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             Richard STRAUSS (1864 – 1949) 
              Orchestral Songs   
              1. Traum durch die Dämmerung (Dreaming in the twilight), Op. 
              29, No. 1 [2:27]  
              2. Wiegenlied (Lullaby/Cradle Song), Op. 41, No. 1 [3:51]  
              3. Meinem Kinde (To My Child), Op. 37, No. 3 [2:50]  
              4. Gesang der Apollopriesterin (Song of the priestess of Apollo), 
              Op. 33, No. 3 [5:42]  
              5. Allerseelen (All Soul’s Day), Op. 10, No. 8 [3:12]  
              6. Ruhe, meine Seele (Be still, my soul!), Op. 27, No. 1 [3:49] 
               
              7. Cäcilie (Cecilia), Op. 27, No. 2 [2:20]  
              8. Mein Auge (My eye), Op. 37, No. 4 [2:35]  
              9. Waldseligkeit (Woodland Bliss), Op. 49, No. 1 [3:19]  
              10. Morgen! (Tomorrow!), Op. 27, No. 4 [3:42]  
              11. Befreit (Released), Op. 39, No. 4 [5:57]  
              Vier letzte Lieder (Four Last Songs), Op. posth (1948)  
              12. Frühling (Spring) [3:48] 
              13. September [5:25] 
              14. Beim Schlafengehen (Going to Sleep) [5:37]  
              15. Im Abendrot (At Sunset) [8:00]  
                
              Michaela Kaune (soprano)  
              NDR Radio Philharmonic Orchestra Hanover/Eiji Oue  
              rec. live, 6-7 May 2004, Large Studio of the NDR National Broadcasting 
              Station, Hanover, Germany (tracks 1-11). 15-17 November 2004, St. 
              Athanasius Kirche, Hanover, Germany (tracks 12-15)  
                
              BERLIN CLASSICS 0017812BC [62:32] 
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                Occasionally you come across a recording that is new to you 
                  although it has been in the catalogue for several years. You 
                  marvel at its quality wondering why you haven’t heard it before. 
                  Sung by soprano Michaela Kaune this outstanding CD is 
                  one of those discs.  
                   
                  Recently I watched a 2006 archive broadcast from the Berlin 
                  Philharmonic’s Digital Concert Hall. It was Sir Mark 
                  Elder’s delightful semi-staged performance of Humperdinck’s 
                  opera Hansel and Gretel - abridged children version aimed 
                  at children - from the Philharmonie. The performance is currently 
                  available to watch free of charge. Highlights can be seen in 
                  a trailer on their Digital Concert Hall. Link: http://www.digitalconcerthall.com/en/concert/64 
                  I was struck by the outstanding acting and stunning soprano 
                  voice of Michaela Kaune in the role of Gretel. Consequently 
                  I began looking for Kaune recordings and this Berlin Classics 
                  disc is the result.  
                   
                  Although Hamburg-born Kaune performs internationally she has 
                  tended to concentrate on operatic roles in her native Germany. 
                  She joined the Deutsche Oper in Berlin as far back as the 1997/8 
                  season and has played numerous roles there including Micaëla 
                  in Carmen, Pamina in Die Zauberflöte, Marguerite 
                  in Faust, Donna Elvira in Don Giovanni, the Countess 
                  in Le nozze di Figaro, Anna in Marschner’s Hans Heiling, 
                  Euridice in Orfeo ed Euridice and the title role in Arabella. 
                  Not surprisingly, she has appeared in many of Europe’s major 
                  opera houses. Notably in 2008 she made her debut at the Bayreuth 
                  Festspiele singing Eva in Katharina Wagner’s production of Die 
                  Meistersinger von Nürnberg. More recently in the Deutsche 
                  Oper Berlin’s 2010/11 season she was the Countess in Le Nozze 
                  di Figaro, Madame Lidoine in Dialogues des Carmélites 
                  and Ariadne in Ariadne auf Naxos. This season she 
                  has taken the part of the Marschallin in Der Rosenkavalier 
                  at the Deutsche Oper Berlin where she is also to assume 
                  the title role in Janáček’s Jenůfa in January 
                  2012.  
                   
                  On this excellent Berlin Classics disc the feature work is 
                  the Four Last Songs. These were composed in 1948, a year 
                  before the composer’s death. They were posthumously published. 
                  Not surprisingly these masterworks have been recorded on numerous 
                  occasions and the competition in the catalogues is particularly 
                  fierce. Since its release in 2006 Kaune’s recording has rather 
                  fallen under the radar with higher profile sopranos on major 
                  labels such as Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, Jessye Norman and Renée 
                  Fleming taking centre-stage.  
                   
                  Strauss’s Four Last Songs are often classed as being 
                  amongst the most haunting and moving music that has ever been 
                  composed. To me this is an autumnal work, suffused with nostalgia, 
                  the colours of sunset and the experience of a long, productive 
                  and controversial life. The settings of Hermann Hesse (the first 
                  three songs) and Joseph von Eichendorff (the fourth song) contemplate 
                  Spring (Frühling), September, Going 
                  to Sleep (Beim Schlafengehen) and At Sunset (Im 
                  Abendrot). It was in 1950 at London’s Royal Albert Hall 
                  when the great Wagnerian soprano Kirsten Flagstad gave the world 
                  première accompanied by the Philharmonia under Wilhelm Furtwängler. 
                   
                   
                  Michaela Kaune’s bright and creamy-toned voice has considerable 
                  amplitude with impeccable diction and the natural ability to 
                  capture the spirit of the texts. Undoubtedly these Strauss songs 
                  have been performed more sumptuously and by voices with 
                  more honey and silk but they have surely never been expressed 
                  in a more genuinely heart-felt way or with more radiance. The 
                  German soprano seems comfortable right across her range. She 
                  has the ability to glide up to the highest notes with alarming 
                  ease and her light vibrato is never obtrusive. With all this 
                  assurance and drama communicated it is not difficult to accept 
                  that Kaune is a natural actress.  
                   
                  Lightly scored, the rocking accompaniment to Wiegenlied (Lullaby/Cradle 
                  Song) is provided by a mere seven strings. The assured Kaune 
                  is quite enchanting. This is the finest performance of Wiegenlied 
                  that I have heard. Credit is due to the NDR Radio Philharmonic 
                  Orchestra under Eiji Oue for their rich and full accompaniment 
                  in Gesang der Apollopriesterin (Song of the priestess 
                  of Apollo) here sung so dramatically. The perfume of rose petals 
                  is evoked by the captivating interpretation of Allerseelen 
                  (All Soul’s Day) and in the passionate setting Cacilie 
                  (Cecilia) the sumptuous, sweet-toothed accompaniment is remarkable. 
                  Kaune’s atmospheric rendition of the justly celebrated Morgen! 
                  (Tomorrow!) is as tender and soft as feather-down with a plaintive 
                  violin solo that suggests weeping tears.  
                   
                  Throughout Vier letzte Lieder Kaune displays ravishing 
                  vocal quality with a wide range of tone colour. It seems appropriate 
                  that Oue refrains from rushing proceedings along and allows 
                  the music to breathe. I especially enjoyed the radiantly performed 
                  Frühling (Spring) with the voice soaring with consummate 
                  ease. The horn solo in September is quite magical. Opened 
                  by low dark strings in Beim Schlafengehen (Going to Sleep) 
                  the powerful climax as the singer depicts the re-awakening subject 
                  is remarkable in force. It makes the hairs stand up on the back 
                  of the neck. The violin solo at 1:44 has never sounded as meltingly 
                  beautiful. In the shimmering Im Abendrot (At Sunset) 
                  Kaune confidently conveys Strauss’s intense and wearying emotions 
                  implying reconciliation in the face of approaching death. The 
                  eleven orchestral songs were impressively recorded at a live 
                  concert at the large studio of the NDR National Broadcasting 
                  Station, Hanover. No applause has been left in and there is 
                  little unwanted noise to detract from the enjoyment. Recorded 
                  at St. Athanasius Church, Hanover the Four Last Songs are 
                  marginally less vivid.  
                   
                  Of the alternative versions in the catalogue I remain an admirer 
                  of the enthralling and award-winning 1982 Leipzig account of 
                  the Four Last Songs performed by Jessye Norman. Kurt 
                  Masur conducts the Leipzig Gewandhaus. Norman’s warmly passionate 
                  interpretation is outstanding. Taken by Kurt Masur at measured 
                  pace Norman displays a driven desire for high drama. My version 
                  is on Philips 411 052-2 (c/w Strauss 6 Orchestral Songs). 
                  Renée Fleming with the Munich Philharmonic under Christian Thielemann 
                  on Decca 478 0647 is sumptuous and highly moving. Depending 
                  on my mood I can find Fleming’s approach a touch over-sentimental, 
                  even cloying. It is coupled with Strauss’s 4 Orchestral Songs, 
                  3 Songs from Ariadne auf Naxos and 1 song from 
                  Die ägyptische Helena. Much lamented since her untimely 
                  death Lucia Popp made a most heart-rending London recording 
                  in 1982 with Klaus Tennstedt conducting the London Philharmonic 
                  Orchestra. My account is found on the compilation double set 
                  ‘The Very Best of Lucia Popp’ EMI Classics 5 85102 2. 
                   
                   
                  I fully agree with the substantial crowd of admirers of the 
                  award-winning version from the assured Soile Isokoski. She possesses 
                  a firm and silvery timbre. Isokoski does however lose a touch 
                  of intensity and warmth at the expense of her cool precision. 
                  Isokoski’s 2001 recording was made in Berlin with Marek Janowski 
                  and the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra on Ondine ODE 982-2 
                  (c/w Strauss 11 Orchestral Songs). A lesser known but 
                  outstanding account comes from Anja Harteros and the Bavarian 
                  Radio Symphony Orchestra under Mariss Jansons on BR Klassik 
                  900707 (c/w Strauss Rosenkavalier Suite, Till Eulenspiegels). 
                  Recorded live in 2009 at the Munich Philharmonie Harteros’s 
                  warm and expressive tone conveys impressive sincerity and gravitas. 
                   
                   
                  I also rate highly the captivating version from Cheryl Studer. 
                  Her creamy texture and warmly expressive tones are complemented 
                  by the Dresden Staatskapelle under Giuseppe Sinopoli. Studer 
                  made the recording in Dresden in 1993 on Deutsche Grammophon 
                  439 865-2. The valuable coupling includes Studer’s marvellous 
                  performance of Wagner’s 5 Wesendonk Lieder and the Vorspiel 
                  and Liebestod from Tristan und Isolde. Two other 
                  splendid versions worthy of consideration are from: Gundula 
                  Janowitz who sings beautifully taking great care with the meaning 
                  of the text. Janowitz is accompanied by the Berlin Philharmonic 
                  under Karajan recorded in 1973 in Berlin; it’s on Deutsche Grammophon 
                  ‘The Originals’ 447 422-2 (c/w Tod und Verklärung and 
                  Metamorphosen). There is also the powerful and dramatically 
                  sung 2007 release from Nina Stemme who is one of the younger 
                  sopranos on the scene today. I did find her heavy vibrato rather 
                  wearing. Stemme is accompanied by the Orchestra of the Royal 
                  Opera House, Covent Garden under Antonio Pappano. It’s on EMI 
                  Classics 378 7972 (c/w Strauss final scenes from Capriccio 
                  and Salome).  
                   
                  Of the older accounts a confident recommendation must go to 
                  Elisabeth Schwarzkopf’s recording with the Berlin Radio Symphony 
                  Orchestra under George Szell. For this stunning version Schwarzkopf, 
                  then in her fifties, demonstrates a tremendous range of interpretative 
                  insights with a voice of heavenly beauty. This truly classic 
                  recording from Berlin in 1965 is on an excellent digitally re-mastered 
                  disc of Great Recordings of the Century EMI Classics 
                  5 66908 2 (c/w Strauss 12 Orchestral Songs).  
                   
                  For Berlin Classics Michaela Kaune proves a thoughtful and radiantly 
                  beautiful interpreter. Fingers crossed for a future recording 
                  by of Wagner’s Wesendonck Lieder.  
                     
                  Michael Cookson 
                   
                  Masterwork Index: Four 
                  Last Songs             
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                 
                   
                 
                 
             
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