Korngold: Sterbelied

This page lists our only recording of Sterbelied, by Erich Wolfgang Korngold (1897-1957) on CD.

Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.)
See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates.
The Exquisite Hour

Awards:

Gramophone Magazine

Editor's Choice - May 2006

Label:

Signum

Catalogue No:

SIGCD072

Discs:

1

Release date:

6th Feb 2006

Barcode:

0635212007228

Medium:

CD
| Share

The Exquisite Hour


Brahms:

Ständchen, Op. 106 No. 1

Da unten im Tale (No. 6 from Deutsche Volkslieder, WoO 33)

Nachtwandler, Op. 86 No. 3

Feldeinsamkeit, Op. 86 No. 2

Alte Liebe, Op. 72 No. 1

Die Mainacht, Op. 43 No. 2

Von ewiger Liebe, Op. 43 No. 1

Britten:

Tit for Tat

Hahn, R:

À Chloris

L'Enamourée

Trois jours de vendange

L'heure exquise

Quand je fus pris au pavillon

Haydn:

Arianna a Naxos, cantata, Hob.XXVIb/2

Ireland:

Her song

Korngold:

Glückwunsch

Alt-Spanisch

Sterbelied

Gefasster adschied

Weill, K:

Lost in the stars

Speak low


Sarah Connolly (mezzo-soprano) & Eugene Asti (piano)

CD

$16.75

Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days.

The Guardian

“a hugely impressive disc, testifying to the versatility and range of a singer who has already drawn comparisons with Janet Baker”

Evening Standard

“A national treasure”

The Telegraph

“Connolly's lovely singing reaches to the sensuous core”

Gramophone Classical Music Guide

2010

“Almost seven years ago we went to the Wigmore Hall expecting to hear a well known soprano only to find that she had been replaced by a less well-known mezzo. Sarah Connolly had already appeared with the English National Opera in major roles such as Handel's Xerxes and Donizetti's Mary Stuart. Disappointment at missing the scheduled artist vanished with the completion of the substitute's first phrases. Delight took its place and increased steadily throughout the recital. It was a clear, fresh and powerful voice, used with intelligent assurance, and by the final groups (Duparc and Falla) she had established with the audience the rapport of a much more experienced artist. What was true at the Wigmore holds for this concert at St John's, Smith Square, where her success with the audience is again unmistakable and fully merited.
Again, her choice of programme contributes to the success: a judicious mixture of the familiar and out-of-the-way, and well suited to voice and style. The Brahms group is particularly satisfying, with Die Mainacht broadly phrased, Nachtwandler imaginatively hushed and Von ewigerLiebe warmly felt. The Hahn songs are equally (if contrastingly) delightful, the two pastiche pieces, A Chloris and Quand je fus pris au pavillon charmingly in period. Weill's Speak Low and Ireland's Her Song are winning encore pieces.
That leaves Haydn's Arianna a Naxos, the long and demanding concert aria which opens the programme. Here we find a substantial achievement and a limitation. The style is admirably clean and the emotional range well probed, but the whole remains a little impersonal and one is driven to comparisons. Janet Baker brings warmer humanity and a more memorable timbre while Cecilia Bartoli is more vivid – hear her intense 'Tradita io sono' for instance, or the pale 'Già più non reggo' or the furious final 'Barbaro ed infedel'.
That comparison does, however, throw into a very favourable light Eugene Asti's accompaniment: where András Schiff (for Bartoli) is over– assertive, Asti is sensitive and keeps proportion.
And indeed he does so throughout: a constant pleasure and a major contribution to the recital's undoubted success.”

BBC Music Magazine

March 2006

*****

“Connolly woos her audience with the calling-card for any and every mezzo: Haydn's dramatic cantata, Arianna a Naxos. And every second of its nervous and emotional life - its hopes, fears and final despair - are uncovered in Connolly's superbly observant voice and imagination.”

Gramophone Magazine

May 2006

“…a clear, fresh and powerful voice, used with intelligent assurance… The Brahms group is particularly satisfying, with Die Mainacht broadly phrased, Nachtwandler imaginatively hushed and Von ewiger Liebe warmly felt. The Hahn songs are equally… delightful, the two pastiche pieces, A Chloris and Quand je fus pris au pavillon charmingly in period. ...Weill's Speak Low and Ireland's Her Song are winning encore pieces.”

Click on any of the works listed above for alternative recordings.

Copyright © 2002-13 Presto Classical Limited, all rights reserved.