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            Richard STRAUSS 
              (1864-1949)  
              The Complete Songs - Volume 6  
              Einerlei, Op.69/3 [2.50] 
              Der Stern, Op.69/1 [2.13] 
              Waldesfahrt, Op.69/4 [3.38] 
              Schlechtes Wetter, Op.69/3 [2.36] 
              Rote Rosen (1883) [2.27] 
              Die erwachte Rose (1880) [3.29] 
              Begegnung (1880) [2.09] 
              Wir beide woollen springen (1896) [1.14] 
              Das Bächlein, Op.88/1 [2.32] 
              Blick vom oberen Belvedere, Op.88/2 [4.33] 
              Krämerspiegel, Op.66 [32.18] 
              Wer hat’s getan? (1885) [3.41] 
              Malven (1948) [3.19]  
                
              Elizabeth Watts (soprano), Roger Vignoles (piano)  
              rec. All Saints Church, East Finchley, London, 16-18 January 2012 
               
                
              HYPERION CDA67844 [67.00]  
             
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                  “It is easy to be rude on the Continent,” wrote 
                  the Hungarian George Mikes, when exiled in England in 1946. 
                  “You just shout and call people names of a zoological 
                  character.” This observation was certainly true in the 
                  case of Richard Strauss when he wrote his song cycle Krämerspiegel 
                  which lies at the centre of this disc. He was perhaps helped 
                  by the fact that the music publishers at whose heads the insults 
                  were hurled all seemed to have “names of a zoological 
                  character.” He wrote the cycle for the publishing firm 
                  of Bote and Bock, who had insisted on his fulfilment of a contract 
                  to write for them despite the fact that they were at loggerheads 
                  over the issue of composers’ royalties. Strauss took full 
                  advantage of the fact that Bock in German means “goat”. 
                  He also had a pop at a good many other publishing firms for 
                  good measure, and the booklet tells us that Breitkopf actually 
                  insisted on banning for decades any publication of the words 
                  in which he was punningly called a “flathead”. Not 
                  altogether surprisingly, Bote and Bock also declined to publish 
                  the cycle in which they were so viciously attacked.  
                     
                  In fact the set of short songs is rather more just than a series 
                  of diatribes in which music publishers are compared unfavourably 
                  with animals. There are quotations from lots of Strauss’s 
                  own works in the manner of Ein Heldenleben¸ and 
                  even more extraordinarily a first appearance of the beautiful 
                  theme which Strauss was later to employ in the moonlit interlude 
                  which precedes the last scene of Capriccio. Having said 
                  that, the satirical verses are most certainly not masterpieces, 
                  and many of the insults nowadays seem puerile if not incomprehensible. 
                  The Germans seem to have a weakness for puns (as did the Victorians), 
                  and there are plenty of them here. The charming Elizabeth Watts 
                  delivers the insults with a degree of charm which quite defuses 
                  the vitriol in the words, and Roger Vignoles is left to make 
                  up the satirical weight with some dashing delivery of the lengthy 
                  piano preludes, postludes and interludes. It probably needs 
                  a male voice to get some of the crudities in the words across 
                  with full venom, although when one listens to the over-the-top 
                  vituperation of Peter Schreier (on a CD no longer available) 
                  one may welcome the restraint that Elizabeth Watts demonstrates 
                  here.  
                     
                  It must be observed however that in his campaigns on behalf 
                  of composer’s copyright Strauss betrayed no more sensitivity 
                  to political niceties than he did in his brief and disastrous 
                  flirtations with the Nazis after 1933. He quickly founds his 
                  links with the Party severed after his insistence on retaining 
                  the Jew Stefan Zweig as his librettist for Die schweigsame 
                  Frau, but not before he had committed the folly of dedicating 
                  his song Das Bächlein with its final longing refrain 
                  “mein Führer!” to Goebbels. When the song was 
                  published after his death as part of the Op.88 set, the dedication 
                  was discreetly omitted. It is coupled here with its companion 
                  from the same set Blick von oberen Belvedere, an evocation 
                  of the eighteenth century which Strauss treats in a decidedly 
                  un-classical manner.  
                     
                  The disc opens with four songs from the Op.69 set written over 
                  twenty years earlier, and these constitute the most substantial 
                  music in this volume. Combining poems by the Prussian aristocrat 
                  Ludwig Achim von Arnim (1781-1831) with those by the aesthetic 
                  Heinrich Heine (1797-1856) might seem like an odd juxtaposition, 
                  but in the event the two very different authors set each other 
                  off admirably. Roger Vignoles in his booklet note suggests that 
                  Waldesfahrt has suffered by comparison with Schumann’s 
                  setting of the same poem as Mein Wagen rollet langsam, 
                  but Strauss responds with far greater immediacy to Heine’s 
                  words and Watts brings the song to real life.  
                     
                  The Op.69 songs are followed by three pieces of Strauss juvenilia 
                  dating from his teenage years. They are decidedly in the style 
                  of Schumann or Mendelssohn, coming as they do from the period 
                  when Strauss still abominated Wagner and all his works. His 
                  father Franz Strauss had played horn in the orchestra for the 
                  first performance of Tristan in the year after his son’s 
                  birth, and had hated every second of it. They give very little 
                  real indication of what was to come. These pieces were not published 
                  until 1959, when they were first performed by Elisabeth Schwarzkopf. 
                  The style of Watts here - and in other places, too - strongly 
                  suggests the very individual style of Schwarzkopf herself.  
                     
                  There are two other fairly early songs included here which were 
                  not published during Strauss’s lifetime. Wir beide 
                  wollen springen was finally published in 1964, and Wer 
                  hat’s getan? ten years later. It is not clear why 
                  Strauss himself did not include them in one or another of his 
                  collections, but neither deserves total neglect and Watts and 
                  Vignoles make a good case for both of them.  
                     
                  Which brings us to Malven, the last song on this disc 
                  and presumably the last song in Hyperion’s six-volume 
                  collection of the complete Strauss songs with piano. This song 
                  was the very last piece that Strauss wrote, and he sent the 
                  score as a personal gift to the soprano Maria Jeritza with a 
                  request that she should send him a copy - presumably with the 
                  intention of orchestrating it. She never did so, and indeed 
                  never performed the song either; it was not given until 1985 
                  when the manuscript was sold following Jeritza’s death. 
                  This rather sad story of neglect, and the fact that the work 
                  was Strauss’s last work, has led to a good deal of special 
                  pleading on behalf of the song, which has been compared with 
                  the Four last songs written the previous year. It is 
                  true that the song has echoes of that magnificent collection, 
                  especially in the wide-ranging vocal line; and if Strauss had 
                  managed to orchestrate it, the somewhat bare piano part might 
                  have been enriched by increased richness of colour. As it stands, 
                  not even Jessye Norman’s passionate advocacy (on her Philips 
                  collection) can convince me that it is a masterpiece on the 
                  same level as Beim Schlafengehen, to which Roger Vignoles 
                  compares it in his booklet note. Elizabeth Watts does not try 
                  to sell it as hard as Jessye Norman did, which leaves the song 
                  to stand on its own merits; and she is advantageously slower 
                  than Soile Isokoski on Ondine. All the same it makes a rather 
                  sad little postlude to Strauss’s superlative output of 
                  songs.  
                     
                  At the time I was reviewing this CD, Radio 3 undertook a comparative 
                  review of all recordings of Strauss’s songs with piano 
                  as one of their valuable Building a library series. They 
                  came up with a first recommendation for the six-CD set made 
                  by Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau with Gerald Moore in 1972, which 
                  included first recordings of a good many of the individual songs 
                  - although excluding the unperformed and unpublished Malven. 
                  The late and lamented Fischer-Dieskau was a very great artist; 
                  but the new Hyperion edition with Roger Vignoles has several 
                  advantages over his ground-breaking survey. In the first place, 
                  they are able to include songs excluded from the Fischer-Dieskau 
                  set; and secondly, they are able to give many of the songs in 
                  the soprano register which Strauss clearly had in mind. In this 
                  context Elizabeth Watts’s recital under consideration 
                  here, although it might be regarded as a collection of various 
                  odds and ends left over from previous volumes, makes for a very 
                  satisfying conclusion to the Hyperion edition. She rescues Krämerspiegel 
                  from the status of a piece of unworthy vituperation; she gives 
                  Malven proper consideration, although without convincing 
                  me that it is a masterpiece; and altogether she gives the music 
                  some of the best performances it is ever likely to get. Earlier 
                  in this review I compared her voice with that of Schwarzkopf; 
                  there could be little higher compliment.  
                     
                  Roger Vignoles is a superb accompanist; and the balance between 
                  voice and piano is just about perfect in a nicely resonant acoustic. 
                  For a real surprise, listen to the postlude to Von Händlern 
                  wird die Kunst bedroht from Krämerspiegel; apart 
                  from the anticipation of the Capriccio theme, we also 
                  get a subtle reference to the same phrase from Tod und Verklärung 
                  with which Strauss brought his Four last songs to a conclusion. 
                  The phrase may be the same, but the result is quite different 
                  although equally effective. That’s mastery for you.  
                     
                  Paul Corfield Godfrey   
                Reviews of other releases in this series 
                  Volume 
                  1 ~~ Volume 
                  2 ~~ Volume 
                  3 ~~ Volume 
                  4  
                
                   
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