SCHUMANN Adventlied. Ballade vom Pagen und der Königstochter
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Johann Sebastian Bach, Robert Schumann
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Ondine
Magazine Review Date: 08/2018
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 71
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: ODE1312-2
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Vom Pagen und der Königstochter |
Robert Schumann, Composer
Aapo Häkkinen, Conductor Benno Schachtner, Countertenor Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Cornelius Uhle, Bass Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir Helsinki Baroque Orchestra Jonathan Sells, Bass Robert Schumann, Composer Werner Güra, Tenor |
Cantata No. 105, 'Herr, gehe nicht ins Gericht' |
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Aapo Häkkinen, Conductor Benno Schachtner, Countertenor Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Cornelius Uhle, Bass Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir Helsinki Baroque Orchestra Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer Jonathan Sells, Bass Werner Güra, Tenor |
Adventlied |
Robert Schumann, Composer
Aapo Häkkinen, Conductor Benno Schachtner, Countertenor Carolyn Sampson, Soprano Cornelius Uhle, Bass Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir Helsinki Baroque Orchestra Jonathan Sells, Bass Robert Schumann, Composer Werner Güra, Tenor |
Author: Peter Quantrill
These performances by a Finnish period instrument ensemble are lively and polished enough, though there’s nothing especially ‘period’ about either the choral forces involved (a fraction the size of those envisaged by Schumann, and unfavourably recessed in this studio recording) or the anachronistic casting of Benno Schachtner’s piercing countertenor. His narrative role assumes undue prominence in the Ballade vom Pagen und der Konigstöchter, written late in 1852 (just over a year before his fateful suicide attempt), though a louring, eerie tone is not altogether out of place in this fascinating precursor to Mahler’s Das klagende Lied, where a murder is similarly exposed at a royal court by means of a ‘singing’ flute.
Aapo Häkkinen usefully pulls back at the cantata’s moment of awful revelation where previous recordings have heedlessly pressed on, and with a sensitivity to mood and textual rhetoric that would have served him well in some rather briskly dispatched movements of the Bach. No such comparisons are available for the Adventlied that here receives, somewhat extraordinarily, a first recording. ‘Peace on earth and goodwill to all men’ is the message of Rückert’s cosy fireside poem; and shortly before Christmas 1848 Schumann followed suit in a pleasantly flowing, not especially memorable idiom pieced together from neo-Baroque gestures and counterpoint. Like the performances themselves, it’s something of a stylistic salad, but attractive nonetheless and probably an essential acquisition for Schumann admirers.
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