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R. Strauss: Die Liebe der Danae
Richard Strauss, Ulrich Windfuhr, Uhl
R. Strauss: Die Liebe der Danae
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (14) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (21) - Disc #2
  •  Track Listings (34) - Disc #3


     
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CD Details

All Artists: Richard Strauss, Ulrich Windfuhr, Uhl, Chafin
Title: R. Strauss: Die Liebe der Danae
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Cpo Records
Release Date: 3/16/2004
Genre: Classical
Style: Opera & Classical Vocal
Number of Discs: 4
SwapaCD Credits: 4
UPC: 761203996728
 

CD Reviews

Beautiful work, unforgivable singing
Finnamon | New York, NY United States | 08/15/2004
(1 out of 5 stars)

"This is a masterpiece that deserves better. Of all the singers, Grundheber is the only one who comes close. Manuela Uhl should be forever banned from the operatic stage. Her singing is curdled, foul and distinctly unradiant. The duet with Xanthe in the first act, just to cite one example, sounds like two alley cats in heat. And what a pity, since this work is THE neglected gem in Strauss' operatic oeuvre. Do yourself a favor and scare up the old Clemens Krauss live recording from 1952. Annelies Kupper is positively radiant in the title role and Paul Schoeffler is magisterial as Jupiter and every member of the supporting cast sings with conviction and taste and in tune, none of which is true of any of the supporting cast here. And Krauss serves Strauss like very few conductors before or since. The only reason to get this performance would be for the sound, and even in that regard, the fidelity in the 1952 recording is suprisingly high. So skip this and anytime you see the name Manuela Uhl, run screaming as if from a burning building."
The best performance of the greatest opera ever written
Eric Zuesse | USA | 12/20/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Not only is this the best performance, but unlike the Krauss its dynamics aren't compressed, and so the effect is what the conductor wanted, and not what some engineer did.



As a result, this superbly conducted performance carries the listener along the huge structural arcs which Strauss built into this his greatest work, up the highest of Alpine peaks, and higher, into the stratosphere, and finally out into ethereal space, looking back upon our speck in the universe.



This symphonic opera is best listened to without paying attention to the words sung by singers, as simply a symphony for huge orchestra, with accompanying vocal soloists. No greater symphony exists, not even Bruckner's.



This orchestral/vocal symphony is wise, ecstatic, and transcendent, a goodbye to life, from a man whose inner world was not just indescribably beautiful but was remarkably independent from the tumultuous circumstances through which he lived. It cements Richard Strauss's status as the greatest of all composers, irrespective of his humble joke that he was the world's best second-rate opera composer -- a joke which the many foolish and insensitive musical commentators still take seriously.



This work, even more than Capriccio, Elektra, the Four Last Songs, the late second sinfonietta for winds, and his other sublime peaks, establishes Strauss's unsurpassed stature: the most essential of all composers.



We must therefore be grateful to cpo and Ulrich Windfuhr for finally introducing this work to the public in a way that's adequate to its immense challenges. After hearing this set, and being stunned by it, I bought a second copy, so that I'll still have this performance even if the first copy wears out or if this recording is tragically remaindered."