Beethoven: In questa tomba oscura, Adelaide, An die ferne Geliebte, Scottish & Irisch Songs André Schuen & Boulanger Trio

Cover Beethoven: In questa tomba oscura, Adelaide, An die ferne Geliebte, Scottish & Irisch Songs

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2017

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
14.07.2017

Label: CAvi-music

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Chamber Music

Interpret: André Schuen & Boulanger Trio

Komponist: Ludwig van Beethoven (1770–1827)

Das Album enthält Albumcover Booklet (PDF)

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FLAC 48 $ 13,50
  • Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 - 1827):
  • 1 Adelaide, Op. 46 05:40
  • 2 An die ferne Geliebte, Op. 98 13:59
  • 3 In questa tomba oscura, WoP 133 03:41
  • 4 Scottish Songs, Op. 108: No. 2. Sunset 03:51
  • 5 Scottish Songs, Op. 108: No. 3. O sweet were the hours 04:46
  • 6 Scottish Songs, Op. 108: No. 5. The sweetest lad was Jamie 01:47
  • 7 Scottish Songs, Op. 108: No. 16. Could this ill world have been contriv'd 02:51
  • 8 Scottish Songs, Op. 108: No. 20. Faithfu' Johnie 04:47
  • 9 Scottish Songs, Op. 108: No. 13. Come fill, fill, my good fellow 02:17
  • 10 Irish Songs, WoO 152: IX. The soldier's dream 05:06
  • 11 Irish Songs, WoO 152: X. The deserter 01:35
  • 12 Irish Songs, WoO 152: V. Ton the massacre of Gelncoe 02:18
  • 13 Irish Songs, WoO 152: XV. The brainspinnings Swans 02:07
  • 14 Irish Songs, WoO 156: XII. Polly Stewart 02:01
  • 15 Irish Songs, WoO 154: IV. The pulse of an Irishman ever beats quicker 02:37
  • 16 Irish Songs, WOO 153: IV. Since greybeards inform us that youth will decay 01:42
  • 17 Irish Songs, WoO 152: XXI. Morning a cruel turmoiler is 01:52
  • Total Runtime 01:02:57

Info zu Beethoven: In questa tomba oscura, Adelaide, An die ferne Geliebte, Scottish & Irisch Songs

Art song had blossomed into a multifaceted genre by 1800, and the debate whether to favour recurrent stanza structures or through-composed form was well underway. Lieder, as the lyrical genre per se, marked out the territory in which musicians could express the most profound emotions. The best composers therefore increasingly chose to through-compose their songs – a logical step, thanks to which they were able to closely follow the content and the speech of the poems they were setting to music. Beethoven already took that very step in his earliest Lieder. The emotional value of a song such as Adelaide op. 46 (1795/96) even managed to convince a late-19th-century Vienna music critic otherwise well known for his harshness – Eduard Hanslick, who wrote in 1886: “No depiction of a youth’s enthusiastic love could be more faithful and exemplary than this Adelaide by Beethoven. What sweet, secret bliss shivers in every note of this golden melody! Perhaps the young man is not even ‘blushingly following her footsteps’ like Schiller’s suitor [in The Song of the Bell ]. Instead, this lover seems to be content to inebriate himself with his beloved’s mere name, to which he renders such profuse homage.”

Beethoven originally called his setting of Matthisson’s poem a “cantata”, and Adelaide introduced a theme that would play a major role in the composer’s subsequent Lieder output: his yearning for the unattainable. No other work conveys that same subject more impressively than the one Beethoven wrote in 1816: To the Distant Beloved, op. 98, a setting of a “romantic-pastoral text” (Maynard Solomon, 1977) by Alois Jeitteles, and the first truly through-composed song cycle in music history. The songs in this cycle cannot be singled out for individual performance, since they are connected by transitions in the piano accompaniment. Schubert never took up the same idea, but it served all the more so as a model for Robert Schumann and for subsequent generations of Lied composers. Beethoven would later apply the same cyclic concept, displayed in such exemplary fashion in To the Distant Beloved, in several of his late chamber music works…

His contribution can be described as new arrangements and harmonizations of pre-existing melodies. These were true “songs without words”, since considerations of language could not be taken into account. Beethoven’s correspondence with Thomson shows, however, that he was quite pleased with this modus operandi (although the Irish Songs WoO 152-154, conversely, did allow for a closer association between text and music).

André Schuen, baritone
Boulanger Trio



Keine Biografie vorhanden.

Booklet für Beethoven: In questa tomba oscura, Adelaide, An die ferne Geliebte, Scottish & Irisch Songs

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