Recordings
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Schubert: The Complete Songs
CDS44201/40
40CDs Boxed set + book (at a special price)
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Details
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No 1: Auf dem Hügel sitz' ich, spähend
Track 20 on CDJ33051/3
CD1 [2'45]
3CDs
No 2: Wo die Berge so blau
Track 21 on CDJ33051/3
CD1 [1'46]
3CDs
No 3: Leichte Segler in den Höhen
Track 22 on CDJ33051/3
CD1 [1'50]
3CDs
No 4: Diese Wolken in den Höhen
Track 23 on CDJ33051/3
CD1 [1'06]
3CDs
No 5: Es kehret der Maien, es blühet die Au
Track 24 on CDJ33051/3
CD1 [2'24]
3CDs
No 6: Nimm sie hin denn, diese Lieder
Track 25 on CDJ33051/3
CD1 [3'56]
3CDs
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All six poems concern the feelings of love as translated through nature – or at least the kind of idealized countryside vistas that had already been immortalized in the ‘Pastoral’ Symphony. All are cast in strophic form except the last, but Beethoven constantly varies and develops his accompaniments. Although these musical changes are not entirely for poetic reasons, they nevertheless help create a sense of progressive musical architecture totally denied strict strophic form.
Beethoven’s poetic sensitivity extends to such lengths as Wo die Berge so blau being kept on an uncomplicated harmonic leash until the words ‘Innere Pein’. Similarly, the move to the tonic minor for the last three stanzas of Leichte Segler in den Höhen is a moment of profound musical insight.
The cycle is quite literally brought full circle by the final song, which recalls material from the first. This technique was to prove a profound influence on the song cycles of Robert Schumann, who also concealed a number of other musical references to An die ferne Geliebte in his work, including the Beethovenian Fantasy in C, Op 17.
from notes by Julian Haylock © 1999