Hindemith Sancta Susanna, etc

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Paul Hindemith

Genre:

Opera

Label: Chandos

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 70

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: CHAN9620

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Sancta Susanna Paul Hindemith, Composer
Ameral Gunson, Old Nun, Mezzo soprano
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra
Della Jones, Clementia, Contralto (Female alto)
Leeds Festival Chorus
Maria Treedaway, Maid, Speaker
Mark Rowlinson, Farmhand, Speaker
Paul Hindemith, Composer
Susan Bullock, Susanna, Soprano
Yan Pascal Tortelier, Conductor
Nusch-Nuschi Dances Paul Hindemith, Composer
Anne Howells, Annina, Contralto (Female alto)
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra
Helen Donath, Sophie, Soprano
Luciano Pavarotti, Italian Tenor, Tenor
Murray Dickie, Valzacchi, Tenor
Otto Wiener, Faninal, Baritone
Paul Hindemith, Composer
Yan Pascal Tortelier, Conductor
Tuttifäntchen Paul Hindemith, Composer
Alois Pernerstorfer, Alberich, Baritone
Alois Pernerstorfer, Alberich, Baritone
Alois Pernerstorfer, Alberich, Baritone
Hilde Konetzni, Gutrune, Soprano
Hilde Konetzni, Gutrune, Soprano
Hilde Konetzni, Gutrune, Soprano
Josef Herrmann, Gunther
Ludwig Weber, Hagen, Bass
Max Lorenz, Siegfried, Tenor
Paul Hindemith, Composer
(3) Gesänge Paul Hindemith, Composer
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra
Fiorenza Cossotto, Amneris, Mezzo soprano
Fiorenza Cossotto, Amneris, Mezzo soprano
Fiorenza Cossotto, Amneris, Mezzo soprano
Montserrat Caballé, Aida, Soprano
Paul Grindlay, Second Devil
Paul Hindemith, Composer
Renato Bruson, Giorgio Germont, Baritone
Renato Bruson, Giorgio Germont, Baritone
Renato Bruson, Giorgio Germont, Baritone
Robert Stewart, Third Devil
Susan Bullock, Soprano
Yan Pascal Tortelier, Conductor
Sancta Susanna is one of the three early stage works Hindemith composed in the wake of the First World War, its companions being Morder, Hoffnung der Frauen (1919) and Das Nusch-Nuschi (1920), based on a play for Burmese marionettes and represented here by its dances. The whole opera has been recorded by Gerd Albrecht (Wergo, 7/89). Hindemith earned a living in the Frankfurt Opera during this period and so it is natural that he nurtured operatic ambitions. Sancta Susanna enjoyed a certain notoriety during its time. Fritz Busch refused to conduct its premiere on account of its blasphemous plot. It tells briefly of a young nun, Susanna, inflamed by the legend she hears from Sister Clementia, of a girl coming naked to the altar to embrace the lifesize figure of Christ on the Cross. For this blasphemy she is buried alive. Aroused and undeterred Susanna strips off and rips the covering from Christ’s torso. She is terrified when a huge spider falls on to her head from the crucifix and, horrified by her deed, begs the nuns to wall her up. A drastic cure for arachnophobia or blasphemy!
The opening of the opera is extraordinarily atmospheric, quite magical in fact, closer to Schreker or even some Szymanowskian vision than anything in the mature Hindemith. The opera is short, concentrated, highly imaginative and resourceful in its use of sonority; and its expressionist musical language is so powerful that one feels at the end of its barely 23 minutes that one has heard a much longer piece. It is superbly done here. No praise can be too high for the singers and for the delicacy, eloquence and power of the playing that Yan Pascal Tortelier draws from his orchestra. MEO wrote warmly of the only other recording of it, by the RIAS forces listed above under Gerd Albrecht, but it would have to be very good indeed to represent a serious challenge either artistically or as a recording to the present issue. As so often from this source, the recorded sound is of demonstration quality in its unforced naturalness.
In discussing the gorgeous Straussian Drei Gesange, Op. 9, MEO called them “very vehement and passionate and at times wildly over the top” and thought their “assured craft and confident ambition breathtaking”. Indeed they are, and Susan Bullock performs them with thrilling panache. They are written for a large orchestra and there is little of what we think of as Hindemith in them. Nor is there much in Tuttifantchen, a children’s pantomime first performed in Darmstadt in 1922, and “almost unimaginably different in its blithe simplicity” (to quote Calum MacDonald’s note). There is even a quotation from Debussy’s “Golliwog’s Cakewalk”. For the most part Tuttifantchen is totally uncharacteristic, not unpleasing but really rather nondescript. The dances from Nusch-Nuschi were once coupled with Hin und zuruck and Der Damon on a 1971 Vox Candide LP and, as one would expect, are even more expertly done on this CD. There is some quite extraordinary music here and Sancta Susanna, which I confess I did not know before, is a great find.'

Discover the world's largest classical music catalogue with Presto Music. 

Stream on Presto Music | Buy from Presto Music

Gramophone Print

  • Print Edition

From £6.67 / month

Subscribe

Gramophone Digital Club

  • Digital Edition
  • Digital Archive
  • Reviews Database
  • Full website access

From £8.75 / month

Subscribe

                              

If you are a library, university or other organisation that would be interested in an institutional subscription to Gramophone please click here for further information.