Label: CAvi
Format: CD
Barcode: 4260085533336
Catalog number: AVI 8553333
Releasedate: 28-08-15
Format: CD
Barcode: 4260085533336
Catalog number: AVI 8553333
Releasedate: 28-08-15
- World Première and First Recording of Ludwig Berger’s „Schöne Müllerin“ cycle, several years before Franz Schubert, of 10 poemes by Mueller
- a recording with the Fortepiano as accompanging instrument and therefore stylistically trying to be authentic from the time of origin
- a recording with the Fortepiano as accompanging instrument and therefore stylistically trying to be authentic from the time of origin
It all began with a musical parlor game. In the Berlin home of Privy Councilor Friedrich August von Staegemann in autumn of 1816, a group of young art-lovers put on a brief play with interspersed songs. It told the story of how Rose, the “lovely maid of the mill”, is courted by three men: a young miller, a gardener and a hunter. The latter eventually succeeds in winning her heart.
A number of songs were improvised for the occasion, based on poems some of the participants had written. The group of friends eventually wished to have those spur-of-the-moment songs replaced with true musical settings so turned to Berlin composer Ludwig Berger, who selected ten pieces and published corresponding settings in 1818 under the title Songs from the Liederspiel “Die schöne Müllerin".
In accordance with the Lied aesthetic en vogue in the early 1800’s, Berger set most of the poems as songs containing several stanzas of equal length. Five of the ten texts Berger set to music were poems by Wilhelm Müller. Born in 1794, it is no wonder that Müller took up the role of the miller-lad in the parlor song game.
Schubert only set twenty of Müller’s twenty-five poems. Three particularly extended numbers with many stanzas would have inserted too much delay into his interpretation designed to lead straight to the miller-lad’s bitter, mortal end.
Markus Schäfer and Tobias Koch have intensely studied the performance practice of Schubert’s time. However, their take on Berger’s and Schubert’s Lieder is not intended to be an act of purely reconstructive historicism, but rather a consciously subjective appropriation and transformation of a historical practice – far beyond merely ornamenting the original notes.
A number of songs were improvised for the occasion, based on poems some of the participants had written. The group of friends eventually wished to have those spur-of-the-moment songs replaced with true musical settings so turned to Berlin composer Ludwig Berger, who selected ten pieces and published corresponding settings in 1818 under the title Songs from the Liederspiel “Die schöne Müllerin".
In accordance with the Lied aesthetic en vogue in the early 1800’s, Berger set most of the poems as songs containing several stanzas of equal length. Five of the ten texts Berger set to music were poems by Wilhelm Müller. Born in 1794, it is no wonder that Müller took up the role of the miller-lad in the parlor song game.
Schubert only set twenty of Müller’s twenty-five poems. Three particularly extended numbers with many stanzas would have inserted too much delay into his interpretation designed to lead straight to the miller-lad’s bitter, mortal end.
Markus Schäfer and Tobias Koch have intensely studied the performance practice of Schubert’s time. However, their take on Berger’s and Schubert’s Lieder is not intended to be an act of purely reconstructive historicism, but rather a consciously subjective appropriation and transformation of a historical practice – far beyond merely ornamenting the original notes.
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1Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 11 (1818)Des Müllers Wanderslied
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2Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 11 (1818)Müllers Blumen
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3Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 11 (1818)Am Bach
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4Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 11 (1818)Am Maienfeste
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5Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 11 (1818)Vogelgesang von der Müllerin Fenster
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6Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 11 (1818)Der Müller
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7Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 11 (1818)Rose, die Müllerin
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8Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 11 (1818)Müllers trockne Blumen
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9Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 11 (1818)Des Baches Lied
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10Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Das Wandern
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11Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Wohin?
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12Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Halt!
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13Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Danksagung an den Bach
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14Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Am Feierabend
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15Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Der Neugierige
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16Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Ungeduld
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17Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Morgengruss
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18Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Des Müllers Blumen
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19Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Tränenregen
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20Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Mein!
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21Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Pause
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22Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Mit dem grünen Lautenbande
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23Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Der Jäger
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24Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Eifersucht und Stolz
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25Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Die liebe Farbe
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26Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Die böse Farbe
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27Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Trockne Blumen
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28Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Der Müller und Bach
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29Die schöne Müllerin, Op. 25, D. 795Des Baches Wiegenlied