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             Oskar FRIED (1871-1941)  
              Prelude and Double Fugue for string orchestra, Op. 10 (c. 
              1901) [8:59]  
              Die Auswanderer (The Emigrants) melodrama for speaker 
              and large orchestra (1912) [21:20]  
              Fantasy on themes from Engelbert Humperdinck’s Hansel and Gretel 
              for orchestra (c. 1892) [20:08]  
              Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night) for mezzo-soprano, 
              tenor and orchestra, Op. 9 (1901) [9:54]  
                
              Salome Kammer (speaker) (Auswanderer)  
              Katharina Kammerloher (mezzo) (Verklärte Nacht)  
              Stephan Rügamer (tenor) (Verklärte Nacht)  
              Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin/Matthias Foremny  
              rec. 1-2 July 2008 (Auswanderer); 2-6 July 2009 (All other tracks), 
               
              Jesus Christ Church, Dahlem, Berlin. DDD  
                
              CAPRICCIO CAP 5043 [60:21]   
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                From the Capriccio label we have a welcome release of four 
                  scores from Oskar Fried a man who has been relegated to a mere 
                  footnote in music history. Lewis Foreman summed up the situation, 
                  writing, “virtually everything about Fried is illusive.” 
                  (The Delius Society Journal, April 1985, No. 86, ‘Oskar 
                  Fried Edition’) If the Berlin-born Fried is remembered today 
                  for anything it is for his conducting prowess. In his eminent 
                  podium career Fried made numerous recordings. There are a series 
                  of historical recordings available of him conducting with titles 
                  such as Mahler's 
                  Disciple; ‘Oskar Fried Conducts’ and ‘A Forgotten 
                  Conductor’. As a composer I would guess that Fried, who 
                  only wrote a small number of compositions, is all but forgotten 
                  except to a handful of musicologists. The feature work here 
                  is undoubtedly Die Auswanderer (The Emigrants). 
                  It seems likely that Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured 
                  Night) and the Prelude and Double Fugue for string orchestra 
                  together with the recently unearthed full score of Die Auswanderer 
                  (The Emigrants) are receiving their first recordings. 
                   
                  Little information is available on Fried so I have provided 
                  a short biographical note for background. As a music student 
                  Fried took lessons with Iwan Knorr, Engelbert Humperdinck and 
                  Xaver Scharwenka. An inveterate traveller he journeyed through 
                  many countries of Europe and to Russia. He even visited the 
                  Americas on two occasions. Fried also came to London several 
                  times. I have seen a note from the teenage Benjamin Britten 
                  mentioning Fried conducting an all-Beethoven concert at the 
                  BBC, London in 1931.  
                   
                  After the rise of the Nazis in Germany, Fried a Jew, had to 
                  leave for his own safety. Unlike the vast majority of émigrés 
                  who went West, Fried with his communist views felt compelled 
                  to move east to the Soviet Union a country he knew well. He 
                  settled in the Soviet Union in 1934 later becoming a Soviet 
                  Citizen. It seems that his death in 1941 was viewed as suspicious. 
                   
                   
                  Fried is inextricably linked to Mahler. They first met in 1901 
                  at Vienna and Fried soon became a disciple of the great composer. 
                  The 1904 première in Berlin of Fried’s composition Das trunkene 
                  Lied (The drunken song) for chorus and orchestra 
                  (1903) to a Nietzsche text brought overnight acclaim. A year 
                  later he conducted Mahler’s Second Symphony with the 
                  Berlin Philharmonic in Berlin with the composer in attendance. 
                  Clearly a favoured conductor of Mahler, Fried was entrusted 
                  with making the first recording of a Mahler symphony when in 
                  1924 he recorded 
                  the Symphony No.2 ‘Resurrection’ with the Berlin 
                  State Opera Orchestra.  
                     
                  The première of Fried’s Die Auswanderer (The Emigrants) 
                  a melodrama for speaker and large orchestra was given in January 
                  1913 by the Berlin Philharmonic with the actress Tilla Durieux 
                  as narrator. Also on the programme was Busoni’s Brautwahl 
                  Suite (world première) and Liszt’s Piano Concerto No. 
                  1 with soloist Wilhelm Backhaus.  
                     
                  Thought lost for many years Fried’s handwritten score to Auswanderer 
                  was recently unearthed in Moscow where it had been stored 
                  in the KGB archives. The text is from a collection of poetry 
                  Les campagnes hallucinatés by Emile Verhaeren translated 
                  into German by Stefan Zweig. Auswanderer is an unsettling 
                  and powerful musical experience which apart from its orchestral 
                  introduction uses the narrator for a large part of its length. 
                  It is harrowing and expressionistic in its depiction of disrooted 
                  and outcast peasants trudging on foot with stoic resignation, 
                  pulling carts full of their ragged belongings towards a city 
                  of dark foreboding. The city turned out to be a horrendous place 
                  described in the Auswanderer text translation by Michael 
                  Bürgermeister as: “apocalyptic”, “sulphurous sky”, 
                  “red-hot heat” and a “gigantic whore”. The powerfully 
                  affecting score is generally dour, heavily disturbing and frequently 
                  aggressive with several loud and menacing climaxes. The orchestral 
                  introduction lasts until 4:31 when the female speaker Salome 
                  Kammer is heard for the first time and is accompanied by a snare 
                  drum.  
                   
                  A couple of months ago at the Konzerthaus, 
                  Berlin I was fortunate to attend a splendid performance 
                  of Auswanderer with the Konzerthausorchester under Maestro 
                  Eliahu Inbal. Jörg Gudzuhn was the narrator. The concert was 
                  part of the 2010/11 season in Berlin marking the centenary of 
                  Mahler’s birth and the half centenary of his death with a cycle 
                  of concerts titled ‘Music with Mahler - Chronicler of his 
                  Time’ focusing on Mahler’s music and the era in which he 
                  worked.  
                     
                  Engelbert Humperdinck’s fairy-tale opera Hansel and Gretel 
                  was completed in 1892 and premièred at Weimar by Richard 
                  Strauss a year later. Mahler in 1894 conducted the work in Hamburg. 
                  It was at this time that Fried was studying composition with 
                  Humperdinck and his arrangement the Fantasy on themes from 
                  ‘Hansel and Gretel’ for orchestra comes from those years. 
                  There was a great demand for various arrangements of successful 
                  operas and Fried’s attractive ‘Hansel and Gretel’ Fantasy 
                  was extremely well received. Fried conducted a recording 
                  of the Fantasy with the Berlin Philharmonic in 1928 for 
                  Deutsche Grammophon. Pleasingly melodic as one would expect 
                  I enjoyed the contrasting moods of exhilaration and melancholy. 
                  At the close of the score I especially enjoyed the ebullient 
                  climax. I did notice a slight but annoying glitch in the sound 
                  at 14:04.  
                   
                  German poet Richard Dehmel wrote Verklärte Nacht (or 
                  Transfigured Night) in 1896 which inspired Arnold Schoenberg’s 
                  Verklärte Nacht for string sextet, Op. 4. A few years 
                  later in 1901 Fried realised his version of Verklärte Nacht 
                  for mezzo-soprano, tenor and orchestra, Op. 9. Its first 
                  performance was given by the composer it seems with the Berlin 
                  Philharmonic in late 1905. It’s a lush, tender and dramatic 
                  score that deserves to be heard more often. The delicious atmosphere 
                  of the duet for mezzo-soprano Katharina Kammerloher and tenor 
                  Stephan Rügamer opens the score with the words, “Two people 
                  are walking through a bare, cold wood.” Initially to a poignant 
                  solo violin melody I enjoyed the passage at 2:22 with Kammerloher 
                  singing the affecting, “I am carrying a child, and not by 
                  you.” Impressive is the soprano’s clear diction and vocal 
                  suppleness in a passage that amply demonstrates her range. At 
                  the end of the second verse Kammerloher gives an impressive 
                  weight to her top notes emphasising the words, “met you.” 
                  At 4:48 Rügamer sings the words, “She walks on, stumbling” 
                  to be rejoined by Kammerloher in a tender duet. At 5:50 the 
                  tenor displays his impressive high register. A climax of drums 
                  and brass dominates the ending before a short quiet close.  
                   
                  From the same period as Verklärte Nacht came Fried’s 
                  Prelude and Double Fugue for string orchestra, Op. 10. 
                  The notes explain that Paul Becker considered the score unsuccessful 
                  for, “stand-alone performances” and felt it would be 
                  better served as incidental music to a play. The powerful score 
                  for strings is dark, grave and of an almost sinister quality 
                  with considerable forward momentum. In the double Fugue 
                  section the work’s dour demeanour intensifies considerably. 
                  On several occasions I was reminded of a chorale from 
                  a J.S. Bach Cantata.  
                   
                  In addition to the Grove entry one of the most informative articles 
                  that I have seen on Oskar Fried is an online 
                  PDF file from the Delius Society by Lewis Foreman: The Delius 
                  Society Journal, April 1985, Number 86, ‘Oskar Fried Edition’ 
                     
                   
                  This Capriccio disc is splendidly played and recorded with an 
                  excellent essay and full texts with English translations. On 
                  the evidence of these four works Oskar Fried is certainly a 
                  composer of worth. For those that enjoy something away from 
                  the mainstream this release demands to be heard.  
                   
                  Michael Cookson 
                                                                  
               
             
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