HENZE Being Beauteous. Kammermusik 1958
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Hans Werner Henze, Peter Ruzicka
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Wergo
Magazine Review Date: 09/2016
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 63
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: WER7334-2

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Being Beauteous |
Hans Werner Henze, Composer
Andreas Grünkorn, Cello Anna Prohaska, Soprano Fabian Diederichs, Cello Hans Werner Henze, Composer Katharina Kühl, Cello Sophia Whitson, Harp Valentin Priebus, Cello |
Kammermusik 1958 on the hymn 'In lieblicher Bläue' |
Hans Werner Henze, Composer
Hanover NDR Symphony Orchestra Hans Werner Henze, Composer Jürgen Ruck, Guitar Peter Gijsbertsen, Tenor Peter Ruzicka, Composer |
Author:
Whether praise or condemnation, that rings hollow hearing this new version, with Peter Ruzicka leading four cellists from the NDR Symphony, the harpist Sophia Whitson and Anna Prohaska. Prohaska’s view of Arthur Rimbaud’s prose poem is altogether cooler, more ethereal and reservedly sensual than Moser’s, taking seriously the snowy setting of the Beauteous Being’s violent metamorphosis. The result is enrapturing, otherworldly, her clean tone serene and her diction superb. Even if Henze drew more tonal variation from his cellists than Ruzicka, these are two equally worthwhile companion views of the piece.
It might seem odd that Wergo has come out with another Kammermusik 1958, barely three years after its first (2/13), but Ruzicka’s is both stronger than and different to Jörg-Peter Mittmann’s, being the first recording of a variant for string orchestra (plus clarinet, bassoon and horn soloists), rather than string quintet. The effect is to subtract a little of Henze’s aching fragility and to add a more elegiac, embittered air, especially to the epilogue.
Peter Gijsbertsen sings Hölderlin’s verse solidly, with a slight Pearsian woofle that recalls the tenor for whom Henze wrote, though Jürgen Ruck is too modest and unflashy in the guitar part intended for Julian Bream. Dig around on YouTube and two Henze versions – the world premiere and an out-of-print London Sinfonietta account – prove more atmospheric listens.
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