalivodová (mezzo); Ladislava Vondrácková (piano) 
              rec. live, 3 June 2011, Gustav Mahler Hotel, Jihlava, Czech Republic 
                
              ARCODIVA UP 0135-2 131 [65:43] 
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                  Martinu, Janácek, Dvorák and the less familiar names of Jan 
                  Kunc, Otakar Ostrcil, and Petr Eben: this is a treasury of Czech, 
                  Slovak, and Moravian songs. The title’s no joke, either: these 
                  may not all be love songs - the lyrics to Ostrcil’s Orphan 
                  Child are particularly depressing - but they are 
                  all intimate songs: confidences, so to speak. 
                    
                  Martinu’s extremely short selections – songs literally written 
                  to appear on one page or two – are all gems, with even the most 
                  abrupt-seeming ending feeling satisfactory: ‘ah, of course’. 
                  The Song on Two Pages selected from a larger collection 
                  for this album was chosen with care: the disc was recorded live 
                  at a concert in the Moravian town of Jihlava, and the song’s 
                  lyrics praise “the country around Jihlava” because “Every Moravian 
                  girl carries herself like a candlestick, likes boys, and has 
                  an open heart.” These lead into similarly short and sweet songs 
                  by Janácek, who’s more prone to racy piano accompaniments and 
                  whose distinctive voice wafts through on more than one occasion. 
                    
                  As much as these delight and romance, they can hardly prepare 
                  you for Jan Kunc’s powerful ballad Kacenka Stood on the 
                  Danube’s Shore, which lavishes ten dramatic minutes on 
                  the unlikely subject of a woman who throws her newborn child 
                  into the Danube and is hanged for the crime, wishing for one 
                  last look at the man who impregnated her. The climax is potent 
                  and the ending suitably grim; here one notices, not for the 
                  first time, mezzo Andrea Kalivodová’s gift for acting the emotions 
                  in the music. 
                    
                  We then get Dvorák’s beloved set of Gypsy Songs, Op 55, 
                  including the legendary ‘Songs my Grandmother Taught Me’. This 
                  is followed by a set of Most Secret Songs by Petr Eben, 
                  the most recent work here since it dates from 1952. Written 
                  for the composer’s fiancée, they’re all love songs with touching 
                  lyrics - one by Eben himself, but most from Arabic poetry - 
                  and they are yet another outstanding cycle. I’m especially fond 
                  of No 4, ‘My Heart in the Morning Breeze’, with its haunting, 
                  uncertain accompaniment, and No 6, ‘Parting’, which is suitably 
                  spartan in feel. Last up is the sad ballad of the Orphan 
                  Child mentioned earlier, by Otakar Ostrcil. It’s marked 
                  from the piano introduction by a sense of sorrow, suffused with 
                  compassion for the subject and a Russian-like union of emotion 
                  and melody. There is concluding applause. 
                    
                  A word about mezzo Andrea Kalivodová. Her voice might charitably 
                  be described as an acquired taste: there’s a distinctive vibrato 
                  which I occasionally found irritating, and she occasionally 
                  screeches when singing loudly at high pitches. There are a couple 
                  moments that made me flinch. But if you acquire the taste for 
                  her tone, there are rewards, like the excellent sense of each 
                  song’s emotional heart and her ability to convey those feelings 
                  in tone, or the very conversational way in which she dispatches 
                  some of the miniatures. Ladislava Vondrácková makes the most 
                  out of the parts the composers give her - most of which are 
                  crafted with unusual skill. The recital was recorded live, but 
                  there are no technical slips, and no audience noise at all. 
                  The only oddity in the acoustic is that Kalivodová was evidently 
                  walking about the stage from left to right. The venue was, I’d 
                  guess from its sound, quite small. 
                    
                  Magdalena Kožená recorded quite a lot of this music for two 
                  DG albums recently (review, 
                  review). 
                  Her voice sets much higher standards for warmth, fullness, and 
                  pure beauty of tone; there’s also competition in the Petr Eben 
                  cycle from an old Supraphon album with the composer himself 
                  at the piano. This repertoire is well off the beaten path (of 
                  love?), so if it intrigues you, I do strongly recommend finding 
                  a sample clip or two and deciding if the voice will please you. 
                  If it does, the interpretations and songs are gems. 
                    
                  I haven’t mentioned the cover. 
                    
                  Brian Reinhart 
                    
                 
                
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                       
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                
                 
             
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