Originally posted by Caliban
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BaL 29.04.17 - Schumann: Liederkreis (Op.24)
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Originally posted by visualnickmos View PostI'm not crazy about lieder - unless it's Richard Strauss; so I'll wash the car instead!
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Originally posted by verismissimo View PostSo ... Bostridge with Drake. Hard to explain why I'm so allergic to his work.
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I thought it was a very interesting BaL with several very fine recordings. I particularly liked the Prégardien from the extracts played, and the one Souzay extract sounded wonderful, every emphasis just right. But I thought that the reviewer relied overly on the song texts in determining the appropriate interpretation, whereas it seems to me that Schumann's reactions to Heine's texts - in this cycle and in Dichterliebe - are subtly (and sometimes not so subtly) different from the characteristics of the poems themselves, reflecting Heine's sometimes mocking, ironic and semi-detached observation of Romantic tropes. Schumann is more avowedly romantic than Heine, and sometimes that can result in a fruitful discordance between music and text. But that's just a personal view.
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Richard Tarleton
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Nevilevelis
Originally posted by aeolium View PostI thought it was a very interesting BaL with several very fine recordings. I particularly liked the Prégardien from the extracts played, and the one Souzay extract sounded wonderful, every emphasis just right. But I thought that the reviewer relied overly on the song texts in determining the appropriate interpretation, whereas it seems to me that Schumann's reactions to Heine's texts - in this cycle and in Dichterliebe - are subtly (and sometimes not so subtly) different from the characteristics of the poems themselves, reflecting Heine's sometimes mocking, ironic and semi-detached observation of Romantic tropes. Schumann is more avowedly romantic than Heine, and sometimes that can result in a fruitful discordance between music and text. But that's just a personal view.
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A fine observation, and very much my own in this cycle.
NVV
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From what I heard on Record Review, this was Bostridge at his best; never over-stretched. I wonder why listening to voices of the past (in this case Garard Souzay) makes one wonder if they had something that the modern generation...of tenors, baritones and basses specifically....doesn't have? Or is this merely nostalgia for a bygone age on my part?
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post... the sort of interpretative effects which might irritate on repeated hearing. Eg the push on the word Wehmut (melancholy) in the last extract played was for me just slightly overdone.
But, Mark Padmore and Christopher Maltman both sounded splendid to me, and their names have gone on "the list"[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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