The 
                      year 1840 was Schumann’s ‘Year of Song’, 140 of them. All 
                      those on this disc were written then although there is not 
                      complete certainty about Der arme Peter. The composer 
                      was thirty at the time and, despite strong opposition from 
                      her father, engaged to Clara Wieck. She was clearly the 
                      inspiration for this flood of outpouring, for though he 
                      had written some romantic songs whilst still a schoolboy, 
                      the ensuing decade of his twenties was largely devoted to 
                      piano music. ‘Ah Clara,’ he wrote on 22 
                      February 1840, ‘what 
                      a happy thing it is to write songs; I have missed it for 
                      a long time’. 
                    His 
                      second source of inspiration was the poet Heinrich Heine, 
                      who he met back in 1828 when doing the obligatory tour before 
                      university studies, the 19th century version 
                      of the ‘gap year’. Contrary to expectation he found Heine 
                      friendly and not in the slightest bit intimidating, perhaps 
                      because the young man was already primed with a secure knowledge 
                      of the poet’s Buch der Lieder, published the year 
                      before in 1827. It became a vital source of inspiration 
                      for the compositions written in 1840, which were song cycles, 
                      written in the case of Liederkreis with a strong 
                      emphasis upon a structural arch. 
                    Without 
                      a doubt, however, the miracle of the year 1840 was Dichterliebe, 
                      written in a week and instantly popular. Schumann had intended 
                      to set 28 texts, but only 20 appeared of which four were 
                      deferred for some years, so we are left with 16 songs in 
                      the cycle, a kaleidoscope of moods endured by a jilted poet. 
                      
                    The 
                      significance of Schumann’s role in the genesis of the Lied 
                      during the 19th century, coming, as he does, 
                      midway between Schubert and Brahms, must not only be his 
                      handling of the voice but also of the piano. Increasingly 
                      it takes upon itself an equal partnership with the voice, 
                      for example when the poet’s memory of the ‘wond’rous month 
                      of May’ in the opening song is recalled at the end in the 
                      piano part.
                    This 
                      element of partnership between these two young artists is 
                      a strong plus on this highly enjoyable disc. Uta Hielscher 
                      fulfils her role as accompanist from the piano in supportive, 
                      colourful playing, crisply articulated and only occasionally 
                      overpowering in Das ist ein Flöten und Geigen. Schumann’s 
                      rhythmic quirks are nicely pointed up in the accompaniments, 
                      though the postlude to Ein Jüngling liebt ein Mädchen 
                      is rather too pedantic, and lacks any sense of forward movement. 
                      Bauer’s singing is distinguished by its expressive response 
                      to Heine’s texts. The highly promising voice of this young 
                      man is not yet quite settled at its extremes, a Mario Lanza-style 
                      tenorial hint of a crack at the end of Ich grolle nicht 
                      either the best take or dubiously preferred for that very 
                      reason. His baritone qualities are lyrical rather than dramatic, 
                      at their best in the middle of the range and when the prevailing 
                      mood is one of calm serenity. 
                    The 
                      song texts are not included with the CD but can be downloaded 
                      as PDF files online; full details are given on the rear 
                      inlay.
                    Christopher Fifield
                    see also 
                      Review 
                      by Gwyn Parry-Jones