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Special offer. Richard Strauss: The Complete Songs 6

Elizabeth Watts (soprano) & Roger Vignoles (piano)

Richard Strauss: The Complete Songs 6

Awards:

As well as showing her ability to weave around a wide-ranging phrase, apparent in the first song on the disc, 'Einerlei', and incorporating a useful chest voice, she shows a wicked penchant...

Special offer. Richard Strauss: The Complete Songs 6

Elizabeth Watts (soprano) & Roger Vignoles (piano)

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This release includes a digital booklet

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Awards:

As well as showing her ability to weave around a wide-ranging phrase, apparent in the first song on the disc, 'Einerlei', and incorporating a useful chest voice, she shows a wicked penchant...

About

Hyperion’s Strauss Lieder series continues to demonstrate that the composer’s achievements in this genre are among the most fascinating and accomplished of his works. This latest volume includes, for instance, the delicious Schlechtes Wetter from Op 69, and the lovely—and unknown—Waldesfahrt from the same group. The delicately beautiful Malven (never published in Strauss’s lifetime, and first performed by Kiri Te Kanawa in 1985), with which the recital ends, is known as Strauss’s ‘Fifth Last Song’.

The central work recorded here, Krämerspiegel, owes its genesis to Strauss’s long-lasting and bitter dispute with the German music publishing industry. A Berlin literary critic, Alfred Kerr, wrote him a witty set of satirical verses lampooning music publishers, mentioning many of Strauss’s principal enemies by name. Strauss set all twelve poems to music, and this practical joke finally saw the light of day in 1921. It is easy to understand why the cycle is now rarely performed, given that the texts consist entirely of in-jokes, and that the lion’s share of the music is given to the pianist. But Strauss’s music is well worth savouring, not least for its humorous references to Strauss’s own works, such as Der Rosenkavalier and Ein Heldenleben, and especially for the beautiful prelude to the eighth song and its reprise as the final extended postlude—used by the composer nearly a quarter of a century later, in his opera Capriccio.

Roger Vignoles is the curator and pianist of this series, and also writes the informative booklet notes. Making her Hyperion debut is soprano Elizabeth Watts, of whom The Guardian commented at a recent Strauss Lieder recital: ‘Watts, winner of the Lieder prize at Cardiff Singer of the World in 2007, is already a major artist, but this struck me as making a transformation into a great one, as well as allowing us to hear her in music she seems to have been born to sing. Watts has the right tonal glamour for Strauss along with that tricky combination of vocal ease and immaculate control that his work requires.’

Contents and tracklist

III. Einerlei
Track length2:50
I. Der Stern
Track length2:13
IV. Waldesfahrt
Track length3:38
V. Schlechtes Wetter
Track length2:36
I. Es war einmal ein Bock
Track length2:59
II. Einst kam der Bock als Bote
Track length3:31
III. Es liebte einst ein Hase
Track length2:00
IV. Drei Masken sah ich am Himmel stehn
Track length2:31
V. Hast du ein Tongedicht vollbracht
Track length0:59
VI. O lieber Künstler sei ermahnt
Track length3:23
VII. Unser Feind ist, grosser Gott
Track length1:28
VIII. Von Händlern wird die Kunst bedroht
Track length4:35
IX. Es war mal eine Wanze
Track length3:33
X. Die Künstler sind die Schöpfer
Track length2:11
XI. Die Händler und die Macher
Track length1:17
XII. O Schröpferschwarm, o Händlerkreis
Track length3:45

Spotlight on this release

Awards and reviews

  • Gramophone Magazine
    February 2013
    Editor's Choice

March 2013

As well as showing her ability to weave around a wide-ranging phrase, apparent in the first song on the disc, 'Einerlei', and incorporating a useful chest voice, she shows a wicked penchant for donning joke fangs in the song cycle.

February 2013

Vignoles was and is very impressive indeed, here readily catching the extraordinary variety of mood in each song...My pleasure in this latest volume is without any reservations. Elizabeth Watts sings gloriously, rising fluently to the high tessitura of Strauss's melodic lines...Her beautiful voice, sensitive phrasing and response to word-meanings are consistently rewarding and her partnership with Roger Vignoles could hardly be more beautifully balanced.
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