Help
Skip to main content

US TARIFFS UPDATE | August 2025 | No impact expected on your Presto orders | Read full details

Schubert: Schwanengesang

James Rutherford (baritone) & Eugene Asti (piano)

Schubert: Schwanengesang
[James Rutherford] has at his disposal a wonderfully healthy and rounded bass-baritone voice…and his German is impeccable…the cycle has a slow-burn cumulative power, and if Rutherford’s tone...

Schubert: Schwanengesang

James Rutherford (baritone) & Eugene Asti (piano)

Purchase product

SACD

Hybrid Multi-channel

$18.25

In stock: usually despatched within 1 working day

Stream now Hi-RES 96 kHz, 24 bit
[James Rutherford] has at his disposal a wonderfully healthy and rounded bass-baritone voice…and his German is impeccable…the cycle has a slow-burn cumulative power, and if Rutherford’s tone...

About

Compared to Franz Schubert's two 'true' song cycles, Die schöne Müllerin and Winterreise, Schwanengesang poses far more questions – to performers, listeners and musicologists alike. It is in fact a compilation of two different sets of songs to texts by Ludwig Rellstab(seven songs) and Heinrich Heine (six). In his manuscript, dated August 1828, Schubert wrote out the songs without any title page or numbering. Following the composer's death three months later, the publisher Tobias Haslinger added the single song Die Taubenpost, written in October 1828, and brought out the posthumous collection entitled, appropriately, 'Swan Song'. How, or indeed if, Schubert himself intended to combine these songs, we do not know. The four miscellaneous songs which close this programme serve as a further demonstration of the astonishing versatility of their maker and his boundless musical resourcefulness. During the 15 years that they have collaborated on these songs, James Rutherford and Eugene Asti, have performed the cycle in many different formats, but for their recording of the collection they have decided to stay as close to the original as possible, with the exception of including Herbst, another Rellstab setting, from Schubert's final year. Schubert's manuscript is written for high voice, and Rutherford and Asti have chosen to transpose each song down a minor third – a seemingly obvious decision, but in fact this recording is one of the few, if not the only, by a baritone in which the original tonal relationships between the songs is retained.

Contents and tracklist

No. 1, Liebesbotschaft
Track length2:47
No. 2, Kriegers Ahnung
Track length4:54
No. 3, Frühlingssehnsucht
Track length3:31
No. 4, Ständchen
Track length3:54
No. 5, Aufenthalt
Track length3:13
No. 6, In der Ferne
Track length6:07
No. 7, Abschied
Track length4:39
No. 8, Der Atlas
Track length2:42
No. 9, Ihr Bild
Track length2:43
No. 10, Das Fischermädchen
Track length2:12
No. 11, Die Stadt
Track length3:25
No. 12, Am Meer
Track length4:45
No. 13, Der Doppelgänger
Track length4:52
No. 14, Die Taubenpost
Track length4:12

Awards and reviews

June 2016

[James Rutherford] has at his disposal a wonderfully healthy and rounded bass-baritone voice…and his German is impeccable…the cycle has a slow-burn cumulative power, and if Rutherford’s tone – occasionally a touch nasal but essentially benign in its ruddy, plump-cheeked healthiness – can’t communicate the tortured grandeur of the young Bryn Terfel, his interpretation grows in emotional urgency as it progresses

12th May 2016

His baritone has almost everything for the Schubert selection on this disc: lightness at the top, warmth in the middle, velvety low notes, and an edge that ensures the words cut through. In dramatic songs he’s capable of quicksilver changes of timbre.
View download progress