Recordings
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Schumann: Kerner Lieder & Liederkreis
CDH55011
Helios (Hyperion's budget label)
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Schumann: Liederkreis Opp 24 & 39
CDA67944
Studio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
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Schumann: The Complete Songs
CDS44441/50
10CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
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Details
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No 01: In der Fremde
Aus der Heimat hinter den Blitzen rot
No 02: Intermezzo
Dein Bildnis wunderselig
No 03: Waldesgespräch
Es ist schon spät, es ist schon kalt
No 04: Die Stille
Es weiß und rät es doch Keiner
No 05: Mondnacht
Es war, als hätt' der Himmel
No 06: Schöne Fremde
Es rauschen die Wipfel und schauern
No 07: Auf einer Burg
Eingeschlafen auf der Lauer
No 08: In der Fremde
Ich hör' die Bächlein rauschen
No 09: Wehmut
Ich kann wohl manchmal singen
No 10: Zwielicht
Dämmrung will die Flügel spreiten
No 11: Im Walde
Es zog eine Hochzeit den Berg entlang
No 12: Frühlingsnacht
Überm Garten durch die Lüfte
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The opening ‘In der Fremde’ is typical in its expression of estrangement and nostalgia amid a dark, woodland landscape. Schumann’s tune has a haunting pathos, discreetly heightened by its gently rippling arpeggio accompaniment. The German forest is at its most sinister in ‘Waldesgespräch’ (No 3), a variation on the Lorelei myth, with its dramatically timed moment of recognition and ironically echoing hunting-horns (dying away eerily in the piano postlude), and again in ‘Zwielicht’ (No 10). Here the keyboard part coils around the voice like a tortuous Bach three-part invention, with an oppressive chromaticism that threatens to dissolve familiar tonal outlines. ‘Auf einer Burg’ evokes a mysterious antiquity with its gloomy, incantatory vocal line, modal harmonies and solemn touches of canonic imitation. In the penultimate song, ‘Im Walde’, the wedding and the hunt, evoked as if through a gauze in Schumann’s music, suddenly fade, leaving only the sighing forest and the poet’s nameless fears amid the darkening inner and outer landscapes.
At the other end of the spectrum, ‘Intermezzo’ (No 2) is an increasingly impassioned avowal of love to Clara, growing from a falling five-note figure Schumann often associated with her. ‘Die Stille’ is a more secretive—and feminine—confession (the German title means both ‘stillness’ and ‘the silent girl’), with a sudden soaring at ‘Ich wünscht’, ich wär’ ein Vöglein’. ‘Schöne Fremde’ (No 6) and ‘Frühlingsnacht’(No 12), with its evanescent wisps of countermelody and triumphant final ‘sie ist Dein!’, are shimmering visions of physical and spiritual elation, while ‘Mondnacht’ (No 5) is perhaps the world’s loveliest vocal nocturne. Here Schumann magically delays the resolution on to the tonic chord until ‘Die Erde’ in bar ten, the moment of mystical-erotic union between sky and earth, Robert and Clara.
from notes by Richard Wigmore © 2012