P. S. Maybe it makes a difference if you're not listening on headphones, but...
Lisa Hirsch's Classical Music Blog.
The iron tongue of midnight hath told twelve. Lovers, to bed; 'tis almost fairy time.
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Ô puissante mer, l’enfant de Dindyme!
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
One CD I Won't Be Buying
Alex Ross saved me $17 by posting the first cut from Mark Padmore and Paul Lewis's new recording of Winterreise. Padmore's voice hasn't got much body and becomes tremulous under pressure, which seems to mean anything above about mezzo-piano. "Gute Nacht" is subdued, and I really, really don't want to hear what happens when Padmore sings "Die Wetterfahne" or "Rückblick" or any of the songs that require some power.
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12 comments:
I just listened through my computer's built-in speakers and I won't be buying this version either. Besides the strange vocal mannerisms (which is what I think they might be, rather than physical failings) the phrasing, starting with the piano intro, strikes me as fussy--why the fourth-beat fermata in Measure 3 and at similar points in the accompaniment?
I put on Matthias Goerne for an ear-cleanser. I might disagree with scattered choices he makes, but there's no sense with him of "GOD NO, TAKE IT OFF!!"
I'm with you. Fey is not what I'm after.
I mentioned Padmore to a friend who said "Yech is exactly right!"
Hmmmm. . . . and I bought a ticket to hear him sing Winterreise in New York! He's doing it in English translation, interspersed with reading from Samuel Beckett. Well, I will hope for the best.
I look forward to your blog posting about that performance!
Hermann Prey was quoted a few years back as saying the first six (I think) songs in the cycle should be at exactly the same tempo; his "Gute nacht" is rhythmically very regular, though by no means unvarying in color and expression, suggesting (I guess) that the traveler is setting forth with a firm step. I like Prey's version, haven't heard Bostridge's--anybody have an opinion on it?
That's nuts - there is no way that "Erstarrung" and "Gute Nacht" should be sung at the same tempo, to take just two of the first six songs. Does Prey actually sing them that way?
You want real tenors in this. Schreier as a golden mean, Anders if you want wild and committed. For me, nothing less will do. Padmore sounds like he's studied it but not ingested. And the reaction of a friend to his Handel was 'he sounds as if he's had sand kicked in his face'.
He is a good musician, though, and a lot better than Bostridge. But should never have recorded this, surely. And Lewis is far too mimsy, too. Sounds like he's done the stylistic quirk in the Organ Grinder's music just to say wake up, I'm doing something interesting.
Oh, boy, those are violent reactions!
What does "mimsy" mean in this context? Fussy/mannered?
Weedy, wet. Actually he does the watery stuff very well, but never bites.
Ha, I would have suggest "miasmic" for "weedy, wet"!
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