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WILHELM KIENZL
(1857-1941)
premiere recording
1.
Es tont ein voller Harfenklang
3:30
No. 2 from Zwei Lieder, Op. 2
Mäßig - Più mosso - Leidenschaftlich - Adagio - Sehr langsam
Solo:Jochen Kupfer baritone
premiere recording
2.
Lenz!
1:14
No. 1 from Frühlingslieder, Op. 33
Freudig bewegt
Solo:Carsten Suss tenor
premiere recording
3.
Hochzeitslied
1:04
No. 6 from Neun Lieder im Volkston, Op. 6
Mäßig schnell und zierlich
Solo:Christiane Libor soprano
premiere recording
4.
Die verschwiegene Nachtigall
2:30
No. 1 from Neun Lieder im Volkston, Op. 6
Naiv und einfach
Solo:Christiane Libor soprano
premiere recording
5.
Die blauen Husaren
1:14
No. 2 from Neun Lieder im Volkston, Op. 6
Frisch und heiter
Solo:Jochen Kupfer baritone
premiere recording
6.
Wehmut
2:44
No. 2 from Acht Lieder der Liebe, Op. 8
Sehr langsam
Solo:Jochen Kupfer baritone
premiere recording
7.
Im Glucke
2:27
No. 3 from Geliebt - Vergessen!, Op. 18
Ruhig und innig
Solo:Jochen Kupfer baritone
8.
Gesunden
3:13
No. 8 from Geliebt - Vergessen!, Op. 18
Ziemlich langsam, doch nicht schleppend - Mit höchstem Ausdrucke -
Solo:Carsten Suss tenor
9.
Deingedenken
3:30
No. 5 froom Geliebt - Vergessen!, Op. 18
Langsam und sehr ruhig
Solo:Carsten Suss tenor
10.
Traumesahnung
1:57
No. 6 from Geliebt - Vergessen!, Op. 18
Sehr rasch, wild erregt und wirr
Solo:Carsten Suss tenor
premiere recording
11.
Triftiger Grund
1:46
No. 2 from Zwei Lieder, Op. 37
Lebhaft
Solo:Christiane Libor soprano
12.
Sehnsucht nach Vergessen
3:44
No. 1 from Zwei Lieder, Op. 39
Mäßig; ausdrucksvoll
Solo:Christiane Libor soprano
premiere recording
13.
Mephistopheles' Lied in Auerbachs Keller
1:52
No. 2 from Drei Lieder, Op. 25
Mit viel Humor; ein wenig outrirt - Etwas breiter -
Solo:Jochen Kupfer baritone
premiere recording
14.
Der Leiermann
2:31
No. 1 from Zwei Lieder, Op. 38
Langsam
Solo:Carsten Suss tenor
premiere recording
15.
Roslein und Schmetterling
1:51
No. 2 from Drei Lieder, Op. 32
[ ] - Langsamer - Tempo I - Ein wenig langsamer - Viel langsamer
Solo:Christiane Libor soprano
premiere recording
16.
Der Kuss
1:18
No. 2 from Drei Volkslieder, Op. 31
Leicht bewegt; liedenschaftlich; dabei ein wenig humoristisch - Etwas ruhiger - Erstes Zeitmaß
Solo:Carsten Suss tenor
premiere recording
17.
Romanze
2:59
No. 1 from Zwei Lieder aus Osten, Op. 36
Langsam; mit Glut - Langsamer
Solo:Christiane Libor soprano
premiere recording
18.
Der Tambourinspieler
2:00
No. 2 from Zwei Lieder aus Osten, Op. 35
Nicht zu rasch; sehr graziös
Solo:Christiane Libor soprano
premiere recording
19.
Die Urgrossmutter
2:23
No. 2 from Zwei Lieder, Op. 42
Mäßig - Langsamer - Tempo I
Solo:Christiane Libor soprano
premiere recording
20.
Jung Werners Lied
2:52
No. 1 from Drei Lieder, Op. 32
Sehr langsam und ruhig - Ruhiger
Solo:Carsten Suss tenor
premiere recording
21.
An die Nacht
5:12
No. 1 from Sechs Lieder, Op. 55
Sehr langsam
Solo:Jochen Kupfer baritone
22.
Augenblicke
5:13
No. 2 from Sechs Lieder, Op. 55
Langsam, düster
Solo:Jochen Kupfer baritone
23.
Abendlied
2:41
No. 6 from Sechs Lieder, Op. 55
Mäßig
Solo:Carsten Suss tenor
premiere recording
24.
Asphodelen
3:50
No. 1 from Drei Gesänge mit Harmonium- oder Klavierbegleitung, Op. 69a
Mäßig
Solo:Jochen Kupfer baritone
premiere recording
25.
Letzte Reise
3:59
No. 1 from Drei Gesänge mit Harmonium- oder Klavierbegleitung, Op. 69a
Sehr langsam
Solo:Jochen Kupfer baritone
67:47
Solo:Stacey Bartsch piano
16, 17, 23 and 24 February 2008
About
KIENZL: LIEDER, VOL. 1
A composer of the romantic, post-Wagner era, Wilhelm Kienzl was active as a music director in his native Austria, The Netherlands, and Germany and was also as an author of distinction. He will perhaps be best remembered for his compositions for the voice. He wrote nine operas, much piano and chamber music, and about 200 songs, or Lieder. The selection of Lieder on this CD spans the earlier part of his career but demonstrates his impeccable literary taste and masterful pianistic proficiency. There are settings of classic poems by Goethe, Eichendorff, Heine, and Lenau, as well as the more contemporary Robert Hamerling. The pianist Stacey Bartsch has put together a deeply engaging programme for the soprano Christiane Libor, tenor Carsten Süss, and baritone Jochen Kupfer, and proves to be a phenomenally accomplished and sensitive interpreter of Kienzl’s music. The singers are all fine performers, steeped in the Lieder tradition. These are striking and imaginative works, beautifully presented. If you like the Lieder of Schubert, Schumann, and Brahms you will love these songs by Kienzl.
This is Volume 1 in a planned series of two, devoted to the rarely recorded but striking and imaginative Lieder by Wilhelm Kienzl, a composer of the romantic post-Wagner era. The works are performed by artists steeped in the Lieder tradition: Christiane Libor, Carsten Süss, Jochen Kupfer, and Stacey Bartsch.
Kienzl was an active music director in Austria, The Netherlands, and Germany, and a noted author. His autobiographical volume, Aus Kunst und Leben (1904), is valuable for his recollections of Wagner, Wolf, Smetana, Johann Strauss, Brahms, Verdi, and Loewe, and his collection of music criticism, Im Konzert (1908), shows him to have been an independent-minded musician who was open to the new music being created by his contemporaries. But above all, Kienzl was a composer for the voice, and chiefly known for his operas, the extremely popular Der Evangelimann in particular. He also wrote piano and chamber music, including three string quartets, and well over 200 songs (Lieder), a genre to which he added right up until his last years.
The selection of Lieder on this recording span the earlier part of Kienzl’s career and shows him to have had impeccable literary taste. The settings include classic poems by the likes of Goethe, Eichendorff, Heine, and Lenau to contemporaries such as Robert Hamerling, and to folk-like texts by Elisabeth, the Queen of Romania, and others.
The Heine poem that Kienzl entitles ‘Traumesahnung’ also appears in Schubert’s Schwanengesang as ‘Ihr Bild’. Kienzl’s setting is very different from Schubert’s, but emotionally very powerful: the rushing, turbulent semi-quavers of the piano part and the vocal part sharply evoke a sense of loss and desolation.
In contrast, Kienzl’s ‘Lenz!’ the first of a set of 4 Frühlingslieder to words by Sophie von Khuenberg, is a rippling stream of bubbling arpeggios that propels the joyous passions of this high-spirited spring song. ‘Gesunden’ is an altogether more ambitious song, built of several elements, including the triplet accompaniment, the left-hand piano motif at the beginning, and the singer’s soaring melody. This is arguably one of Kienzl’s finest songs.
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Reviews
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Roberto Brusotti - Musica - November 2011
"... you will miss some fine music if you don’t explore the music of this largely forgotten composer. I will welcome the planned second volume The recorded sound is clear and spacious ..."
R Moore - American Record Guide - November/December 2011
“It’s the more extended songs which reveal Kienzl at his most impressive” “Of the singers,Christiane Libor and Carsten Süss are alive to poetic and dramatic nuances. German baritone Jochen Kupfer, warm and mellifluous, is outstanding in all he does. The fine Australian-born pianist Stacey Bartsch doubles as a record producer.”
Peter Palmer – Tempo – October 2011
"... Chandos has engaged three very fine singers for this project. Tenor Carsten Süss He’s very sensitive to the texts and is a fine musician Baritone Jochen Kupfer is a rich-voiced, communicative Lieder singer, and the beautiful, sensuous singing and interpretative skill of Christiane Libor are an absolute delight. Pianist Stacey Bartsch plays masterfully ..."
Paul Orgel - Fanfare - September/October 2011
“...The lieder of this largely forgotten composer are well investigating this disc is recommended to any inquisitive Lieder lover inclined to investigate what Calum MacDonald, in his stimulating notes, aptly dubs Kienzel’s “unassuming but echt-romantic style””
Richard Wigmore – Gramophone – July 2011
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