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Songs by Great Conductors Hans von BÜLOW (1830–1894) Fünf Lieder op. 5: Freisinn; Der Fichtenbaum; Wunsch;
Nachts; Volkslied Drei Lieder op. 30: Du bist für mich; Immer fühl ich
deine Nähe; Wenn an des Weltmeer's Klippen Bruno WALTER (1876–1962) Drei Lieder nach Joseph v. Eichendorff: Musikantengruß;
Der junge Ehemann; Der Soldat Drei Lieder nach Heine op. 12, Nr. 4–6:Tragödie
1 „Entflieh mit mir“; Tragödie 2 „Es fiel ein Reif “;
Tragödie 3 „Auf ihrem Grab“ Clemens KRAUSS (1893–1954) Acht Gesänge nach Gedichten von Rainer Maria Rilke:
Das war der Tag der weißen Chrysanthemen; Manchmal geschieht
es in tiefer Nacht; Gehst du außen die Mauem entlang; Im
flachen Land war ein Erwarten; Der Abend ist mein Buch;
Und reden sie dir jetzt von Schande; Wie eine Riesenwunderblume
prangt voll Duft die Welt; Herbst: Die Blätter fallen
Petra Lang
(soprano)
Michael Volle (baritone)
Adrian Baianu (piano)
rec. 27-28 September 2004 (Volle); 2-4 May 2007 (Lang), Bayerischer
Rundfunk Studio 2, Munich. OEHMS CLASSICS
OC808 [58:29]
In
the estimable completion of his study of the life of Gustav
Mahler (A Life Cut Short, OUP, 2008) Henry-Louis de
La Grange devotes one of his appendices (Why did Mahler
not Write an Opera?) to a discussion of why Mahler only
(basically) wrote songs and symphonies. With respect to the
author his argument is a hollow one because in his unfortunately
short life Mahler was too busy conducting to spend more than
his summer holidays composing. This was long enough for a
symphony but too short a time to plan an opera. For most
of his life Mahler was in debt and had no wealthy patron,
like Wagner in his later years, and, like many us, was resigned
to the daily drudgery of a day job. He was not the first
and will not be the last conductor/composer. Names of the
present and the past that also combined both roles include
Leonard Bernstein, Lorin Maazel, Pierre Boulez, Peter Eötvös,
Michael Tilson Thomas and Esa-Pekka Salonen. Others such
as Benjamin Britten and Thomas Adès are possibly better known
as composers than conductors but that duality is still there.
In
this fascinating CD forgotten songs composed by three peerless
conductors of the nineteenth and twentieth century are brought
together for the first time in outstanding performances from
Petra Lang, Michael Volle and their impeccable and expressive
pianist, Adrian Baianu who was, I understand, the inspiration
behind this collection.
At
nine years-old Hans von Bülow was a student of Friedrich
Wieck: Clara Schumann’s father. However his parents later
sent him to Leipzig to study law. There he met Franz Liszt,
and on hearing some of Richard Wagner’s music - specifically,
the première of Lohengrin in 1850 - he decided to
ignore what his parents wanted him to be and make himself
a career in music instead. His first conducting job was in
Zürich, on Wagner's recommendation, in 1850. He was ambivalent,
to say the least, towards Mahler as a composer but admired
him as a conductor. The songs on this CD are his Fünf
Lieder that he composed when he was 27 and the Drei
Lieder from 1884, a year after Wagner’s death, when he
was living in Hamburg.
Bruno
Walter was himself nine when he made his first public appearance
as a pianist. Following a visit to one of Hans von Bülow's
concerts in 1889, he then went to Bayreuth in 1891. This
confirmed in his mind that he wanted to be a conductor. He
was first engaged in 1893 as a coach at the Cologne Opera
and made his conducting début there with Lortzing's Waffenschmied.
The next year he went to the Hamburg Opera where he worked
as an assistant to Gustav Mahler. His songs performed here,
with texts by Heinrich Heine, are from his mid-twenties and
those to the words of Joseph von Eichendorff date from about
a decade later.
Clemens
Krauss was born too late to know either Wagner or Mahler
neither it seems did he spend much time in Hamburg. He was
however championed by – and later a champion of – Richard
Strauss. Strauss himself had heard the music of Wagner for
the first time in 1874 and this had a deep effect on him.
In Berlin he had successful performances of his own compositions
with the Meiningen Orchestra conducted by Hans von Bülow.
In 1884 he conducted that orchestra himself for the first
time. Within a year he was appointed assistant conductor
to von Bülow, beating off competition from Mahler! Krauss’s Acht
Gesänge were first published in 1920 only a couple of
years before he was brought to Vienna State Opera by Strauss
and Franz Schalk.
This
CD had a long gestation period and Michael Volle recorded
his songs in 2004, while Petra Lang did hers in 2007, yet
the quality of performance and recording is uniformly first
class. Throughout the CD Adrian Baianu is always a wonderfully
sensitive accompanist. Listen particularly to his trotting
accompaniment to the very first song Freisinn and
to his subtle introduction to Walter’s Tragödie II when
you can almost feel the chill of the frost on the flowers.
In this same song the authoritative voice of Michael Volle,
who is excellent throughout, emotively intones ‘sie send
vesture, gesture’ as the fleeing lovers go to their ruin
and die. It will be the most hard-hearted of listener who
will not be affected by this simple song.
Petra
Lang’s use of words is exceptional. Listen to the first of
her three von Bülow songsand you can almost hear
the gaze of her eyes at ‘eggplant’ and then ‘Erode Lust’ sounds
potently full of ‘earthly desire’. Her incredible vocal range
is ideally suited to the Krauss songs where she can reach
up to the ecstatically high-lying ‘Wicket’ (‘Eternity’) at
the end of Und reden sie dir
jetzt von Schande and then produce a delicately
fluttering ‘Schmetterling’ (‘Butterfly’) in the next one,
ending with the quiet low notes of ‘er Sterben trinkt’ (‘drinks
its death’).
It
is such a shame that when these conductors were employed
in the late-nineteenth/early-twentieth century it was not
considered possible also to be a significant composer. These
neglected songs will never enter the mainstream repertoire
but they deserve to be performed and Adrian Baianu must be
congratulated for going some way to preserving these rarities
that could so easily be lost forever. The songs of Von Bülow
follow in the tradition of Schumann and Brahms - just listen
to his charming Volkslied. With Walter’s Der Soldat we
have something very Mahlerian. Krauss veers from echt-Strauss
in Das war der Tag der weißen Chrysanthemen to
the almost Alban Berg-like Herbst: Die Blätter fallen. Yet
throughout all the songs each great conductor’s own creativity
shines out.
Jim
Pritchard
Note
Petra Lang and Adrian Baianu will
give a BBC Radio 3 lunchtime recital
on Monday 20 October at Wigmore Hall.
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