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            Farewell   
              Franz Joseph HAYDN (1732 – 1809) 
               
              Symphony No.45 in F# minor, Farewell (1772) [24:31]  
              Frank MARTIN (1890 – 1974)  
              Pavane couleur du temps (1920) [6:56]  
              Wladimir VOGEL (1896 – 1984) 
               
              Abschied (1973) [7:54]  
              Herman HALLER (1914 – 2002) 
               
              Abschied, op.59 (1973?) [13:23]  
              Hans SCHAEUBLE (1906 – 1988) 
               
              Symphony, In memoriam, op.27a (1943/1944 – 1977) [18:12]  
                
              Barbara Böhl (soprano)  
              Camerata Zürich/Marc Kissóczy  
              rec. 31 March 2008 (Haydn), 30 August 2008 (Haller, Martin and Vogel), 
              29 September 2009 (Schaeuble), Radiostudio Zürich. DDD  
                
              GUILD GMCD7342 [71:20]   
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                  I am sure that because of Mahler’s naming of the final movement 
                  of Das Lied von der Erde, Abschied, that word has come 
                  to mean, for many music lovers, death and the end of just about 
                  everything, as it does in that work; this despite the eternal 
                  renewing epilogue of the music. But Abschied is an innocent 
                  little word merely meaning farewell, and not in any terminal 
                  sense. Take Haydn’s Symphony of that name. His idea was a joke, 
                  to bring to the attention of his patron that the musicians deserved, 
                  and needed, a holiday. That it’s one of his Sturm und Drang 
                  period works doesn’t make it any the darker or more deeply felt, 
                  in an emotional sense. Haydn’s ruse worked and the well deserved 
                  holiday was granted. Kissóczy directs a passionate and fiery 
                  account of this music, very well conceived for the piece, and 
                  the ending, where the players drop out one by one, as if leaving, 
                  is nicely delivered. This is as finely considered a performance 
                  of this work as I have heard.  
                   
                  Frank Martin’s Pavane couleur du temps - it seems impossible 
                  viably to render it into English, the translation Colour 
                  of the Weather Pavane seems ludicrous, what did he have 
                  in mind at the time of composition, one wonders - is a slow 
                  movement with an air of solemnity and nobility. Quite what it 
                  has to do with the concept of farewell is beyond me, perhaps 
                  his use of the title Pavane evoked, for someone, memories 
                  of Ravel’s Pavane pour une infante defunte and thus it 
                  seemed to fit into a collection of Farewells. It’s a fine piece, 
                  but there’s nothing of a departure about it, and the strangely 
                  equivocal ending is mystifying. Wladimir Vogel’s Abschied 
                  is more the kind of thing I would have expected here. This is 
                  an atmospheric and sustained lament, beautifully laid out for 
                  strings alone. Herman Haller’s similarly titled work is a setting 
                  of words by Juan Ramón Jiménez in a translation by Hans Leopold 
                  Davi, whose first half is a protest for the strings alone. On 
                  the entry of the voice, the music becomes calmer and more lyrical. 
                  Throughout there’s some nicely contrasted writing for solo and 
                  massed strings but I have to say that the piece outstays its 
                  welcome, for there is too little material to sustain nearly 
                  a quarter of an hour’s music. Barbara Böhl’s singing is very 
                  fine, with a good line and a sensitive and intelligent use of 
                  vibrato.  
                   
                  I first encountered the music of Hans Schaeuble when I reviewed 
                  a CD devoted to archive recordings of his music (GUILD 2332) 
                  and I was impressed. This Symphony was written in 1943/1944, 
                  for strings, and then reworked and incorporated into his 2nd 
                  Symphony, as the 3rd and 4th movements. 
                  Thirty-three years later he returned to the original score and 
                  added a part for timpani, and this is the version we have here. 
                  Dedicated to “my Berlin friend and promoter Oswald Schrenk” 
                  the music is deeply felt, and, oddly, at times, has an English 
                  feel. It’s a beautifully written score and one is left wondering 
                  why it’s seldom, if ever, heard.  
                   
                  This is a fascinating collection, played with style and grace, 
                  and recorded in excellent sound, with a feeling of space, the 
                  orchestra being placed slightly away from the microphones. The 
                  booklet contains, different, notes in English, by Robert Matthew 
                  Walker and German, by Guy Andrea Lang. I can heartily commend 
                  this to anyone, not just those interested in music of the period, 
                  nor those seeking unusual repertoire, for this is music which 
                  deserves to be heard.  
                   
                  Bob Briggs   
                   
                   
                   
                 
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                
                 
                 
                 
             
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