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FANNY CACILIE HENSEL (NEE MENDELSSOHN)
1.
Morgenständchen Op.1, No.5
2:07
Solo:Susana Gaspar soprano
2.
Ich Kann Wohl Manchmal Singen
2:23
Solo:Gary Griffiths baritone
3.
Im Herbst
2:25
Solo:Gary Griffiths baritone
4.
Vorwurf Op.10, No.2
2:39
Solo:Gary Griffiths baritone
5.
Traurige Wege
3:47
Solo:Manuel Walser baritone
6.
Der Eichwald Brauset
1:20
Solo:Susana Gaspar soprano
7.
Gegenwart
3:22
Solo:Gary Griffiths baritone
8.
Gleich Merlin, Dem Eitlen Weisen
1:49
Solo:Manuel Walser baritone
9.
Das Meer Erglänzte Weit Hinaus
3:02
Solo:Manuel Walser
10.
Fichtenbaum Und Palme
2:21
Solo:Manuel Walser
11.
Warum Sing Denn Die Rosen So Blass Op.1, No.3
1:22
Solo:Kitty Whately mezzo-soprano
12.
Die Frühen Gräber Op.9, No.4
4:09
Solo:Susana Gaspar soprano
13.
Warum Sind Denn Die Rosen So Blass, Op.1, No.3
2:13
Solo:Kitty Whately mezzo-soprano
14.
Harfners Lied
2:17
Solo:Manuel Walser baritone
15.
Dämmrung Senkte Sich Von Oben
2:22
Solo:Manuel Walser
16.
Suleika
3:02
Solo:Susana Gaspar soprano
17.
Die Schiffende
3:38
Solo:Susana Gaspar
18.
Kein Blick Der Hoffnung
1:47
Solo:Gary Griffiths baritone
19.
Die Mainacht Op.9, No.6
3:37
Solo:Susana Gaspar
20.
Über Allen Gipfeln Ist Ruh
1:32
Solo:Manuel Walser
21.
Wanderers Nachtlied
2:27
Solo:Manuel Walser
22.
Nach Süden Op.10, No.1
2:00
Kitty Whately
23.
Wanderlied Op.1, No.2
1:55
Solo:Kitty Whately Kitty Whately
24.
Bergeslust Op.10, No.5
1:45
Solo:Susana Gaspar Susana Gaspar
Total time: 59:21
Solo:Susana Gaspar soprano
Solo:Gary Griffiths baritone
Solo:Manuel Walser baritone
Solo:Kitty Whately mezzo-soprano
2nd-3rd December 2013, 16th-17th March 2015 and 6th-9th July 2015
About
For this third volume in a complete survey of Mendelssohn songs, Malcolm Martineau shines the spotlight on ‘the other Mendelssohn’, with a complete volume of songs by his sister Fanny Hensel. Her professional attitude to domestic music-making is described by Martineau as ‘revolutionary’ and her early death, within five months of her celebrated brother, was a great loss to the musical world.
Despite his enthusiasm and support for her work, Felix Mendelssohn did not approve of her publishing her work – but thankfully for us, she defied it, daring to publish her Opus 1 songs under her own name a year before her death in 1847.
For many years her music was appraised in the context of her brother’s work, considered as lesser clones of his output. Now that more of her work is known, that opinion has changed thanks to work by scholars including Steven Rogers pointing to Fanny’s Bachian voice-leading in numerous passages, her complex interweaving of voice and piano parts, and more intense chromaticism than her brother achieves.
The settings are of spring songs, of poetry by Eichendorff, Lenau, Schiller, Goethe and even Heine who she knew personally but did not like, but admitted to be a great poet.
Malcolm Martineau has assembled, as always, a cast of wonderful young singers for this refreshing and important repertoire.
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