All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Des Knaben Wunderhorn
Wolfgang Holzmair is one of the great word-painters of our time and one of the foremost interpreters of Mahler’s songs. He is embarking on an international tour of this repertoire, which has been a central part of his career, to mark his 60th birthday. His interpretation of this music draws upon many years of experience and brings a deep insight to these wonderful songs. Mahler composed his settings of poems by Clemens Brentano and Achim von Arnim in 1892. The piano-writing is remarkable for its almost orchestral complexity and imitation of orchestral effects. Mahler would eventually score 12 of the 'Wunderhorn' songs for orchestra. The poems’ appeal to Mahler is easy to understand: nature, yearning, love, farewells, night, death, spectral goings-on, boisterous youth, high spirits and wry, crisp humour all combined with the agitated imagination and personality of the composer to produce some of the greatest songs by any composer. They also formed the fertile ground from which several of the symphonies grew. “this is a unique sequence, showing that most of the earliest settings which sit alongside the more familiar numbers, usually linked by theme, are just as finely-wrought and no less typical of Mahler's most haunting preoccupations.” BBC Music Magazine, Christmas 2012 **** “His word-painting is superb, replacing sheer vocal firepower wityh more Lieder-friendly qualities of agility , precision and nuance. Poetic narrative is everywhere apparent...Holzmair seems to make the case for Mahler inheriting the Lieder mantle from Schumann...for nearly 80 minutes you can listen to Mahler's melodies and barely recall that they exist in an orchestral version” Gramophone Magazine, December 2012 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mahler: Des Knaben Wunderhorn
This is a special release commemorating the 100th anniversary of Mahler’s death and Michael Gielen has returned to make his first ever recording of the complete Des Knaben Wunderhorn. These vital new performances show that Gielen, despite now being in his eighties, is not slowing down. He is one of our generation’s greatest Mahlerians. “As so often, the veteran 'modernist' proves himself a highly perceptive Mahlerian...[Muller-Brachmann's] penetrating, never heavy bass-baritone is pleasing and he is blessed with fine diction too, projecting the humour of 'Lob des hohen Verstandes' to excellent effect...admirers of Gielen's Mahler should not hesitate to acquire what is his belated first recording of these songs.” Gramophone Magazine, April 2012 | | | (also available to download from $10.75) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mahler: Des Knaben WunderhornCatalogue CD 2011
“Sarah Connolly, with her glowing, supple mezzo and unaffected directness, is well-nigh ideal” Daily Telegraph “there is the superlative singing of Dietrich Henschel, who seems to go from strength to strength in Lieder.” Gramophone Magazine, November 2006 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mahler: Songs with Orchestra
Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony bring their historic Mahler recording cycle to a close with the composer’s three song cycles. Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony, who launched their historic Mahler recording cycle in 2001, complete the best-selling, critically acclaimed and award winning project with the composer’s atmospheric song cycles. The live recordings, taken from concerts in the orchestra’s Davies Symphony Hall, features two of America’s most lauded singers, mezzo-soprano Susan Graham in Rückert-Lieder, and baritone Thomas Hampson in Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen, and selections from Das Knaben Wunderhorn. The release coincides with international celebrations Mahler’s music, as 2010 is the 150th anniversary of his birth, and 2011 marks the 100th year of his death. The SFS and MTT, among the world’s leading interpreters of Mahler’s music, will play a significant role in the global commemoration of Mahler, through concerts, prominent media projects, and extensive international tours. The MTT/SFS Mahler cycle has won seven Grammy Awards, including three for Best Classical Album, and has sold over 140,000 recordings world-wide. This final instalment puts the crowning touch on every collector’s CD shelf. “'Um mitternacht' works best, with gleaming voice complemented by superb San Francisco clarinets and trumpets - glorious recorded perspectives, too, as ever from this source.” BBC Music Magazine, November 2010 **/*** “From the opening bars of the Wayfarer songs, Hampson demonstrates his mettle as a gifted storyteller, his warm, legato tones awash with dramatic colour. Susan Graham's mezzo brings similar tonal and dramatic light and shade to the Rückert-Lieder. The orchestra has this music just as sussed.” Classic FM Magazine, November 2010 ***** “It is unusual to hear a baritone sing "Urlicht" or indeed "Wo die schönen Trompeten blasen", but that Housman-like tale is here most sympathetically unfolded...[Hampson's] is a performance of terrific presence and power.” Gramophone Magazine, November 2010 “[Graham's] contribution is unquestionably the highlight. She brings great depth of feeling to Liebst du um Schönheit (If you love for beauty) and Um Mitternacht (At Midnight). Indeed, I can’t think of a finer contemporary female interpreter of these songs on disc. Please, someone, record her in the other two cycles.” Sunday Times, 19th September 2010 *** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mahler - Songs from Des Knaben Wunderhorn
“Both "Dras irdische Leben" and "Der Tambourg'sell" - two starkly different songs - have a gentle lyricism that's deeply affecting. Genz is partnered by Roger Vignoles, whose playing is so sharply characterised and finely weighted that I hardly missed the better-known orchestral version.” Gramophone Magazine, July 2008 “Stephan Genz's light, warm and cultured baritone is especially fine in reflecting the ghost voices and moonlight serenades of Mahler's folk-inspired anthology. Yet more attack is surely needed for the prisoner in the tower and the what should be the increasingly desperate pleas of the starving child is 'Das irdische Leben'.” BBC Music Magazine, February 2008 *** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mahler: Des Knaben Wunderhorn
“The two singers have here superb voices, and Philip Herreweghe's accompaniments leave almost nothing to be desired…” BBC Music Magazine, September 2006 **** “…Herreweghe's keenly judged tempi and delicate, chamber-like way with the orchestral part… allows us, in a well ventilated recording, to hear every detail of the magical score finely played by the conductor's own orchestra. …Dietrich Henschel… brings to the dramatic songs a lively feeling for the texts and a vocal brio that places him among the most convincing male advocates in this work. ...Henschel's partner is the admirably alert and warm-toned Sarah Connolly.” Gramophone Magazine, November 2006 “Sarah Connolly, with her glowing, supple mezzo and unaffected directness, is well-nigh ideal” Daily Telegraph | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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“EMI's classic recording made in 1968 more or less puts all rivals out of court. Even those who find Schwarzkopf's singing mannered will be hard pressed to find more persuasive versions of the female songs than she gives, while Fischer-Dieskau and Szell are in a class of their own most of the time. Bernstein's CBS version, also from the late 1960s but with less spectacularly improved sound than EMI now provide, is also very fine, but for repeated listening Szell, conducting here with the kind of insight he showed on his famous Cleveland version of the Fourth Symphony, is the more controlled and keen-eared interpreter. Also, few command the musical stage as Fischer-Dieskau does in a song like 'Revelge' where every drop of irony and revulsion from the spectre of war is fiercely, grimly caught. Strongly recommended.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “The superb singing of Schwarzkopf and Fischer-Dieskau is underpinned by wonderfully sensitive playing from the LSO under Szell” Penguin Guide, 2010 **** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mahler: Des Knaben Wunderhorn
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| |  | Mahler: Symphony No. 3and songs from Des Knaben Wunderhorn
“Really outstanding issues like this one remain few and far between. A happy testament to all Rattle has achieved in Birmingham.” BBC Music Magazine, May 2005 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mahler: Des Knaben Wunderhorn
Omo Bello (soprano), Julien Guénebaut (piano) & Etsuko Hirose (piano) The story of Omo Bello is pretty extraordinary: born in Nigeria 26 years ago, nothing predestined this young woman, a passionate singer, to travel the world, singing. After a university degree in cell biology, she decided to devote himself to music and studied in France. Winner of many international competitions, she has performed as a soloist worldwide as well as in operas, oratorios and chamber music. This is her first album. The last movement of the fourth symphony (here in a version for piano four hands) is placed in the disk as if part of the cycle, 'Des Knaben Wunderhorn'. | 
| | | Scheduled for release on 1 July 2013. Order it now and we will deliver it as soon as it is available. |
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