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About
Throughout history men have feared madwomen, burning them as witches, confining them in asylums and subjecting them to psychoanalysis – yet, they have also been fascinated, unable to resist fantasizing about them. For their new disc, Carolyn Sampson and Joseph Middleton have created a programme that explores the responses of a variety of composers to women whose stories have left them vulnerable and exposed. As a motto they have chosen an aphorism by Nietzsche: ‘There is always some madness in love, but there is also always some reason in madness.’
Brahms’ Ophelia Songs, composed for a stage production of Hamlet, appear next to those by Richard Strauss and Chausson, while Ophelia's death is described by both Schumann (in Herzeleid) and Saint-Saëns. Goethe’s mysterious and traumatized Mignon appears in settings by Hugo Wolf as well as Duparc, while his ill-used Gretchen grieves by her spinning-wheel in Schubert's matchless setting. Sadness and madness tip into witchery and unbridled eroticism with Pierre Louÿs's poems about Bilitis, set by Kœchlin and Debussy. Sampson and Middleton end their recital as it began, with a suicide by drowning: in Poulenc’s monologue La Dame de Monte-Carlo, the elderly female protagonist has been unlucky at the gambling tables and decides to throw herself into the sea.
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Reviews
Choc de Classica
Alexandra Genin - Classica magazine (France) - September 2019
Performance **** Recording *****
"... Sampson's mix of silken tonal quality and cutting dramatic instincts makes the journey a compelling one, and in Joseph Middleton she has an accompanist who constantly brings extra illumination without barging obtrusively into the spotlight."
Terry Blain - BBC Music magazine - July 2019
"... a fine recital indeed."
Tim Ashley – Gramophone magazine – June 2019
"... a brilliantly assembled exploration of how female madness has fascinated male poets and composers... all performed with Sampson's wonted freshness of tone, superb control and subtle sensuality, with Middleton offering vibrant support."
Erica Jeal - The Guardian - 5 April 2019
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