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Wolf: Italienisches Liederbuch
Allan Clayton (tenor), Carolyn Sampson (soprano), Joseph Middleton (piano)
Awards:
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Presto Recording of the Week, 5th August 2022
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Gramophone Magazine, October 2022, Editor's Choice
Sampson sings the final song cataloguing all of her other lovers with cruel abandon, positively shouting the line ‘And ten in Castiglione’. Alas for the suitor so often overwhelmed by his feelings...
Wolf: Italienisches Liederbuch
Allan Clayton (tenor), Carolyn Sampson (soprano), Joseph Middleton (piano)
Purchase product
Awards:
-
Presto Recording of the Week, 5th August 2022
-
Gramophone Magazine, October 2022, Editor's Choice
Sampson sings the final song cataloguing all of her other lovers with cruel abandon, positively shouting the line ‘And ten in Castiglione’. Alas for the suitor so often overwhelmed by his feelings...
About
"Composed in feverish bouts interrupted by long periods of inaction, Hugo Wolf’s Italienisches Liederbuch was brought to completion in 1896. The 46 songs are settings of poems in German by Paul Heyse, after Italian folk songs – miniatures with a duration of less than 2 minutes in most cases. Heyse’s collection numbered more than 350 poems, but Wolf ignored the ballads and laments, and concentrated almost exclusively on the rispetti. These are short love poems which chart, against a Tuscan landscape, the everyday jealousies, flirtations, joys and despairs of men and women in love. Heyse’s translations often intensify the simple Italian of the original poems, and in their turn, Wolf’s settings represent a further heightening of emotion. Miniatures they may be, but many of the songs strike unforgettably at the heart. When Wolf’s songbook is performed in its entirety, it is usually done by a male and a female singer, although this is not specified in the score. It is not uncommon for them to be transposed, but the songs are written for high voices, and are here performed by a soprano and a tenor – Carolyn Sampson and Alan Clayton – with Joseph Middleton at the piano. The performers have chosen to present the songs in the order they appear in the printed collection, dividing them between themselves."
Contents and tracklist
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Awards and reviews
-
Presto Recording of the Week5th August 2022
-
Gramophone MagazineOctober 2022Editor's Choice
October 2022
Sampson sings the final song cataloguing all of her other lovers with cruel abandon, positively shouting the line ‘And ten in Castiglione’. Alas for the suitor so often overwhelmed by his feelings for the woman! Allan Clayton’s wonder at her beauty is palpable in ‘Gesegnet sei, durch den die Welt entstund’.
October 2022
Choosing to present the songs in published order, they offer a performance to cherish: fresh, intelligent and beautifully sung and played.
5th August 2022
Clayton and Sampson recorded their songs in separate sessions (and with different sound-engineers) almost a year apart, but that scarcely registers...Clayton in particular takes full advantage of the in camera setting, digging deep into the texts and making some bold interpretative choices. Sampson, too, is totally attuned to the cycle’s shifts between the sacred and the profane, and Middleton's brief moments in the spotlight would be worth the price of the recording on their own.
3rd August 2022
Sometimes the piano trots beside the vocalists like a faithful dog; other times, when the emotions are rocky, it’s impulsive and disruptive, something at which Middleton excels.
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