Gramophone – September 2019

(singke) #1
gramophone.co.uk GRAMOPHONE SEPTEMBER 2019 99

The women fare better. Eleonora
Buratto sounds good in the almost bluesy
‘Crucifi xus’ (the comparison with jazz has
been more than once drawn) and her voice
blends exquisitely with Sara Mingardo’s
dark alto in the deeply felt ‘Qui tollis’,
which is very much the emotional fulcrum
around which Gimeno’s interpretation
swings. Mingardo, meanwhile, really
comes into her own in the haunting
‘Agnus Dei’, singing with restrained
intensity and wonderful evenness of
tone. The recording itself is handsomely
engineered and scrupulously balanced. If
you care for the work, you will probably
want to hear this, for the choral singing
above all, though Chailly’s performance,
with its stronger solo quartet, still leads
the fi eld. Tim Ashley
Selected comparisons:
Chailly (2/95) (DECC) 444 134-2DX2


C Schumann


Complete Songs
Miriam Alexandra sop Peter Gijsbertsen ten
Jozef De Beenhouwer pf
Dabringhaus und Grimm F Í MDG903 21146
(71’ • DDD/DSD • T)


It’s good to be able
to welcome a survey
of Clara Schumann’s
songs for the
composer’s anniversary – they more often
than not appear coupled with those of her
more bankable husband. MDG’s release
faces some stiff competition precisely from
those mixed recitals, especially when it
comes to the three published sets of
Opp 12, 13 and 14, but scores points in
being marginally more complete than
Naxos’s ‘Complete Songs’ from a decade
ago, including also the premiere recording
of ‘O thou my star’, an English version of
‘Mein Stern’.
There’s an advantage, too, in having
the songs split between two singers, with
tenor Peter Gijsbertsen bringing ringing
heroic tone and dramatic urgency to his
numbers – at his fi rst entry you might
even be forgiven for mistaking him for
a baritone – as well as touching tenderness.
There’s a great deal to enjoy in his account
of the fi ne songs that make up Op 13,
although I wouldn’t want to be without
Wolfgang Holzmair’s superb account
of three of them with Imogen Cooper
(Philips, 5/02 – coupled with Robert’s
Kerner Lieder) or Barbara Bonney’s of the
complete set. Gijsbertsen makes a no less
persuasive case for the precocious works
of the early 1830s – the charming, slightly


parlouresque ‘Walzer’, for example, and
the terrifi c, pointedly Schubertian ‘Der
Wanderer in der Sägemühle’.
I wish, though, I could be more
enthusiastic about Gijsbertsen’s soprano
colleague on the album. Miriam Alexandra
is clearly as formidable a researcher as
performer (her PhD was on Pauline
Viardot), but the voice, as captured
here, lacks fi rmness and projection,
her performances too often marred by
intonation issues. It’s a shame, since she
has some gems to sing, but a quick
comparison with the likes of Miah Persson
in Op 12 or ‘Loreley’ show what’s missing.
A useful album, then, with alert piano-
playing from Jozef De Beenhouwer; but
seek out performances on those mixed
recitals to hear how persuasive these
songs can be. Hugo Shirley
Complete songs – selected comparison:
Craxton, Djeddikar (NAXO) 8 570747
Op 12, etc – selected comparison:
Persson, Breinl (11/11) (BIS) BIS-SACD1834
Op 13 – selected comparison:
Bonney, Ashkenazy (6/97) (DECC) 452 898-2DH

Schütz
‘Psalmen & Friedensmusiken’
An den Wassern zu Babel, SWV500. Auf dich,
Herr, traue ich, SWV462. Danklied, ‘Fürstliche
Gnade’, SWV368. Da pacem, Domine,
SWV465. Das ist mir lieb, SWV51. Gesang der
drei Männer, SWV448. Herr, der du bist
vormals, SWV461. Herr, unser Herrscher,
SWV449. Herr, wer wird wohnen, SWV466.
Mit dem Amphion zwar, SWV501. Osterdialog,
‘Weib, was weinest du’, SWV443. Syncharma
musicum, ‘En novus Elysiis’, SWV49.
Teutoniam dudum belli, SWV338. Trostlied,
SWV502. Tugend ist der beste Freund,
SWV442. Vater Abraham, erbarme dich mein,
SWV477. Veni Sancte Spiritus, SWV475. Wo
der Herr nicht das Haus, SWV473. Wo Gott,
der Herr, SWV467
Dorothee Mields, Gerlinde Sämann, Isabel
Schicketanz, Maria Stosiek sops David Erler,
Stefan Kunath countertens Tobias Mäthger, Georg
Poplutz tens Martin Schicketanz, Felix
Schwandtke basses Dresden Chamber Choir;
ensemble / Hans-Christoph Rademann
Carus F b CARUS83 278 (139’ • DDD • T/t)

Over a decade,
19 volumes and
many hours of psalms,
anthems, Passions,
madrigals and motets later, Hans-
Christoph Rademann’s recording of the
complete works of Heinrich Schütz for
Carus is at its end. It’s an end that brings
us full circle.

Thecomposer’sOp 1 – hisItalian
madrigals–launchedhiscareerwithan
elaboratehomagetothenationalstyle
Schützlearntduringhisformativeyears
inVenice.ThatItalianeducationwasthe
product,asOliverGeisler’sbookletnotes
remindus,ofthepatronageofLandgrave
MoritzofHessen-Kassel.Whatwehave
hereinthisfinalvolumearethemature
fruitsofthissamepatronage–thepublic
commissions,large-scaleItalianatepsalms
andanthemsdesignedtoreflectthe
patron’ssplendidgenerosityandpower
backathim.
It’sashamethatthenotesgiveussuch
selectiveandbriefguidestotheselesser-
knownworks(manyofwhichareomitted
fromthecursorydiscussionaltogether),
oftenleavingusguessingastocontext.
Whatwedoknowgivesusafascinating
portraitofanageinwhichmusichada
keypublicrole.Anthemsherecelebrate
aristocraticbirthdays,accompanycivic
andreligiousceremoniesandprovide
courtlyentertainments.
Rademann’sforcesbringallthewarmth
andsoft,grainybloomwe’vecometo
expectthroughthisseriestothelarger-
scaleworks,aswellasarhythmicand
expressivelightnessthathelpsgiveclarity
rightthroughsomeverydensevertical
textures.Highlightsincludetheminiature
oratorioVaterAbraham,erbarmedichmein,
anattractive,richlydramaticpiecewitha
delightfulclosingquartetfortwoangels,
AbrahamandLazarus,andthe12-part
Syncharmamusicum,‘EnnovusElysiis’,
whichoffersamagnificentsonicpageant.
Soloistskeepthingscleanandcrisp,their
slighter,tightertonebalancedbythe
grumblingbreadthofperiodtrombones
andkeeningbrillianceofcornettos.
Butmostmoving(perhapsinevitably)
arethehandfulofprivateworkstucked
inattheendoftheseconddisc:thetiny
Trostlied–asimplechoralecomposedto
markthedeathofababy–andthemore
extendedMitdemAmphionzwar,written
onthedeathofhisownbelovedwife.
Violentlyexpressiveverseismatchedby
musicwhichwearsitsgriefmorelightly,
passingchromaticscuttingdeeplyintenor
GeorgPoplutz’srestrainedperformance.
It’sasplendidendtoRademann’slabour
oflove,andthosefinalpersonalworksoffer
alovelypartingglimpseoftheprivateman
behindsomuchpublicmusicalspectacle.
AlexandraCoghlan

Tchaikovsky
Liturgy of St John Chrysostom, Op 41.
Nine Sacred Choruses
Latvian Radio Choir / Sigvards Kļava
Ondine F ODE13362 (77’ • DDD • T/t)

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