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Loving that transitional harmonic language between the Viennese schools, I found this Zemlinsky BAL the best I've heard in ages. Eric was deeply knowledgeable and spoke with calm authority. Furthermore the discography of the wonderful Lyric Symphony was small enough to allow an adequate discussion.
As an aside, I thought Fischer-Dieskau, even though a vocal hero of mine in his core repertory, wasn't quite right for the part.
Loving that transitional harmonic language between the Viennese schools, I found this Zemlinsky BAL the best I've heard in ages. Eric was deeply knowledgeable and spoke with calm authority.
Well put: EL had the knack of praising singers for what they did, while being clear (where needed) as to their limitations. He was generous without ever being gushing, and spared us the usual meaningless verbiage of "absolutely superbs", "mind-blowings" and "stunnings". I wish R3 used him more. Given a rather splendid encore from Joanna MacGregor on Radu Lupu, this was the best Record Review for a long time, I think.
Loving that transitional harmonic language between the Viennese schools, I found this Zemlinsky BAL the best I've heard in ages. Eric was deeply knowledgeable and spoke with calm authority. Furthermore the discography of the wonderful Lyric Symphony was small enough to allow an adequate discussion.
Agreed. It’s sent me back to a work I explored via the Maazel & Chailly recordings, & EL’s extracts made me realise why it never fully ‘took’ with me.
Christine Schäfer can do no wrong as far as I’m concerned, anyway
"...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..."
Me too. Has she stopped recording? It'sbeen a while since she has released anything.
I’d agree that in her prime Schafer was very good. However, I think she did start to have some vocal problems later on.
She decided to take a sabbatical from singing in 2015 that was initially intended to last a few months, but was then extended indefinitely. She’s now a professor of singing at the Hanns Eisler music school in Berlin.
"I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
Thanks for that post , Dermot. I have a special admiration for Dorothy Dorow's singing, so it's good to hear of another example of her very slender discography. I still treasure memories of seeing her sing Erwartung in Manchester in1968, a memorable evening.
I’d agree that in her prime Schafer was very good. However, I think she did start to have some vocal problems later on.
She decided to take a sabbatical from singing in 2015 that was initially intended to last a few months, but was then extended indefinitely. She’s now a professor of singing at the Hanns Eisler music school in Berlin.
PS to above: I found an update here: In April of this year, she will be back on stage in Vienna, as part of the event "Friday the 13th. An Evening for Arnold Schoenberg".
The venue's site describes it as "an immersive theatrical experience", offering "a sensual and crazy evening for the MusikTheater an der Wien that dives deep into Schoenberg's workshop and soul."
The venue's site describes it as "an immersive theatrical experience", offering "a sensual and crazy evening for the MusikTheater an der Wien that dives deep into Schoenberg's workshop and soul."
Then that would by definition have to include Die Glückliche Hand, Schoenberg's visionary expressionist, psychedelic, and possibly most overlooked work, written between 1911 and 1913, originally mooted to have intended inclusion of a clavier à lumières, similar from what one can gather to that which Scriabin had intended for his incomplete Mystery.
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