Elin Skorup is a young Swedish soprano who studied at the Royal
College of Music in Stockholm where she met Swiss-born pianist
Fabienne Romer, who was also a student there. They soon realized
that they both had a deep interest in art songs and formed the
Skorup-Romer Duo, specialising in the Swedish, German and French
song repertoire. On this disc they have chosen settings of poems
from four centuries.
Richard Strauss’s Morgen and Wiegenlied are
two of the best known works from the whole song repertoire and
inevitably invite comparisons with singers from the past and
present. Elin Skorup has a beautiful voice and sings with feeling
and commitment. She also has a tendency, not uncommon these
days, to start a phrase or a single tone almost vibrato-less
and then squeeze it for more volume, whereby the voice opens
up and becomes more vibrant. The vibrato is controlled but this
squeezing gives the impression of breaking the legato line and
of longer phrases being chopped up in smaller portions. One
gets used to it but I wish she could even out the pressure and
produce a more seamless legato. The same thing happens in Das
Rosenband. The second of the Strauss songs, Amor,
is something of a rarity. The poem is by Clemens von Brentano
(1778 – 1842) and is No. 5 of the six Brentano-Lieder,
Op. 68 from 1918. The songs were composed with Elisabeth Schumann
in mind, but it is uncertain that she ever sang all of them,
definitely not No. 6 Lied der Frauen wenn die Männer im
Kriege sind which is more like an operatic scena
and needs a Salome or Elektra voice. Also Amor, with
its Zerbinetta-like coloratura was hardly Schumann’s cup of
tea. Skorup’s technical accomplishment is indisputable and she
has both brilliance and power for this testing piece.
Ingvar Lidholm is the doyen of Swedish composers and has been
in the avant-garde forefront since the 1940s. Several of his
choral and orchestral works are firmly established as modern
classics. When he wrote these three songs he was in his early
twenties and his tonal language was then rather traditional,
inspired by, say, Hugo Wolf and other late-romantic composers.
Hjalmar Gullberg (1898 – 1961) has inspired various settings,
most notably by Lars-Erik Larsson in God in Disguise,
which is almost contemporaneous with the Lidholm songs. För
vilsna fötter sjunger gräset (The grass sings to erring
feet) was also memorably set for mixed choir by Lille Bror Söderlundh,
whose centenary is celebrated this year (2012) Lidholm’s setting
is melodically not unlike Söderlundh’s and should be heard more
frequently. Vid Medelhavet (By the Mediterranean) describes
a loving couple in a beautiful landscape but the love is ebbing
away and the melody becomes more drained of life. Lope de Vega
(1562 – 1635) is well known as a dramatist but he was a prolific
author and his The Madonna’s Lullaby is heard in the
Swedish of Carl August Hagberg, famous for his Shakespeare translations.
There are influences from the Middle Ages in Lidholm’s music
and it is sung simply and with rather a thin tone.
Gunnar de Frumerie became the foremost musical interpreter of
Pär Lagerkvist’s poetry, the equivalent of what Peterson-Berger
was for another Nobel Prize winner, Karlfeldt. They are agreeable
settings in a mainly late-romantic idiom. The most directly
appealing is Det kom ett brev (A Letter Came).
Maurice Karkoff is one of the most individual and prolific of
Swedish composers after World War Two. Ekorren (The
Squirrel) is a lively and unpredictable little rascal, the piano
accompaniment tells us, while I mörkret hos dig (Beside
you in the darkness) is a warm and inward love song. Thalatta!
is Greek for “The sea”; poem describes the morning light on
a seashore. This is a twelve-tone composition, as is the following
Handens insida (The palm of the hand). Det är en
solig dag (It is a sunny day) is joyous and vivacious with
a more contemplative middle section.
Internationally the best known of the four Swedish composers
here is Gösta Nystroem. Though born in an inland region the
sea became all-important to him. All four poems here describe
the sea in different situations, and the melody of Det enda
(The one and only) was also used in Nystroem’s masterwork Sinfonia
del mare (1947 – 1948). Anyone fascinated by these four
songs - and I imagine many will be if they allow themselves
the opportunity - are advised to read John France’s review
of Sinfonia del mare and other works and also track
down references to other Nystroem discs. In På reveln
(On the sandspit) we hear butterflies fluttering; Otrolig
dag (Incredible day) has a simple beautiful melody and
Havet sjunger (The sea sings) paints a powerful and
colourful picture of the sea and asks the question: Does the
sea matter more than love? Nystroem’s songs are well worth seeking
out and there is a full CD, also on the Daphne label, with Charlotte
Hellekant (see
Gary Higginson’s review).
The four concluding Schubert songs again pit Elin Skorup against
all the great singers of the past. For all her commitment it
is impossible not to feel that there is more to these songs
than she can produce today. It is honest singing but it is one-dimensional
and monochrome. I am convinced that in a few years’ time she
will be able to give these songs their due. Here she presents
a blueprint that is promising. She has a splendid pianist by
her side and the Swedish songs are well worth investigating.
Göran Forsling
Complete contents list
Richard STRAUSS (1864
– 1949)
1. Morgen [3:47]
2. Amor [3:06]
3. Das Rosenband [3:06]
4. Wiegenlied [4:04]
Ingvar LIDHOLM (b. 1921)
5. För vilsna fötter sjunger gräset [1:49]
6. Vid Medelhavet [1:20]
7. Madonnans vaggvisa [2:50]
Gunnar de FRUMERIE (1908
– 1987)
8. Källan [1:57]
9. Från mitt väsens yta [1:01]
10. Intet är förgäves [1:26]
11. Det kom ett brev [2:52]
Maurice KARKOFF (b. 1927)
12. Ekorren [1:38]
13. I mörkret hos dig [3:21]
14. Thalatta! [1:16]
15. Handens insida [2:29]
16. Det är en solig dag [1:48]
Gösta NYSTROEM (1890
– 1966)
17. Det enda [3:42]
18. På reveln [2:40]
19. Otrolig dag [1:15]
20. Havet sjunger [2:21]
Franz SCHUBERT (1797
– 1828)
21. Ständchen [3:51]
22. Heimliches Lieben [4:07]
23. Nähe des Geliebten [3:17]
24. An den Mond [4:02]