1. 
Sret’ shumnava bala (At the ball) Op. 38 No. 3 [2:33] 
                  
                  2. 
Net, tol’ka tot, kto znal (None but the lonely heart) 
                  OP. 6 No. 6 [3:30] 
                  3. 
Kak nad garjacheju zaloj (Over burning ashes) Op. 
                  25 No. 2 [1:47] 
                  4. 
Moj genij, moj angel, moj druk! (My genius, my angel, 
                  my friend!) [1:55] 
                  5. 
Kolybel’naja pesnja (Lullaby) Op. 16 No. 1 [3:18] 
                  
                  6. 
Primiren’je (Reconciliation) Op. 25 No. 1 [5:17] 
                  7. 
Zakatilas’ sontse (The sun has set) Op. 73 No. 4 [1:41] 
                  
                  8. 
Strashnaja minuta (The fearful moment) Op. 28 No. 
                  6 [3:35] 
                  9. 
Nam zvjozdy krotkije sijali (Mild stars looked down) 
                  Op. 60 No. 12 [3:26] 
                  10. 
Kaby znala ja (Had I only known) Op. 49 No. 1 [4:00] 
                  
                  11. 
Uzh gasli f komnatakh agni (The lights were being 
                  dimmed) Op. 63 No. 5 [2:46] 
                  12. 
Ni slova, a druk moj (Not a word, my friend) Op. 
                  6 No. 2 [3:06] 
                  13. 
Atchevo? (Why?) Op. 6 No. 5 [2:56] 
                  14. 
Ja li f pole da ne travushka byla (The bride’s lament) 
                  Op. 47 No. 7 [5:47] 
                  15. 
Pesn’ Cyganki (The gypsy song) Op. 60 No. 7 [2:39] 
                  
                  16. 
Ne ver’, moj druk (Do not believe, my friend) Op. 
                  6 No. 1 [3:57] 
                  17. 
To byla ranneju vesnoj (It was in early spring) Op. 
                  38 No. 2 [2:38] 
                  18. 
Kukushka (Cuckoo) Op. 54 No. 8 [2:31] 
                  19. 
Den’li tsarit (Can it be day?) Op. 47 No. 6 [3:19] 
                  
                  20. 
Snova, kak prezhde, adin (Again, as before, alone) 
                  Op. 73 No. 6 [2:15] 
                  
                    
                  
Last year reviewed the two latest instalments 
                    in the Naxos series of the complete Tchaikovsky songs. I was 
                    seriously disappointed. So it’s a great pleasure to receive 
                    this disc as a corrective. And not just as a corrective, since 
                    this is in fact the best disc with Tchaikovsky’s songs since 
                    Elisabeth Söderström’s collaboration with Vladimir Ashkenazy 
                    more than twenty-five years ago. They produced quite a number 
                    of memorable recordings, including also a substantial helping 
                    of Rachmaninov songs, which also have to be regarded as benchmark 
                    versions. Tchaikovsky’s songs have seen one or two comparable 
                    recordings, one of the most recommendable is a Hyperion disc 
                    with Joan Rodgers. I gather that CD is being reissued in the 
                    Helios series. Whatever the merits of that issue, of which 
                    I have heard only a couple of excerpts, it would have to be 
                    very good indeed to challenge the present disc with Christianne 
                    Stotijn. Though her Russian seems impeccable to my non-Slavonic 
                    ears she is Dutch. I have had reason to praise her on a couple 
                    of previous occasions, most substantially her Mahler recital 
                    that arrived  a little over a year ago (review). 
                  
The largely melancholy world of Tchaikovsky 
                    seems to suit Ms Stotijn to perfection. She radiates warmth 
                    and has beautiful tone. Her quick vibrato, which is perfectly 
                    controlled, adds personality. Moreover, and this is most important 
                    for a singer of romances, her phrasing is unerringly musical 
                    and sensitive. She opens the recital with two of the most 
                    well-known Tchaikovsky songs. In At the ball all the 
                    aforementioned characteristics are in clear evidence. None 
                    but the lonely heart, sung and recorded by almost every 
                    singer of some importance – and not only by artists in the 
                    classical trade – is even better. Julius Drake’s superb introduction 
                    is in itself almost worth the price of the disc. Stotijn is 
                    wonderfully inward and concentrated. I can’t remember hearing 
                    a finer reading ever. 
                  
The positive impressions of these two songs 
                    remain throughout the programme and are even enhanced. Drake 
                    is certainly one of today’s foremost accompanists, flexible 
                    and sensitive. His playing in the dramatic and intense Over 
                    burning ashes is magnificent. He is a pillar of strength 
                    throughout the disc. Regarding Christianne Stotijn, her real 
                    strength is that she neither sentimentalizes the songs nor 
                    invests them with more dramatic gestures than they can hold. 
                    After all these songs – at least most of them – are lyrical 
                    miniatures and actually grow in stature when sung inwardly. 
                    Some of the most ravishing examples of this aspect are the 
                    intimate My genius, my angel, my friend and Lullaby. 
                    Especially in the latter it is remarkable how skilfully Stotijn 
                    lightens her rather voluminous voice and caresses the melody 
                    with beautiful pianissimo singing. At the other end of the 
                    spectrum is Had I only known: intense, emotionally 
                    charged and still subtly nuanced. This is the song I will 
                    return to most often in the future but I am sure I will be 
                    tempted to play the rest of the recital as well, once I have 
                    started listening. In a more light-hearted mood Cuckoo, 
                    one of Elisabeth Söderström’s favourite songs, is another 
                    real hit. 
                  
With this disc Christianne Stotijn takes a 
                    big leap from ‘utterly promising’ to ‘near the top of the 
                    trade’. I will be eagerly awaiting her future excursions in 
                    the song literature – why not a sequel to this one? There 
                    are enough gems among Tchaikovsky’s songs to fill a volume 
                    two. In the meantime the present disc should be savoured by 
                    all lovers of good song interpretation. 
                  
Göran Forsling