Originally posted by RichardB
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BaL 23.04.22 - Zemlinsky: Lyric Symphony
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View Postthe “ somnolent “ tempo for the fourth movement.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostUnlike most of the score, the fourth movement contains very few tempo directions: "langsam" at the beginning, "etwas zurückhaltend" after a while, and later on "noch ruhiger", all of which together with the text does point in the direction of "somnolent" if you ask me!
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On the basis of this forthcoming BaL, I ordered a couple of "Used - Very Good" condition recordings under the baton of Michael Gielen. That with Elisabeth Söderström, Thomas Allen and the BBCSO ('live') was delivered a few minutes ago. The other, with Vlatka Orsonic, Jame Johnson and the SWFSO is due to arrive by 8 pm.
Less than £9, including p&p for the pair of them. Does anyone here know either of these? Not sure when I can make time to listen to them, yet.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostThis is the thing - the two vocalists have to be well matched, since (unlike in Das Lied von der Erde) they're the protagonists of a single narrative, and while DFD is as good as anyone could be, Schäfer and Goerne together are something else.
It's interesting that you talk about a "single narrative", because Zemlinsky cleverly chose disparate Tagore poems to suggest one, although in fact the six songs don't literally fit together as a narrative sequence. They do, though, make a supreme emotional sequence, following the progress and extinction of sexual love.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostIt's interesting that you talk about a "single narrative", because Zemlinsky cleverly chose disparate Tagore poems to suggest one, although in fact the six songs don't literally fit together as a narrative sequence.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostWhat I meant was that Zemlinsky fits them together into a narrative sequence, not just by choosing and ordering the poems in the way he does, but also by the way the music is structured.
For what it's worth, my 'must-have' list contains Beaumont (especially for the rugged wisdom of Grundheber, greatest of Wozzecks), Conlon (for rich sonics and Isokowski's opulent beauty) as well as Eschenbach - a clear first with me, given the best-matched vocal couple around, in Goerne's piercing intelligence and Schäfer's heart-rending fragility. Eschenbach best captures the music's operatic, as well as its symphonic, dimension. It's a staging for the mind.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostYou're right to point to the musical narrative, which does - as the title might lead us to expect - provide a truly symphonic logical progression, to mirror the emotional journey of six very disparate texts. What a fabulously well-wrought work it is!
For what it's worth, my 'must-have' list contains Beaumont (especially for the rugged wisdom of Grundheber, greatest of Wozzecks), Conlon (for rich sonics and Isokowski's opulent beauty) as well as Eschenbach - a clear first with me, given the best-matched vocal couple around, in Goerne's piercing intelligence and Schäfer's heart-rending fragility. Eschenbach best captures the music's operatic, as well as its symphonic, dimension. It's a staging for the mind.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostBo Skovhus doesn't do much for me I'm afraid, I find his approach too operatic and not sufficiently liedermässig, although as MJ says Soile Isokoski is superb.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Goon525 View PostI’m guessing that there won’t be the customary arguments with Levi’s choice this time - seems a popular one around here.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostIndeed, though I was a little disappointed that Gielen was only represented by his studio recording and not by either of the 'live' performances (both still available, either "new" or "used").
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