Zemlinsky Posthumous Songs
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Alexander von Zemlinsky
Label: Classical
Magazine Review Date: 6/1995
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 70
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: SK57960

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(7) Lieder |
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer Andreas Schmidt, Baritone Cord Garben, Piano Hans-Peter Blochwitz, Tenor Iris Vermillion, Mezzo soprano Ruth Ziesak, Soprano |
(2) Lieder |
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer Cord Garben, Piano Hans-Peter Blochwitz, Tenor Iris Vermillion, Mezzo soprano |
(2) Preislieder |
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer Cord Garben, Piano Ruth Ziesak, Soprano |
Wandl' ich im Wald des Abends |
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer Andreas Schmidt, Baritone Cord Garben, Piano |
(4) Lieder |
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer Cord Garben, Piano Hans-Peter Blochwitz, Tenor Iris Vermillion, Mezzo soprano Ruth Ziesak, Soprano |
(2) Brettl-Lieder |
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer Cord Garben, Piano Iris Vermillion, Mezzo soprano |
(3) Lieder |
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer Cord Garben, Piano Hans-Peter Blochwitz, Tenor Iris Vermillion, Mezzo soprano |
(2) Balladen |
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer Andreas Schmidt, Baritone Cord Garben, Piano |
(5) Lieder auf Gedichte von Richard Dehmel, Movement: No. 2, Ansturm |
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer Cord Garben, Piano Hans-Peter Blochwitz, Tenor |
(5) Lieder auf Gedichte von Richard Dehmel, Movement: No. 3, Vorspiel |
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer Cord Garben, Piano Hans-Peter Blochwitz, Tenor |
(5) Lieder auf Gedichte von Richard Dehmel, Movement: No. 5, Auf See |
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer Cord Garben, Piano Hans-Peter Blochwitz, Tenor |
Und Einmal gehst du |
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer
Alexander von Zemlinsky, Composer Andreas Schmidt, Baritone Cord Garben, Piano |
Author:
A few years ago Blochwitz, Schmidt and Garben, together with Barbara Bonney as soprano and Anne Sofie von Otter as mezzo, recorded all of Zemlinsky's published songs (DG, 10/89). These are the ones he didn't publish; why not? When sung as they are here in chronological order the reason for a while seems obvious: a good many of the earlier ones are competent but rather ordinary. Apart from a charming hint of Schumann in the very first of them (and an almost literal quotation from him in the second) they have little individuality until about a third of the way through the collection. Then, in ''Orientalisches Sonett'' (Vier Lieder), there is an appropriately languishing touch of fin de siecle exoticism, as well as a deft reflection of the form of a sonnet, and, on ''Susse, susse Sommernacht'' (from the same set) a long and beautiful lullaby melody, finely poised over an arpeggiated accompaniment. From then on things get much more interesting.
In his notes, Anthony Beaumont suggests that in some cases it wasn't dissatisfaction that deterred Zemlinsky from publication; the austere, searching ''Es war ein alter Konig'' (Drei Lieder), for example, may have been a private reflection on Mahler's marriage to Alma Schindler, with whom Zemlinsky himself was in love. Similarly three settings of Richard Dehmel, obviously designed as a set, are perhaps about the love affair Zemlinsky's sister (Schoenberg's first wife) was having with the painter Richard Gerstl. The relationship and Schoenberg's reaction to it led to a cooling of Zemlinsky's close friendship with his brother-in-law; Gerstl later killed himself. The songs have a concentrated, poignant intensity so impressive that one is tempted to speculate about other hidden reasons for Zemlinsky's reticence. ''Jane Grey'' (from Zwei Balladen), for example, was entered for a competition to which Schoenberg submitted a setting of exactly the same text. Is that why it almost out-Schoenbergs Schoenberg in its tenuous hold on tonality, its curiously gripping bare angularity? But in ''Der verlorene Haufen'' (Zwei Balladen), also set by Schoenberg for the same competition, Zemlinsky seems to be out-Mahlering Mahler in the fearsome march-toccata that accompanies this grim tale of a front-line regiment contemplating death each morning.
The manner of the Dehmel songs is recaptured in a haunting group of settings of Hofmannsthal (Vier Lieder); there are also two curious comic ballads (theBrettl-Lieder, one quite funny, the other—about a man who eats so much that he bursts – rather disgusting), a most beautiful cradle-song over a dead child (''Uber eine Wiege'', Drei Lieder) and a much later, nobly stoic contemplation of old age (Und einmal gehst du) that are in no way inferior to the best of Zemlinsky's published songs. Blochwitz, Schmidt and Garben are as reliable as they were in the earlier set, Vermillion matches them admirably and Ziesak, if a little hard and bright at times, can fine her voice down to an effective intimacy. The recordings are excellent. R1 '9506110'
In his notes, Anthony Beaumont suggests that in some cases it wasn't dissatisfaction that deterred Zemlinsky from publication; the austere, searching ''Es war ein alter Konig'' (Drei Lieder), for example, may have been a private reflection on Mahler's marriage to Alma Schindler, with whom Zemlinsky himself was in love. Similarly three settings of Richard Dehmel, obviously designed as a set, are perhaps about the love affair Zemlinsky's sister (Schoenberg's first wife) was having with the painter Richard Gerstl. The relationship and Schoenberg's reaction to it led to a cooling of Zemlinsky's close friendship with his brother-in-law; Gerstl later killed himself. The songs have a concentrated, poignant intensity so impressive that one is tempted to speculate about other hidden reasons for Zemlinsky's reticence. ''Jane Grey'' (from Zwei Balladen), for example, was entered for a competition to which Schoenberg submitted a setting of exactly the same text. Is that why it almost out-Schoenbergs Schoenberg in its tenuous hold on tonality, its curiously gripping bare angularity? But in ''Der verlorene Haufen'' (Zwei Balladen), also set by Schoenberg for the same competition, Zemlinsky seems to be out-Mahlering Mahler in the fearsome march-toccata that accompanies this grim tale of a front-line regiment contemplating death each morning.
The manner of the Dehmel songs is recaptured in a haunting group of settings of Hofmannsthal (Vier Lieder); there are also two curious comic ballads (the
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