Hermann Prey Sings Erlkonig

Submitted by a reader, this recording of Hermann Prey singing Erlkonig an 1986 gives a totally different take on the song from the Ann Sofie von Otter performance. Both are with orchestras, but not only are the voices very different, but the orchestration of this version is much more intricate. Listen to the contrast between the two parts in Prey’s performance; he is almost two different people.

This is what makes Schubert’s lieder so great.

Posted: 9/24/2012 by Kirk | Filed under: Videos Tags: Hermann Prey | No Comments  »

Anne Sofie von Otter sings Erlkönig

The sound isn’t great, and it’s a tad out of synch, but this performance with the Chamber Orchestra of Europe and Claudio Abbado is intense. I love Ann Sofie’s voice. There’s more in these four minutes than in many symphonies.



Posted: 9/6/2012 by Kirk | Filed under: Videos Tags: Anne Sofie von Otter | No Comments  »

Thomas Quasthoff Sings Auf dem Flusse

Thomas Quasthoff unfortunately announced his retirement from singing early in 2012, because of health reasons. But while he was singing, he was perhaps one of the best interpreters of Schubert since Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau. (In fact, Fischer-Dieskau called Quasthoff the greatest living lieder singer in 2007.)

This performance of Auf den Flusse is riveting. In the first verses, Quasthoff sets the scene for what will come. Then, the contrast he gives in the final verse is simply chilling:

Mein Herz, in diesem Bache
Erkennst du nun dein Bild?
Ob’s unter seiner Rinde
Wohl auch so reißend schwillt?

The first two lines are ethereal, then the torrent breaks through and he gives his all in the final lines and the repeats.

Daniel Barenboim is also excellent on piano here.



Posted: 9/1/2012 by Kirk | Filed under: Videos Tags: Thomas Quasthoff | No Comments  »

Thomas Hampson Sings Rast

Thomas Hampson is perhaps better known as one of the leading singers of Mahler lieder of our time, but he’s also recorded Schubert’s songs, such as ">Volume 14 of Hyperion’s Schubert edition.

Here is Hampson singing Rast. He is, perhaps, a bit gloomy in this performance, and this could be, in part, because of the lack of an audience. But Hampson’s introspective yet forceful style comes through here very well. I like this performance. Listen to the way he sings the final line, “Mit heißem Stich sich regen!”



Posted: 8/31/2012 by Kirk | Filed under: Videos Tags: Thomas Hampson | No Comments  »

Ian Bostridge Sings Erlkönig

I like Ian Bostridge’s Schubert. He really seems to get the music. I find that, in this performance, there is a very clear distinction between the way he sings the two voices in the song. Some may find his approach a bit extreme, especially the way he sings “Und bist du nicht willig, so brauch ich Gewalt.” But Bostridge’s theatricality works well in this performance.



Posted: 8/30/2012 by Kirk | Filed under: Videos Tags: Ian Bostridge | No Comments  »

DVD Review: Hermann Prey, The Schubert Song Cycles

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Schubert’s lieder is one of my favorite parts of the classical repertory, and I have to confess that I’m an inveterate fan of Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau singing these works. I have dozens of his recordings, from the early EMI recitals to the “complete” DG set, as well as many of his various versions of Winterreise and the other songs cycles, together with many of the more recently released radio performances.

But a few years ago, by way of Deutsche Grammophon’s download site, I picked up a set of Hermann Prey’s recordings on the cheap. Not being familiar with his works – he had never come into my radar – I was impressed by how wonderful his voice was and how rich was his technique. Unfortunately, while he recorded a fair amount of lieder, his catalogue is nothing like that of Fischer-Dieskau’s; while he recorded the three song cycles, which appear on this DVD set, he didn’t record many other Schubert lieder.

Die Schöne Müllerin starts off this two-disc set, with Hermann Prey and pianist Leonard Hokanson singing on a set made up to look like a bourgeois music room. With furniture along the walls, windows looking out on painted backdrops, and some “sun” streaming in, it is meant to look as though the two just got together for some amiable music-making after a good Viennese lunch.

For Schwanengesang, the set is the same, but it is evening. While Prey and Hokanson are well lit, the rest of the set is very dark at times. For Winterreise, the setting is similar, but with more normal studio lighting. It’s daytime again, and one can glimpse frost on the windows and snow on a tree outside.

Prey is natural and seems as though he’s singing for a few friends; he embraces the camera, whose many tight shots keep this recording intimate. (Though these close-ups can be odd; during Ihr Bild, in Schwanengesang, all but the first few seconds of the song feature a close-up of Prey, which zooms in slowly during the first minutes to maintain nothing but his head on screen; this technique is used with other songs too.) While his smiles sometimes seem forced, it is clear that he truly loves and understands this music, and he is able to express this in the subtle manner in which he approaches it. Yet he can be very strong and forceful, such as when singing the powerful Der Doppelgänger, in Schwanengesang. Here, Prey shows the dark side of this music, and does so with violent expressiveness.

While Prey seems very comfortable, Hokanson is one of those pianists who looks as though he’s working hard when he plays. He has sheet music for the songs on his piano as he plays, which is a bit disturbing. I understand that musicians may need this in concert, but you’d think that for a recording like this they’d be able to play from memory. During Winterreise, Helmut Deutsch seems more absorbed in the music than Hokanson, hunched over his piano, though he, too, needs to have score on his piano.

The sound is both good and mediocre. The first piano notes in Die Schöne Müllerin show that the piano didn’t record well; it booms a bit, sounds muddy when alone, and is, at times, a bit too loud compared with Prey’s voice. (It’s better in the stereo mix than in the faux-5.1 version.) The piano sound is better for Winterreise. Prey, however, sounds excellent; his voice comes through clearly and the smooth character of his singing is evident with each word. At times, though, the sound is very strange. In Der Atlas, the second song of Schwanengesang, Prey’s voice suddenly sounds strident, as though there were a problem with the recording. It is much louder than the previous song in that cycle (and the songs in Die Schöne Müllerin), and sounds as though he was miked differently. The rest of the songs sound normal, though occasionally, in the louder sections, the levels go into the red.

So what about the performances? Prey is pretty darned good in these song cycles. I’ve heard many singers tackle them, and Prey is one of those who sings these works without exaggeration or misplaced mannerisms. He may seem a bit wooden when singing, but this betrays a certain stability in his approach. While he can be forceful when necessary, and lyrical when the music calls for it, he seems to find the right balance for most of the songs. This is a wonderful set, with all three of the cycles recorded in similar circumstances and close together, though it’s a shame they weren’t recorded a decade earlier, when Prey was truly in his prime.

For those unfamiliar with Hermann Prey, this is a wonderful way to get to know this great singer. For those who know his work, this set is a must-have. Prey shows here that he can rival the best.

Here is a clip from the Winterreise video; Hermann Prey sings Gefrorne Tränen:



Posted: 8/29/2012 by Kirk | Filed under: DVDs and Blu-Rays, Videos Tags: Die schöne Müllerin, Hermann Prey, Schwanengesang, Winterreise | No Comments  »

Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau Sings Der Leiermann from Winterreise

Here’s a video of Fischer-Dieskau singing one of Schubert’s finest songs, Der Leiermann from Winterreise.



Posted: 8/29/2012 by Kirk | Filed under: Singers, Song Cycles, Songs, Videos Tags: Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Winterreise | 1 Comment »

Matthias Goerne Sings Wanderers Nachtlied

Filmed with a cellphone; the quality isn’t great, but the performance is excellent.



Posted: 8/27/2012 by Kirk | Filed under: Videos Tags: Matthias Goerne | No Comments  »

Dame Janet Baker Sings Schubert’s An die Musik

With Murray Perahia on piano…



Posted: 8/25/2012 by Kirk | Filed under: Videos Tags: Dame Janet Baker | No Comments  »
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