Label: Challenge Classics
Format: SACD
Barcode: 0608917278828
Catalog number: CC 72788
Releasedate: 06-09-19
Format: SACD
Barcode: 0608917278828
Catalog number: CC 72788
Releasedate: 06-09-19
- A delightful recital by one of the greatest tenors of our time: Christoph Prégardien.
- Two great classics: Schumann’s Dichterliebe and Wagner’s Wesendonck-Lieder
- And a less-known masterpiece by Schumann: the late Lenau-Lieder with Requiem, Op.90
- Two great classics: Schumann’s Dichterliebe and Wagner’s Wesendonck-Lieder
- And a less-known masterpiece by Schumann: the late Lenau-Lieder with Requiem, Op.90
Robert Schumann was the most confessional of composers. And many of the songs from his great Liederjahr of 1840 were in essence love songs to Clara Wieck. In them he could express overtly what had been merely implicit in his piano music: his fears and longing, his passion and devotion, his pain at their separation, his vision of sexual and spiritual fulfilment, and his recurrent fears of losing her.
In Dichterliebe (‘Poet’s Love’) Op.48, he turns again to the pithy verses of Heinrich Heine’s Buch der Lieder.
On one level, Dichterliebe can be heard as his most piercing recreation of the fluctuating emotions he had experienced during his long courtship of Clara.
Characteristically of Schumann, it is the piano that controls the musical narrative in Dichterliebe.
Characteristic, too, of Schumann’s 1840 songs is the piano postlude that encapsulates and deepens a song’s meaning. Dichterliebe takes this to the furthest extreme.
Schumann’s late Lieder have too often been dismissed as the products of an increasingly tired, sick mind. True, they tend to be more elusive than the songs of 1840, with piano parts that are often self-effacing and/or tortuously chromatic. But there are more than enough fine songs among them to challenge the cliché that Schumann’s genius declined irredeemably after the early 1840s. If the songs of 1849-52 are sometimes less ‘melodious and direct’ than their predecessors, that does not automatically make them inferior.
In August 1850, Schumann set six poems by the unstable and ultimately insane Austrian poet Nikolaus Lenau (1802-1850), whom he had briefly met in Vienna in 1839. Like Schumann and Wolf, Lenau spent his last years in an asylum, his mind destroyed by syphilis. Schumann was ill and dejected at the time, and his mood is reflected in these poems of satiety, oppressiveness and transience.
As a tribute to the dying poet (who he initially believed had already died), Schumann appended to the Lenau group one of his rare religious songs: Requiem, a setting of Héloïse’s lament for Peter Abelard. For this quasi-operatic music of solemn grandeur and mounting exaltation, Schumann devised a swirling keyboard accompaniment that takes its cue from the poem’s image of angelic harps.
During the autumn of 1857 Wagner began a set of five songs to poems by Mathilde Wesendonck, written in evident imitation of Wagner’s hothouse Tristan manner – one of the very rare occasions when he set words other than his own. The Wesendonck Lieder, as they are now known, were revised and completed in 1858, and first performed as a cycle in July 1862 at a country house belonging to the publisher Franz Schott.
Each of the songs shares with Tristan the concept of ‘endless melody’, a saturated, dissolving chromaticism – the musical emblem of unstilled desire – and a feverish, oppressive atmosphere.
In Dichterliebe (‘Poet’s Love’) Op.48, he turns again to the pithy verses of Heinrich Heine’s Buch der Lieder.
On one level, Dichterliebe can be heard as his most piercing recreation of the fluctuating emotions he had experienced during his long courtship of Clara.
Characteristically of Schumann, it is the piano that controls the musical narrative in Dichterliebe.
Characteristic, too, of Schumann’s 1840 songs is the piano postlude that encapsulates and deepens a song’s meaning. Dichterliebe takes this to the furthest extreme.
Schumann’s late Lieder have too often been dismissed as the products of an increasingly tired, sick mind. True, they tend to be more elusive than the songs of 1840, with piano parts that are often self-effacing and/or tortuously chromatic. But there are more than enough fine songs among them to challenge the cliché that Schumann’s genius declined irredeemably after the early 1840s. If the songs of 1849-52 are sometimes less ‘melodious and direct’ than their predecessors, that does not automatically make them inferior.
In August 1850, Schumann set six poems by the unstable and ultimately insane Austrian poet Nikolaus Lenau (1802-1850), whom he had briefly met in Vienna in 1839. Like Schumann and Wolf, Lenau spent his last years in an asylum, his mind destroyed by syphilis. Schumann was ill and dejected at the time, and his mood is reflected in these poems of satiety, oppressiveness and transience.
As a tribute to the dying poet (who he initially believed had already died), Schumann appended to the Lenau group one of his rare religious songs: Requiem, a setting of Héloïse’s lament for Peter Abelard. For this quasi-operatic music of solemn grandeur and mounting exaltation, Schumann devised a swirling keyboard accompaniment that takes its cue from the poem’s image of angelic harps.
During the autumn of 1857 Wagner began a set of five songs to poems by Mathilde Wesendonck, written in evident imitation of Wagner’s hothouse Tristan manner – one of the very rare occasions when he set words other than his own. The Wesendonck Lieder, as they are now known, were revised and completed in 1858, and first performed as a cycle in July 1862 at a country house belonging to the publisher Franz Schott.
Each of the songs shares with Tristan the concept of ‘endless melody’, a saturated, dissolving chromaticism – the musical emblem of unstilled desire – and a feverish, oppressive atmosphere.
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1Dichterliebe, Op.48Im wunderschönen Monat Mai01:29
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2Dichterliebe, Op.48Aus meinen Tränen sprießen00:56
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3Dichterliebe, Op.48Die Rose, die Lilie00:35
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4Dichterliebe, Op.48Wenn ich in deine Augen seh'01:37
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5Dichterliebe, Op.48Ich will meine Seele tauchen00:55
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6Dichterliebe, Op.48Im Rhein, im heiligen Strome01:56
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7Dichterliebe, Op.48Ich grolle nicht01:31
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8Dichterliebe, Op.48Und wüssten's die Blumen01:13
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9Dichterliebe, Op.48Das ist ein Flöten und Geigen01:25
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10Dichterliebe, Op.48Hör' ich das Liedchen klingen01:59
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11Dichterliebe, Op.48Ein Jüngling liebt ein Mädchen00:59
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12Dichterliebe, Op.48Am leuchtenden Sommermorgen02:22
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13Dichterliebe, Op.48Ich hab' im Traum geweinet02:34
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14Dichterliebe, Op.48Allnächtlich im Traume01:27
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15Dichterliebe, Op.48Aus alten Märchen winkt es02:43
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16Dichterliebe, Op.48Die alten, bösen Lieder04:01
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175 Gedichte für eine Frauenstimme, WWV 91 (Wesendonck-Lieder)Der Engel03:07
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185 Gedichte für eine Frauenstimme, WWV 91 (Wesendonck-Lieder)Stehe still!03:15
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195 Gedichte für eine Frauenstimme, WWV 91 (Wesendonck-Lieder)Im Treibhaus05:03
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205 Gedichte für eine Frauenstimme, WWV 91 (Wesendonck-Lieder)Schmerzen02:28
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215 Gedichte für eine Frauenstimme, WWV 91 (Wesendonck-Lieder)Träume04:36
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226 Gedichte von N. Lenau und Requiem, Op.90Lied eines Schmiedes01:30
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236 Gedichte von N. Lenau und Requiem, Op.90Meine Rose03:28
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246 Gedichte von N. Lenau und Requiem, Op.90Kommen und Scheiden01:27
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256 Gedichte von N. Lenau und Requiem, Op.90Die Sennin01:56
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266 Gedichte von N. Lenau und Requiem, Op.90Einsamkeit03:06
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276 Gedichte von N. Lenau und Requiem, Op.90Der schwere Abend01:59
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286 Gedichte von N. Lenau und Requiem, Op.90Requiem03:44