Beethoven / Reicha: Egmont / Lenore
Orfeo - MP 1903
Wykonawcy
Lenore - Camilla Nylund, soprano
Mutter - Pavia Vykopalova, mezzo-soprano
Erzahler - Corby Welch, tenor
Wilhelm - Vladimir Chmelo, bass
Ruth Ziesak, soprano
Ulrich Tukur, narrator
Prague Chamber Choir
Virtuosi di Praga / Frieder Bernius
Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg / Gerd Albrecht
Lenore - Camilla Nylund, soprano
Mutter - Pavia Vykopalova, mezzo-soprano
Erzahler - Corby Welch, tenor
Wilhelm - Vladimir Chmelo, bass
Ruth Ziesak, soprano
Ulrich Tukur, narrator
Prague Chamber Choir
Virtuosi di Praga / Frieder Bernius
Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg / Gerd Albrecht
Utwory na płycie:
- Lenore, musical tableau for soloists, chorus & orchestra: Ouverüre
- Lenore fuhr uns Morgenrot.
- Er war mit König Friedrichs Macht
- Der König und die Kaiserin.
- Ach! Aber für Lenoren.
- Die Mutter lief wohl hin zu ihr.
- O Mutter, Mutter! Hin ist hin!
- So wütete Verzweifelung.
- Und außen, horch! ging's trap trap trap.
- Holla, Holla! Tu auf, mein Kind.
- Schön Liebchen schürzte, sprang und schwang.
- Und hurre hurre, hop hop hop!
- Was klang dort für Gesang und Klang?
- Laßt uns den Lieb begraben!
- Totenmarsch - Und näher zog ein Leichenzug.
- Still Klang und Sang. - Die Bahre schwand.
CD 1:
Ludwig van Beethoven:
Leonoren-Ouvertüre No. 2, Op. 72
Egmont, Op. 84 - Music to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's Tragedy
CD 2:
Leonre - Dramatic Cantata on the text of the ballad by Gottfried August Bürger
Ludwig van Beethoven:
Leonoren-Ouvertüre No. 2, Op. 72
Egmont, Op. 84 - Music to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's Tragedy
CD 2:
Leonre - Dramatic Cantata on the text of the ballad by Gottfried August Bürger
While Ludwig van Beethoven’s only opera Fidelio remains at home timelessly on all the major stages, concert audiences are usually only aware of the relevant overtures of the other stage music by the great composer. However, the eminently appealing music of Egmont with its beautiful and catchy songs and its energetic and melodious orchestral scores might be considered as Beethoven’s most interesting and worthwhile stage music after Fidelio.
Antonín Reicha’s dramatic cantata Lenore is the musical setting of the eponymous horror ballade by the German poet Gottfried August Bürger, famous today above all as the author of the tales concerning the Baron of the Lies, Münchhausen. In comparison with Beethoven (who is said greatly to have admired Reicha’s Lenore and even to have recommended it be performed), in musical terms Reicha’s cantata does not point into the future despite all its onomatopoetic effects, but takes its bearings audibly from the epic oratorio style of Reicha’s mentor and friend, Joseph Haydn.
Recordings: Musikhalle Hamburg, 14.-15.10.1991 (CD 1); Prague, Studio Korunni 60, 24.-27.11.2001 (CD 2).
Antonín Reicha’s dramatic cantata Lenore is the musical setting of the eponymous horror ballade by the German poet Gottfried August Bürger, famous today above all as the author of the tales concerning the Baron of the Lies, Münchhausen. In comparison with Beethoven (who is said greatly to have admired Reicha’s Lenore and even to have recommended it be performed), in musical terms Reicha’s cantata does not point into the future despite all its onomatopoetic effects, but takes its bearings audibly from the epic oratorio style of Reicha’s mentor and friend, Joseph Haydn.
Recordings: Musikhalle Hamburg, 14.-15.10.1991 (CD 1); Prague, Studio Korunni 60, 24.-27.11.2001 (CD 2).