All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Miah Persson sings Songs by Schubert, Sibelius & Grieg
Grieg: | Seks Sange, Op. 48 Hjertets Melodier af H. C.Andersen, Op. 5 No. 3 'Jeg elsker Dig' encore | Schubert: | Suleika I, D720 Ganymed, D544 (Goethe) Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt, D877/4 Rastlose Liebe, D138 Du bist die Ruh D776 (Rückert) Auf dem Wasser zu singen, D774 Gretchen am Spinnrade, D118 Der Hirt auf dem Felsen, D965 (Von Chezy / Muller) Richard Hosford (clarinet) | Sibelius: | Våren flyktar hastigt, Op. 13 No. 4 (Text: Runeberg) Den första kyssen, Op. 37 No. 1 (Text: J.L. Runeberg) Var det en dröm? Op. 37 No. 4 (J.J. Wecksell) Säf, säf, susa, Op. 36 No. 4 (Text: Gustav Fröding) Flickan kom från sin älsklings möte, Op. 37, No. 5 |
Famed for her highly intelligent performances and deep engagement with music, Swedish soprano Miah Persson is in great demand throughout the world. She returned to Wigmore Hall last February with internationally renowned accompanist Roger Vignoles to perform a wonderfully emotive and dramatic programme. Opening with some of the most celebrated Schubert Lieder, Persson revealed a refined interpretation of each song, searching deep within the texts to convey emotions from agony to ecstasy. With great passion, Persson then entered the Scandinavian sound world to complete her programme with Grieg’s stormy Six Songs and a beautiful collection of Sibelius’s most evocative settings. “'Gretchen am Spinnrade' is a model of how a middle-weight voice can scale the song's peaks thanks to an inner conviction and trusting how the notes and words can shoulder the dramatic weight...So beautiful is her enunciation in the Swedish-language Sibelius songs that you could take phonetic dictation...The Grieg songs show signs of vocal tiring...In 'Die verschwiegene Nachtigall', though, one can hardly imagine a more alluring nightingale song.” Gramophone Magazine, August 2012 “a lovely, beautifully balanced recital...In an opening Schubert set, Persson, for all the natural brightness of her voice, achieves the right aching heaviness in Lied der Mignon, and a beguiling sense of gentle repose in Du bist die Ruh.” Sunday Times, 15th July 2012 “Persson is beautiful and so is her voice, so she starts with a big advantage. But that is only the start...I did find...that there was a danger of monotony, undercharacterisation and reliance on sheer undeniable vocal beauty. Roger Vignoles is an ideal accompanist, setting the mood with a few notes or chords” BBC Music Magazine, September 2012 *** “Persson clearly relishes the possibility of characterization particular songs...The voice is light and lyric throughout but there's power too when required, so the final lines of Du bist die Ruh are radiant...However - and this is possibly a subjective caveat - what Persson lacks is the kind of rounded warm tone and inner conviction that makes the best Schubert recitals so warmly satisfying...Hosford is the perfect partner up on the rock” International Record Review, September 2012 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Goethe-Lieder: Das ewig Weibliche
Braunfels: | Die Trommel gerühret (first version), Op. 29 No. 2 | Diepenbrock: | Kennst du das Land? (Mignon) | Ives, C: | Illmenau | Kempff: | Wandrers Nachtlied, Op. 61 No. 4 | Krenek: | Monolog der Stella, Op. 57 | Liszt: | Freudvoll und leidvoll, S.280 Über allen Gipfeln ist Ruh (Wandrers Nachtlied II), S.306 | Medtner: | Wandrers Nachtlied II aus 'Neun Lieder von W. Goethe', Op. 6 No. 1 | Mendelssohn, Fanny: | Ach, um deine feuchten Schwingen, H306 | Schubert: | Suleika I, D720 | Schumann: | Nachtlied, Op. 96 No. 1 So lasst mich scheinen Op. 98a No. 9 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe) | Sommer, H: | Ach neige, du Schmerzenreiche Wandrers Nachtlied | Tchaikovsky: | None but the lonely heart, Op. 6 No. 6 | Trojahn: | Bewundert viel und viel gescholten | Wagner: | Meine Ruh ist hin, Op. 5 No 6 | Wolf, H: | Philine (No. 8 from Goethe-Lieder) Mignon I 'Heiß mich nicht reden' (No. 5 from Goethe-Lieder) |
For her first solo CD, Marlis Petersen and her partner Jendrik Springer have devised this programme of 19 lieder, from nearly two centuries of music, centreing on the concept of the 'Eternal Feminine'. "For this CD we made a selection of songs sung by several female characters from Goethe’s dramas (Stella, Klärchen, Gretchen, Mignon, Philine, Suleika and Helena). Among them are a number of poems which have been set to music countless times in the past two centuries, but are today often known only in a standard setting: if one speaks of 'Gretchen am Spinnrade' or Klärchen’s 'Freudvoll and leidvoll' (to take just two examples), then each of us thinks immediately of the compositions by Franz Schubert and Ludwig van Beethoven respectively. These poems too are on our CD, but set by Richard Wagner and Franz Liszt! By choosing composers who are not usually associated with the lied genre (Ernst Krenek, Charles Ives) or in certain cases probably completely unknown to some listeners (Nikolay Medtner, the pianist Wilhelm Kempff), we wanted to encourage a fresh approach to the poems, one not cluttered by listening traditions. However, to make the selection of songs as varied and balanced as possible, we have also included a few well-known settings like Schubert’s 'Was bedeutet die Bewegung' or Robert Schumann’s 'So laßt mich scheinen'. Furthermore, Manfred Trojahn has contributed a new setting of words portraying Helen of Troy, thus bringing our survey right up to date. Between the individual groups and at the end we have placed a setting of Goethe’s second ‘Wanderer’s Night Song’, 'Über allen Gipfeln ist Ruh'. This is intended to serve as a restingpoint, an emotional ‘reset’; at the same time, it gave us the possibility of presenting a single poem in the interpretation of six different composers: the naive idyll of Hans Sommer and the threatening, doom-laden atmosphere of Nikolay Medtner’s setting are worlds away from each other. It was a thrill and a delight for us to explore this virtually inexhaustible musical treasure-trove in order to come up with an interesting selection of songs that amply repay discovery. We hope you will be as fascinated by this rich diversity as we were!" Marlis Petersen/Jendrik Springer “the sheer range of Petersen's soprano and her interests enables her to compel and convince as much in 1821 Schubert as in German composer Manfred Trojahn's settings from 2008...Most fascinating and seductive of all are the rare settings of Goethe's Uber allen Gipfeln ist Ruh” BBC Music Magazine, May 2012 ***** “There are real treats here and on her best form Marlis Petersen is the kind of silvery-toned lyric soprano for whom some of these Goethe settings hold no fear. She is a natural Mignon in Alphonse Diepenbrock's Kennst du das Land and an appealing Helen of Troy in Manfred Trojahn's Bewundert viel und viel gescholten...it's a compelling piece, packed with drama as Helen contemplates her place in world history” International Record Review, May 2012 BBC Music Magazine
Choral & Song Choice - May 2012 |
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| |  | Schubert: Lieder
Schubert: | Gretchen am Spinnrade, D118 Heidenröslein, D257 Lieb Minna, D222 (Stadler) Ganymed, D544 (Goethe) Geheimes, D719 (Goethe) Auf dem See, D543 (Goethe) Der Musensohn, D764 (Goethe) Suleika I, D720 Suleika II, D717 Dass sie hier gewesen! D775 (Rückert) Sei mir gegrüsst! D741 (Rückert) Du bist die Ruh D776 (Rückert) Lachen und Weinen, D777 Schlachtgesang D443 (Klopstock) An die Nachtigall, D497 Wiegenlied, D498 Am Grabe Anselmo's D504 An die Musik D547 Die Forelle, D550 Auf dem Wasser zu singen, D774 Die junge Nonne, D828 An Sylvia, D891 Ständchen 'Horch! Horch! die Lerch!', D889 |
The Lied is at the heart of Schubert’s output. Throughout his short life, and right up to the weeks immediately before his death, he took a keen interest in every aspect of this genre, which constituted the most intimate expression of the German psyche, of which Schubert was from very early on well placed to act as a vehicle for its sentiments and its torments (love, friendship, pain, loneliness), ranging widely across its joys and its sorrows in all their subtle shadings. Schubert composed quickly, occasionally writing as many as nine or ten Lieder in a single day, with a prodigious fluency that won the admiration of Schumann. A born song-writer, he loved to perform his own Lieder, accompanying himself on the piano; he admitted that he could get carried away by singing for hours on end. In Schubert’s songs, the voice is always the focus of attention, while the piano accompaniment provides a psychological backdrop. Less discriminating in his choice of poems than Schumann or Wolf, Schubert was more interested in verbal colouring and the emotional content of a text than in its literary value, and although his some six hundred Lieder are in a wide range of forms – from simple strophic songs to dramatic scenas – they are still characterised by their exceptional simplicity, freshness and spontaneity of utterance. “Arleen Auger brings her special quality of chaste intimacy to gentle, small-scale performances of 23 of Schubert's most popular songs” BBC Music Magazine, October 2010 *** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Schubert - Lieder
Schubert: | An den Mond, D193 Suleika I, D720 Im Abendrot, D799 Sei mir gegrüsst! D741 (Rückert) Die Forelle, D550 Heimliches Lieben D922 (Klenke) Der Sänger am Felsen, D482 Thekla, D595 (Schiller) An die Sonne D270 Aus 'Diego Manzanares', Ilmerine D458 Nacht und Träume, D827 Frühlingsglaube, D686 Die Blumensprache D519 (Platner) Nähe des Geliebten, D162 An die Nachtigall, D497 Liane, D298 (Mayrhofer) Das Madchens Klage, D191 (Schiller) Nachtviolen D752 (Mayrhofer) Marie D658 (Novalis) Lambertine, D301 (Stoll) Die Männer sind méchant, D866 No. 3 |
SONY BMG Masterworks is delighted to present the debut solo album by soprano Elizabeth Watts. Born in 1979, Elizabeth has already garnered an impressive list of accolades, including reaching the final and winning the prestigious Rosenblatt Recital Song Prize at the 2007 Cardiff Singer of the World Competition, winning the Kathleen Ferrier Prize in 2006, the MIDEM Classique Award for Outstanding Young Artist Award in 2007, and has also been selected for BBC Radio 3’s New Generation Artists Scheme. “…Watt's youthful, radiant delivery, with no flaws in technique that I can hear, fits many of the Lieder like a glove.” BBC Music Magazine, January 2009 **** “A voice in its first, radiant freshness is always to be cherished in Schubert. Watts is a thoughtful interpreter, too, alive to mood and atmosphere… Crucially, she also brings a measure of innocence and simplicity - not quite the same thing as artlessness - to many of these songs, allied to a technical mastery that allows her to spin a rapt, unblemished line in "Nacht und Träume".” Gramophone Magazine, February 2009 “Hailed as a singer to watch after winning the 2006 Kathleen Ferrier Award and the 2007 Cardiff Song Prize, Elizabeth Watts makes her CD debut with this refreshingly unhackneyed Schubert programme. Perennial soprano favourites – DieForelle, Nacht und Träume, Frühlingsglaube, Suleika – are not shunned. But Watts has alighted on some rarely aired gems. How often in recital do we hear the agitated scena-in-miniature AusDiego Manzanares; or the playfully charming paean to spring Die Blumensprache; or the Novalis setting Marie, where sacred and profane blur in a song of exquisite, rarefied grace? A voice in its first, radiant freshness is always to be cherished in Schubert. Watts is a thoughtful interpreter, too, alive to mood and atmosphere, colouring her tone in response to a darkening of the harmony in, say, Sei mir gegrüsst. Crucially, she also brings a measure of innocence and simplicity – not quite the same thing as artlessness – to many of these songs, allied to a technical mastery that allows her to spin a rapt, unblemished line in Nacht und Träume. Encouraged by Vignoles's buoyant accompaniment, she makes an engaging story-teller in Die Forelle, with an unexaggerated touch of indignation at the angler's treachery; and she sings the mildly salacious refrain song Die Männer sind méchant with just the right wide-eyed mock-pathos. Quibbles? Well, in one or two songs, including the opening An den Mond, Watts struck me as overly languid. She treats Nähe des Geliebten as an elegiac litany, where, say, Janet Baker, choosing a more mobile tempo and finding greater variety from verse to verse, sings it as a passionate avowal of love. Watts also emphasises melancholy over excited anticipation in Frühlingsglaube and Suleika. Here and elsewhere, Watts under-exploits the expressive potential of German consonants. That said, highlights are lovely performances of Nachtviolen – the high tessitura effortlessly negotiated – or the Mozartian barcarolle Liane: just two songs among many where the vernal purity of Watts's tone and the grace of her phrasing are priceless assets.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Schubert: Lieder
Schubert: | Gretchen am Spinnrade, D118 Suleika I, D720 Suleika II, D717 Schwestergruss, D762 (Bruchmann) Schlaflied D527 (Mayrhofer) An die untergehende Sonne, D457 Heiss mich nicht reden, D877/2 So lasst mich scheinen, D877 No. 3 Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt, D877/4 Kennst du das Land (Mignons Gesang), D321 Berthas Lied in der Nacht, D653 An Herrn Josef von Spaun, Assessor in Linz (Epistel), D749 (Collin) Raste Krieger, Krieg ist aus (Ellens Gesang I), D837 Jäger, ruhe von der Jagd (Ellens Gesang II), D838 Ave Maria, D839 Hin und wieder fliegen Pfeile, D239 No. 3 (Goethe) Liebe schwarmt auf allen Wegen, D239 No. 6 (Goethe) An die Nachtigall, D497 Wiegenlied, D498 Lied der Delphine, D857 No. 1 Wiegenlied D867 (Seidl) Die Männer sind méchant, D866 No. 3 Iphigenia, D573 (Mayrhofer) Das Mädchen D652 (Schlegel) Die junge Nonne, D828 Am Grabe Anselmo's D504 Abendstern, D806 Die Gotter Griechenlands D677 (Schiller) Gondelfahrer, D808 Auflösung, D807 Die Forelle, D550 Rastlose Liebe, D138 Auf dem Wasser zu singen, D774 Der Tod und das Mädchen, D531 An die Musik D547 Frühlingsglaube, D686 Der Musensohn, D764 (Goethe) An Sylvia, D891 Litanei auf das Fest Allerseelen, D343 Heidenröslein, D257 Nacht und Träume, D827 Du bist die Ruh D776 (Rückert) |
“With Gerald Moore (who returned to the studio out of retirement especially for the occasion) still at this finest, this is a hugely satisfying collection...There are no texts, but this remains an unmissable reissue.” Penguin Guide, 2011 edition **** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | The Hyperion Schubert Edition - Complete Songs Volume 19Songs about flowers and nature
'Rarely can one find a recording where every single aspect - repertoire, performance and production - is perfect. This is. Highest imaginable recommendation' (In Tune, Japan) | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Bei dir allein!Schubert Songs
Schubert: | Bei dir allein, D866/2 Lied der Delphine, D857 No. 1 Lied des Florio, D857 No. 2 Suleika I, D720 Suleika II, D717 An Sylvia, D891 Der Zwerg, D771 (Collin) Geheimes, D719 (Goethe) Heimliches Lieben D922 (Klenke) Gretchen am Spinnrade, D118 Frühlingsglaube, D686 Im Frühling, D882 Der Sänger am Felsen, D482 Totengräbers Heimwehe D842 (Craigher) Litanei auf das Fest Allerseelen, D343 |
The Swedish soprano Camilla Tilling here performs songs by Franz Schubert, accompanied by Paul Rivinius. The disc includes some of Schubert's best-known songs, such as the carefree An Silvia, the serene Litanei, and the first Suleika song. The programme features great changes in emotion: from the portrayals of the joy and despair of young love in Bei dir allein! and Lied des Florio, to the Gothic drama of Der Zwerg and the despondency of Totengräbers Heimweh. As well as having a highly successful opera career, Camilla Tilling has made a name for herself in concert and in recital. Her previous recording for BIS – the Strauss recital Rote Rosen (BISSACD1709) – was met with great critical acclaim. “Above all, Tilling is versatile and protean...Her soprano sounds peachier than ever, her diction is clear and her musical instincts are immaculate. This lovely singing is underpinned by Paul Rivinius’s outstanding playing of the equally important piano parts. A must for Schubertians.” Sunday Times, 8th April 2012 “Tilling is a Swedish singer whose enchanting soprano voice and acute musical intelligence are both admirably deployed in this well-chosen selection...The opening song of the recital is the lively, exhilarating 'Bei dir allein!'...Tilling negotiates it without strain and sings it with delightful spontaneity...This is a lovely disc, a treat for all lovers of Schubert's songs.” International Record Review, May 2012 “The al fresco exuberance of 'Bei dir allein' gets this recital off to a delectable start: Camilla Tilling's vernal tone is fresh and smiling, her phrasing both shapely and feurig, as Schubert demands, her response to mood and harmony vivid...Tilling's tonal radiance and free-soaring top notes are priceless assets...a Schubert recital of rare pedigree.” Gramophone Magazine, July 2012 | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | Vocal Recital: Erna Berger
Brahms: | Vorüber, Op. 58 No. 7 Mein wundes Herz verlangt, Op, 59, No. 7 Wiegenlied, Op. 49 No. 4 (Lullaby) Der Tod, das ist die kühle Nacht, Op. 96 No. 1 | Flotow: | Letzte Rose | Pfitzner: | Alte Weisen, Op. 33 | Puccini: | Si, mi chiamano Mimi (from La Bohème) | Schubert: | Gretchen am Spinnrade, D118 Der Hirt auf dem Felsen, D965 (Von Chezy / Muller) Suleika I, D720 | Schumann: | Mondnacht (No. 5 from Liederkreis, Op. 39) Er ist's! Op. 79 No. 23 (Eduard Mörike) Der Nussbaum, Op. 25 No. 3 | Strauss, J, II: | Frühlingsstimmen Walzer Op. 410 | Wolf, H: | An eine Æolsharfe (No. 11 from Mörike-Lieder) Die Spröde (No. 26 from Goethe-Lieder) |
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| |  | Schubert, Mendelssohn & Strauss - Lieder
Recorded 1980 | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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| |  | Mens Songs Womens VoiceA fascinating recital of songs by male composers, based on poetry by women.
Soprano Georgine Resick's latest BRIDGE CD presents a fascinating recital of songs by male composers, based on poetry by women. The disc begins with the premiere recording of John Harbison's "Mirabai Songs" in their voice and piano version, and presents other rarely heard songs sung in French, German and English (translations enclosed). Of special interest is Korngold's voluptuous and rarely performed song cycle, "Unvergänglichkeit". Georgine Resick is an internationally recognized soprano in both the operatic and concert fields. Renowned for her Mozart and Strauss interpretations, she has sung a wide variety of leading roles with the Vienna State Opera, Chicago Lyric Opera, Paris Opera, Houston Grand Opera, and numerous others. Warren Jones has been the distinguished accompanist for Marilyn Horne, Luciano Pavarotti, Kiri Te Kanawa, Kathleen Battle and many other great vocalists of our time. | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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