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			Anton URSPRUCH (1850-1907)
     Die heilige Cäcilia (op posth) Gegrüßet,
Heldenpaar (4. Act) (c. 1906) [3:57]
     Nehmt Leib und Leben mir! (5. Act) [8:37]
     Four Songs from the poems of Mirza-Schaffy Op.4
     Nr. 1: Ich fühle deinen Odem [1:32]
     Nr. 2: Seh' ich deine zarten kleinen Füßchen [2:44]
     Nr. 3: Gott hieß die Sonne scheinen [1:56]
     Nr. 4: Neig', schöne Knospe, dich zu mir [1:37]
     Six Songs Op.3
     Nr. 1: Das Meer hat seine Perlen [1:48]
     Nr. 2: Deine weißen Lilienfinger [1:35]
     Nr. 3: Die Rose, die Lilie, die Taube, die Sonne [0:59]
     Nr. 4: Im tiefsten Innern [1:32]
     Nr. 5: Es streckt der Wald die Zweige [1:44]
     Nr. 6: Weil' auf mir, du dunkles Auge [1:36]
     12. Wenn ich in deine Auge seh' op. 6 Nr. 2 [1:36]
     13. Hör' ich das Liedchen klingen op. 6 Nr. 3 [1:55]
     14. Ja, du bist elend op. 6 Nr. 3 [2:52]
     Ludwig THUILLE (1861-1907)
     Three Songs Op.12 (1892)
     Nr. 1: Waldeinsamkeit [5:48]
     Nr. 2: Die Nacht [3:19]
     Nr. 3: Die stille Stadt [3:23]
     19. Devotionale op. 27 Nr. 1 (1901) [3:06]
     Erich J.WOLFF (1874-1913)
     Erhebung op. 8 Nr. 2 [2:01]
     Bienenlied op. 12: Nr. 6 [2:32]
     Mignon op. 15 Nr. 1 [3:59]
     Tag meines Lebens op. 13 Nr. 2 [3:07]
     Andacht op. 11 Nr. 1 [3:29]
     Mandolinen op. 22 Nr. 5 [1:42]
     Gebet op. 14 Nr. 1 [2:26]
     Die Horen op. 12 Nr. 2 [1:22]
     Gottes Segen op. 14 Nr. 4 [1:56]
 
             
            Rebecca Broberg (soprano)
     Ulrich Urban (piano)
 
			rec. June and September 2010, Schüttbau, Rügheim
     Texts in German but no translations
 
                
              THOROFON CTH2585   [74:25]  
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                  Three Austro-German contemporaries share disc space in a recital 
                  subtitled by Thorofon, ‘Magic Dark and Bright Azure’. 
                  This resplendent poetic and painterly phrase summons up fin 
                  de siècle succulence that is not wholly met by the music, 
                  which it is best to set in its own contexts.  
                     
                  Anton Unsprach was born in Frankfurt am Main in 1850, and is 
                  the most senior of the three composers. He studied successively 
                  under Lachner, Raff and Liszt, of whom he was a favourite student. 
                  Unsprach considered himself to be a ‘progressive modernist’ 
                  and something of a Wagnerian. Certainly the evidence of a certain 
                  thrall is evident in the two examples, in voice and piano reduction, 
                  taken from his incomplete operaDie heilige Cäcilia. 
                  This was his third opera and an opus posthumous, sadly, given 
                  his early death. The examples are from the fourth and fifth 
                  acts and test Rebecca Broberg’s soprano punishingly. She 
                  has to attack from beneath the note and squalls to produce the 
                  exultant effect demanded of her. This is a difficult sing, and 
                  needs a much more powerful voice than hers fully to do it justice. 
                  She is much more at home in the rest of the programme, where 
                  the lines fit her voice much more reasonably. The Op.4 settings 
                  are quite simple, with the voice sitting on top of a very closely 
                  shadowing piano line. Unsprach seems reluctant to let pass any 
                  opportunity for the piano to echo the vocal line, a limiting 
                  lack of independence and imagination. The Op.3 set is better. 
                  There’s a rare geniality in Die Rose, though Broberg 
                  falters technically here, and Weil' auf mir, du dunkles Auge 
                  has a most pleasing melody line. The idiom here is less progressive 
                  than conservative, but it would be important to know when the 
                  songs were written to gauge just how conservative, should conservatism 
                  be a concern.  
                     
                  Ludwig Thuille was born in Bozen in 1861 and was a childhood 
                  friend of Richard Strauss. His 1892 Three Songs Op.12 
                  demonstrate far greater independence than those of Urspruch. 
                  The first is a relatively long, and convincing nature setting, 
                  limpid in places, but all three are extremely well characterised 
                  and there are some well judged repeated stabbing notes in Die 
                  stille Stadt that fully convey the necessary atmosphere. 
                  The oppressive atmosphere attests to Thuille’s fine responses 
                  to texts.  
                     
                  The last composer is Erich J. Wolff, born in 1874 in Vienna. 
                  A well-known accompanist, he died on tour in America after an 
                  operation went wrong. He was there to accompany Elena Gerhardt. 
                  Enough evidence exists here to show he was a far more engaging 
                  composer than the more touted Urspruch. He’s wittier, 
                  sharper and less mired in Wagneriana for three things. His piano 
                  writing is droll and uplifting and his vocal lines attractive 
                  melodically. There’s a witty mandolin setting, delightful 
                  bee trills and romantic expression in Gottes Segen. One 
                  feels pianist Ulrich Urban really enjoying himself in these 
                  settings.  
                     
                  All three composers’ lives were sadly short ones. None 
                  made it to sixty. We need more from Urspruch to see how competent 
                  he really was. I know Thuille best for his chamber music but 
                  he wrote a substantial amount for the stage and voice and what 
                  relatively little we have in this recital is good. But it’s 
                  Wolff who most intrigues me. He wrote a Violin Concerto for 
                  the terrific Canadian violinist Kathleen Parlow. Is it still 
                  around? Has it been edited? If so, let’s hear it!  
                     
                  Jonathan Woolf  
                 
                  
                  
                 
                 
                 
             
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