Magical Journey: Various Composers - This Be Her Verse (Golda Schultz; Jonathan Ware)

Once again, I thank you for your donation, BIRGIT.

Thursday, March 28, 2024

Various Composers - This Be Her Verse (Golda Schultz; Jonathan Ware)


Information

  1. Clara Schumann - Lieder, Op. 12: Liebst du um Schönheit
  2. Clara Schumann - Lieder, Op. 12: Warum willst du andre fragen?
  3. Clara Schumann - Lieder, Op. 12: Am Strande
  4. Clara Schumann - Lieder, Op. 12: Lorelei
  5. Emilie Mayer - Erlkönig
  6. Emilie Mayer - 3 Lieder, Op. 7: Du bist wie eine Blume
  7. Emilie Mayer - 3 Lieder, Op. 7: Abendstern
  8. Rebecca Clarke - Down by the Salley Gardens
  9. Rebecca Clarke - The Tiger
  10. Rebecca Clarke - Cradle Song
  11. Rebecca Clarke - The Seal Man
  12. Nadia Boulanger - La mer est plus belle
  13. Nadia Boulanger - Prière
  14. Nadia Boulanger - Élégie
  15. Nadia Boulanger - Cantique
  16. Kathleen Tagg - After Philip Larkin
  17. Kathleen Tagg - Wedding
  18. Kathleen Tagg - Single Bed

Golda Schultz, soprano
Jonathan Ware, piano

Date: 2022
Label: Alpha Classics

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Review

In her debut solo recital recording, South African soprano Golda Schultz emerges as a master storyteller, an enterprising programmer and, most important, a lustrous Mozart/Strauss soprano. Though the disc’s all-female-composer concept is increasingly common these days, Schultz’s starting point is the question, according to the booklet notes, ‘what if a woman told her own story?’ Thus one’s ears are attuned to what – in this cross section of songs from the mid-19th century to the present – women say in music that men don’t, even if the poets they choose happen to be men.

The most ready comparisons are songs by female composers based on poems and legends that are well known in male-authored versions. Discussion of differences could fill dissertations. But if I may risk cursory observations based on the composers represented here, one hears something more cogent and unified in the ‘Liebst du um Schönheit’ of Clara Schumann, in contrast to Mahler’s more contemplative setting. A matter of gender? The general culture of each composer’s respective era? A bit of both?

The subject of parenthood is another point of comparison. For Emilie Mayer, the child-stealing fairy in ‘Erlkönig’ is a bigger, more seductive presence than in Schubert’s more plot-driven version, and is more chilling because the listener feels much greater identification with the boy being abducted. The ‘Cradle Song’ of Rebecca Clarke, with words by William Blake, also has exceptional child empathy, especially in the closing moments when a piano flourish departs into a different key – to dreamland, of course. More and more, Nadia Boulanger (1887-1979) is emerging as an extraordinary compositional figure before she devoted herself to pedagogy, particularly in ‘Cantique’, where she captures a subtle but eloquent mixture of detachment in Maurice Maeterlinck’s text about how love-induced tears are never for nought.

The album takes its title, ‘This Be Her Verse’, from the concluding song-cycle by South African composer Kathleen Tagg (b1977), a multitalented artist who with poet Lila Palmer (b1986) makes a fierce contribution to the art-song repertoire. In the opening song, ‘After Philip Larkin’, Tagg makes haunting use of pithy, repetitive motifs and extended piano techniques, poetically rendered by Jonathan Ware. The rest of the cycle gives a refracted, almost cubist view of the subjects at hand, told in half-completed thoughts and in a dizzying array of impressions, concluding with Schultz singing an intense high A that will not be soon forgotten. That’s one of the great aspects of the Schultz voice: in addition to her instinctual projection of words and eloquent phrase-shaping, her vocal colour morphs seamlessly from one register to another, each more alluring than the last.

-- David Patrick Stearns, Gramophone


----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Golda Schultz (born 1983 in Cape Town) is a South African soprano. She studied singing at the University of Cape Town and at the Juilliard School in New York. From 2011 to 2013, she was a member of an opera studio and from 2014 to 2018, of the ensemble of the Bavarian State Opera. From her base in Germany, Schultz has appeared at the world’s famous opera houses and concert halls, such as the Vienna State Opera, the Salzburg Festival, La Scala Milan and the Metropolitan Opera in New York. Her recording of Porgy and Bess with the Metropolitan Opera received a Grammy Award in 2021.

***

Jonathan Ware (born 1984) is an American pianist, Lied accompanist and academic teacher. Born in Texas, Ware studied at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, at the Juilliard School in New York City and at the Hochschule für Musik "Hanns Eisler". As a Lied accompanist, he has performed in major venues in Europe and the US, including with Benjamin Appl, Christiane Oelze, Golda Schultz, Elsa Dreisig and Ludwig Mittelhammer. For several years, he participated to the Heidelberger Frühling Festival Academy. He teaches at the Hanns Eisler Academy of Music and the Barenboim–Said Akademie in Berlin.
https://www.jonathanware.org/

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

FLAC, tracks
Links in comment
Enjoy!

1 comment:

  1. Choose one link, copy and paste it to your browser's address bar, wait a few seconds (you may need to click 'Continue' first), then click 'Free Access with Ads' / 'Get link'. Complete the steps / captchas if require.
    Guide for Linkvertise: 'Free Access with Ads' --> 'Get [Album name]' --> 'I'm interested' --> 'Explore Website / Learn more' --> close the newly open tab/window, then wait for a few seconds --> 'Get [Album name]'

    https://link-center.net/610926/this-be-her-verse
    or
    https://uii.io/7Mycux
    or
    https://exe.io/DXDVB

    ReplyDelete