Folk Songs
    see end of review for track listing
    Nora Gubisch (mezzo), Alain Antinoglu (piano)
    rec. November 2013, Salle Colonne, Paris, France.
    Sung texts and French and English translations enclosed
    
NAÏVE V5365 [65:00]
    
    
 A cosmopolitan duo, she with Spanish and German ancestry, 
      he of Armenian descent, seems an ideal combination for this programme. Spanish 
      and German songs surround Berio’s Folk Songs covering almost 
      the rest of the world, including one Armenian song.
       
      De Falla’s cycle has reached wide popularity, sung not only by Spanish 
      singers. Nora Gubisch's slightly vibrant, dark-tinted Carmen voice 
      seems cut out for them, whether it be the joyous and intense Seguidille, 
      a sad but not tearful Asturiana, the Jota, sung with a 
      twinkle in the eye, a hushed and intimate Nana with enviable legato 
      or the slightly ironic Canción.
       
      The music of Fernando Obradors, a bit younger than de Falla, is hardly standard 
      repertoire – but should be. Everyone hearing El vito for 
      the first time will long to hear it again.
       
      With Granados we are treading more familiar paths again. El tra la la 
      y el punteado is most infectious and like El vito a true show-stopper.
       
      That it is fifty years since Luciano Berio’s Folk songs were 
      first heard – with Cathy Berberian for whom they were written – 
      is almost incredible. They have become established modern classics and though 
      Berberian’s readings are legendary there is room for others as well. 
      In Stockholm, more than twenty years ago I heard Jard van Nes singing them 
      and she later recorded them for Decca. Several others have also tackled 
      them. Nora Gubisch certainly has the measure of the songs and the concluding 
      Azerbaijan love song with a text that is impossible to translate, 
      is a tour de force.
       
      Back to Granados and La maja dolorosa, where she is up against 
      a number of masterly singers from the past. I have deliberately not 
      made any comparative listening but my reaction when hearing Nora Gubisch’s 
      reading was that it was wonderful in its own right. If I like what I hear 
      then I can honestly recommend the recording. If others think that someone 
      else sings that particular phrase better – then let them think so. 
      A reading can sometimes be very different but not necessarily better or 
      worse than another. Just listen, for instance, to her beautifully soft singing 
      in El mirar de la maja.
       
      Sometimes there exist touchstone recordings that have set standards that 
      are difficult to ignore. One such is Kathleen Ferrier’s 65-year-old 
      recording of Brahms’ Op. 91 songs for contralto with viola and piano. 
      It is unique for the moving quality of her voice and for the way the viola 
      and the voice blend. Nora Gubisch has the masterly Gérard Caussé 
      as her partner and they achieve a similar effect, which is fully valid. 
      Moreover her reading of the encore, Wiegenlied, is so lovingly 
      sung that no listener can remain untouched.
       
      Alain Antinoglu’s accompaniments are excellent and the ensemble in 
      the Berio songs is wonderful.
       
      If the programme appeals to you there is no reason not to acquire this disc.
       
      Göran Forsling
       
      Track listing
      Manuel de FALLA (1876 – 1946)
      Siete canciones populares españolas
      1. El paño moruno [1:11]
      2. Seguidilla murciana [1:18]
      3. Asturiana [2:11]
      4. Jota [3:09]
      5. Nana [1:46]
      6. Canción [1:02]
      7. Polo [1:35]
      Fernando J. OBRADORS (1897 – 1945]
      Canciones clásicas españolas
      8. Aquel sombrero de monte [3:13]
      9. El vito [1:43]
      Enrique GRANADOS (1867 – 1916)
      10. El tra la la y el punteado [1:08]
      Luciano BERIO (1925 – 2003)
      Folk songs, for mezzo-soprano and seven instruments
      11. Black is the colour (USA) [3:18]
      12. I wonder as I wander (USA) [2:05]
      13. Loosin yelav (Armenia) [2:19]
      14. Rossignolet du bois (France) [1:25]
      15. A la flemminisca (Sicily) [1:19]
      16. La donna ideale (Italy) [1:26]
      17. Ballo (Italy) [1:34]
      18. Mottetu de tristura (Sardinia) [1:48]
      19. Malurous qu’o uno fenno (Auvergne) [0:50]
      20. Lo fiolaire (Auvergne) [2:41]
      21. Azerbaijan love song (Azerbaijan) [2:27]
      (with Gérard Caussé (viola), Raphaël Perraud (cello), 
      Bastien Pelat (flute), Raphaël Sévère (clarinet), Iris 
      Torossian (harp), Adrien Perruchon and Camille Baslé (percussion)
      Enrique GRANADOS
      La maja dolorosa
      22. ¡Oh muerte cruel! [2:40]
      23. ¡Ay majo de mi vida! [2:09]
      24. De aquel majo amante [2:54]
      25. El mirar de la maja [2:37]
      Johannes BRAHMS (1833 – 1897)
      Zwei Gesänge für eine Altstimme mit bratsche und pianoforte, Op. 
      91
      26. Gestillte Sehnsucht [6:07]
      27. Geistliches Wiegenlied [5:25]
      (Gérard Caussé (viola))
      28. Wiegenlied, Op. 49 No. 4 [1:43]