British audiences have become most used to seeing Simon Keenlyside
                  as an operatic baritone, so it is good indeed to be reminded
                  of his consummate skill as a lieder interpreter. Keenlyside
                  is no stranger to Schumann, having contributed a magnificent Kernerlieder to
                  Hyperion’s Schumann edition. His Dichterliebe takes
                  us on as great an emotional journey as you would expect from
                  this singer. The opening song suggests hope without
                  ever quite getting to its realisation, while Die Rose, Die
                  Lilie throbs with the anticipation of youthful ardour,
                  Keenlyside shading down his voice to suggest youth and impetuosity
                  as well as excitement. This then gives way to proud nobility
                  in Wenn ich in deine Augen seh’ as he find fulfilment
                  in his love - or so he thinks. The grandeur of Cologne is evoked
                  strikingly in Im Rhein, im heiligen Strome, before the
                  loss which hits instantly in Ich grolle nicht. His skill
                  in this song is to hint at wells of sorrow lying just below
                  the surface while still putting on a superficially care-free
                  expression to the rest of the world in Und wüβten’s
                  die Blumen. Am leuchtenden Sommermorgen suggests
                  gentle resignation, while the escapism of Aus alten Märchen
                  winkt es is lovely. The end of the cycle is utterly bleak
                  from the baritone, but Malcolm Martineau’s ever-sensitive
                  accompaniment plays out the final bars suggesting the possibility
                  of some redemption, however faint. 
                  
                  It’s harder to divine much purpose to the Brahms selection.
                  The songs are chosen from all across Brahms’ output so
                  there is obviously no narrative link, and there doesn’t
                  seem to be much of an emotional journey in them either, with
                  thoughtful, cheerful and sorrowful songs all appearing without
                  much rhyme or method. Musically speaking it remains very satisfying,
                  however. Highlights include the wonderful sense of yearning
                  and loss in An eine Äolsharfe, while the dark emotional
                  world of Nicht mehr zu dir zu gehen is wonderfully evocative
                  of a young man, head over heels with passion, who has no idea
                  whether his feelings are reciprocated. There is a wonderful
                  sense of peace to the sleepwalker of Nachtwandler, but
                  it is clearly a fragile peace, a hair’s breadth away
                  from the sorrow of the real world from which the sleeper is
                  sheltering. The setting of “Genesen” (released)
                  at the end of Auf dem Kirchhofe is marvellously appropriate,
                  and this of all the songs showcases the emotional world that
                  can be encompassed within three minutes. Abenddämmerung provides
                  a satisfying conclusion to the sequence, its accompaniment
                  suggesting both peace and restlessness at the same time. 
                  
                  Keenlyside’s ever-skilful vocal acting enables him to
                  inhabit the characters of each song to the hilt, though he
                  is tested by the high tessitura of the opening Brahms song.
                  His chest voice is resonant and compelling, providing emotional
                  power while remaining thoughtful at all times. Martineau’s
                  accompaniment is always entirely appropriate, illuminating
                  the nuances - and often the duality - of each song with intelligence
                  and sensitivity and often lending real grandeur to each setting,
                  such as in Verzagen. My only doubt is over the acoustic
                  which is rather too reverberant; the piano in particular sounds
                  distant and muddied, something the engineers should surely
                  have picked up on. After a while you can zone this out, though,
                  and you will enjoy a fine Lieder recital which, while it may
                  not say much that is new about either sequence, will reward
                  repeated listening. 
                  
                  Simon Thompson 
                  
                  Review index for Schumann's Dichterliebe