Did anybody else listen to Richard Strauss' Four Last Songs performed by Lisa Larsson on R3, Essential Classics, Monday 16 April just after 11 am. A most impressive CV so why was I underwhelmed? Views from our lieder experts would be appreciated.
Strauss' Four Last Songs - 16 Apr Essential Classics
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Originally posted by Pianorak View PostDid anybody else listen to Richard Strauss' Four Last Songs performed by Lisa Larsson on R3, Essential Classics, Monday 16 April just after 11 am. A most impressive CV so why was I underwhelmed? Views from our lieder experts would be appreciated.
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Originally posted by Pianorak View PostDid anybody else listen to Richard Strauss' Four Last Songs performed by Lisa Larsson on R3, Essential Classics, Monday 16 April just after 11 am. A most impressive CV so why was I underwhelmed? Views from our lieder experts would be appreciated."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostNo expert here but I've heard a few performances, know what I like ... and switched that performance off after one phrase from the singer who seemed to be sliding around near each note without ever settling on a single one. The sort of singing I simple can't listen to....
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Originally posted by Caliban View Post. . . the singer who seemed to be sliding around near each note without ever settling on a single one. . .My life, each morning when I dress, is four and twenty hours less. (J Richardson)
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Originally posted by Pianorak View PostLisa Della Casa, Lucia Popp or Jessye Norman please!Originally posted by cloughie View PostFlott, Schwanewilms, Isokowski, Te Kanawa and Bonney (with piano acc)Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostAnd Janowitz
As to the others, a friend and I did a private 'BAL' using all the recordings we collectively owned (about 15 in all.. I think I wrote about this on another thread some time ago, or maybe on the old R3 boards). Della Casa, Popp, Norman, Schwarzkopf (both), Janowitz all came out with honour and pleasure of course, but with variable success in terms of balance with the orchestra, playing etc... (Bonney with piano is sui generis and gorgeous )
But the recording which emerged the all-round 'winner' in our living-room BAL was, as you mention, Cloughie, Flott: stunning singing, wonderful, full, airy Chandos recording and sumptuous playing
And I have a private passion .... The recording by the little-known (I think) Elisabeth Meyer-Topsøe with the Copenhagen Philharmonic. Seems unlikely doesn't it? It's generally very good... and there's one moment I keep going back to - the opening of "Im Abendrot". The way the colour of the voice and the swell of the orchestra conveys the contrast between suffering and joy in "durch Not und Freude", the word "Freude" opening out and giving me goose bumps ever time.
This is the disc (but the price on amazon is ludicrous)....
... but it's available on iTunes, you can buy each song separately for 99p a pop
I urge the discerning fans of the piece on this thread to give it a go, at least "Im Abendrot". What else can you get for 99p these days apart from chewing gum or a bar of Dairy Milk?"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Pianorak View PostPrecisely what I thought, right from the word go - not to mention the flaky German In dämmrigen Grüften etc. Yep, Lisa Della Casa, Lucia Popp or Jessye Norman please!
R. Strauss: Vier letzte lieder (Four Last Songs), Daphe (closing scene), 12 Lieder (Red Line)
Richard Strauss | Format: Audio CD
Price: £5.70 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery.
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