Presto News - 21st May 2012Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau |
![]() When news of Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau’s death broke on Friday afternoon we felt that we couldn’t let his passing go unmarked without paying tribute. Born in 1925, the great German baritone’s name has been a byword for the art of lieder singing for over five decades, synonymous with expressive eloquence, textual sensitivity and sheer communicative genius. His vocal technique, too, was impeccable, but always so wholly deployed in service of music and text that it almost escapes notice. ![]() Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau Some of Fischer-Dieskau’s earliest song ‘recitals’ were given in his early twenties, not in a recital hall but in a Prisoner of War camp in Italy, where he cheered his compatriots and others with Schubert. He began his singing career in earnest soon after his release, giving his first professional recital in Leipzig in 1947 and was signed by the Berlin Opera the following year, a house which remained his ‘base’ throughout his 30-year operatic career. His meteoric rise as a lieder singer really began in the early 50s, when he set down his first, legendary studio recordings with Gerald Moore for EMI: this first Schöne Müllerin has simply never been bettered (and arguably never been equalled) for its clarity and consistently compelling narrative arc. Fischer-Dieskau would revisit the three great Schubert cycles at various points throughout his long career, in the studio as well as on the platform, and each subsequent account testifies to his ever-evolving interpretations – this is a singer who never allowed anything to stagnate, and even after his retirement twenty years ago he demonstrated his sense of continuing discovery in his celebrated recorded masterclasses. Though it is with the German song repertoire that he is indelibly associated, Fischer-Dieskau’s interpretative gifts registered with almost equal power on the operatic stage. Peerless in the great Mozart roles of Almaviva, Papageno and Don Giovanni and the more lyrical Strauss parts, his astute vocal judgements and musical good sense also led to successful forays into heavier repertoire such as Verdi’s Macbeth, Rigoletto and Falstaff (he had an equal capacity for both comedy and pathos) and the great Wagner roles – Hans Sachs, the Dutchman and even Wotan are preserved on disc, with the lieder singer’s gift for word painting unearthing nuances that often go unnoticed in the larger-scale interpretations which are more usual in these roles. Contemporary music, too, played a large part in his career and he inspired new works from composers including Pfitzner, Henze and Barber and of course Benjamin Britten. As a friend commented on hearing the sad news, it says much that Britten chose Fischer-Dieskau as the German representative in the premiere of his War Requiem, a work which was designed to bring together the very best of both England and Germany. Fischer-Dieskau’s legacy will surely be a lasting one, not only in terms of the hugely diverse range of recordings which he leaves behind but also in the profound respect and affection which he inspired in later generations of musicians. As I sat down to write these words on Friday afternoon, it was touching (and not a little incongruous) to see my social networking feeds flooding with tributes, fond memories and simple gratitude from young music lovers and singers who learned their craft from this ‘German master’, a man who had retired well before many of them had even started their training. Many credited his performances with awakening their interest in the art of song, or their love of the German language; many more cherish his interpretations for representing a standard of perfection which they could at least aspire towards, if never reach. Perhaps the most apposite of Fischer-Dieskau’s roles, then, turned out to be that of Hans Sachs, the eloquently inspirational songsmith and teacher at the heart of Wagner’s Die Meistersinger. (Though the part is usually cast with far more stentorian voices than Fischer-Dieskau’s big lyric, he recorded the role with great success for Deutsche Grammophon in 1976.) Like Wagner’s cobbler-poet, Fischer-Dieskau instilled younger generations with the utmost respect for the German song tradition and ensured its survival, whilst at the same time encouraging them to revitalise it and to make it their own. A true Mastersinger indeed. You can browse all Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau’s currently available recordings here, or below you’ll find one particularly good-value set from EMI containing a wide range of his greatest recordings and including the legendary Schubert song cycle recordings with Gerald Moore.
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![]() Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau: The Great EMI RecordingsDietrich Fischer-Dieskau (baritone) “All in all, this is a magnificent retrospective...Strongly recommended.” - Gramophone Magazine |
Katherine Cooper - katherine@prestoclassical.co.uk |
New Releases21st May 2012 |
This is just the pick of the recent releases. The New Releases and Future Releases pages are always available for browsing all the new and forthcoming releases. |
![]() Wagner: Die WalküreStig Andersen (Siegmund), Yvonne Howard (Sieglinde), Clive Bayley (Hunding), Egils Silins (Wotan), Susan Bullock (Brünnhilde), Hallé, Sir Mark ElderThis is the latest release in Elder and Halle’s stunning Ring cycle and was recorded live at sell-out Bridgewater Hall concerts which formed highlights of the 2011 Manchester International Festival. The performances received stunning reviews. |
![]() Glass, P: Symphony No. 9 for large symphony orchestra with expanded brass and percussionBruckner Orchester Linz, Dennis Russell DaviesComposed on commission from the Bruckner Orchester Linz, Carnegie Hall, and the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Philip Glass’ Ninth Symphony receives its world premiere here on a recording from Orange Mountain Music. |
![]() Martha Argerich & Friends: Live from the Lugano Festival 2011Martha Argerich (piano), Renaud Capuçon (violin), Gautier Capuçon (cello) and friendsEMI Classics is pleased to release the latest instalment of highlights from the Martha Argerich Project at the Lugano Festival. This is the ninth annual 3-CD set celebrating the musical fruits of a project in which young artists join seasoned performers, including Martha Argerich herself, to explore wide-ranging chamber music and orchestral repertoire, both well known and rarely heard. |
![]() Bartók: Concerto for Orchestra & Music for Strings, Percussion and CelestaBaltimore Symphony Orchestra, Marin AlsopBéla Bartók’s Concerto for Orchestra, one of his greatest works, was written in the United States after the composer was forced to flee Hungary during World War II. It is not only a brilliant display vehicle for each instrumental section but a work of considerable structural ingenuity that unites classical forms and sonorities with the pungency of folk rhythms and harmonies. Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta explores darker moods through a score of marvellously poised symmetry.
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![]() Purcell: Love’s MadnessDorothee Mields (soprano), Lautten Compagney Berlin, Wolfgang KatschnerFollowing her previous very successful release of Love Songs by Purcell (CARUS83435), Dorothee Mields now turns her attention to a darker side of life. Reminiscences of Shakespeare, melancholy and madness are evident throughout this collection.
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![]() Bach, J S: Mass in B minor, BWV232Collegium Vocale Gent, Philippe HerreweghePhilippe Herreweghe’s long-lasting interest in the works of the Cantor of Leipzig has turned him into a man whose views evolve as he delves deeper into his subject matter. The joy that he feels – combined with a very legitimate sense of pride – in having forged musical tools that have today reached maturity, has led him to come back on a Missa that has never ceased to intrigue him: the catholic Missa of the protestant composer Bach. |
![]() Schumann: Chamber MusicThe Nash EnsembleAmong Schumann’s inspired late chamber works is a collection of music for more unusual instruments, composed in a concentrated flurry of creativity between 1849 and 1853 and written specifically for particular players, and it is to these exquisite short works that the world-famous Nash Ensemble turns its impeccable collective musicianship. |
![]() Mozart: Apollo et Hyacinthus, K38Klara Ek (Melia), Sophie Bevan (Hyacinthus), Lawrence Zazzo (Apollo), Christopher Ainslie (Zephyrus) & Andrew Kennedy (Oebalus), Classical Opera, Ian PageFollowing its successful full length opera, Artaxerxes, Classical Opera return with the first in an epic series of Mozart operas Apollo et Hyacinthus. This recording has been eagerly awaited since its 2007 debut CD, ‘The A-Z of Mozart Opera’ was released, described by David Vickers in Gramophone as ‘glorious...fresh, diverse, insightful and illuminating’. |
![]() BBC Radio 3 CD ReviewSaturday 19th May 2012 |
Building a Library - Gesualdo Round-Up |
![]() Gesualdo: Madrigali libro quinto, 1611La Venexiana
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![]() Gesualdo: Tenebrae responsoriesThe Hilliard Ensemble |
Disc of the Week |
![]() Brahms: Clarinet Quintet in B minor, Op. 115 and Grieg: String Quartet in G minor, Op. 27Hagen Quartett, Jörg Widmann (clarinet) |
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