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Strauss: Four Last Songs
Richard [1] Strauss, Kurt Masur, Gewandhausorchester Leipzig
Strauss: Four Last Songs
Genres: Pop, Classical
 

     
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All Artists: Richard [1] Strauss, Kurt Masur, Gewandhausorchester Leipzig, Jessye Norman
Title: Strauss: Four Last Songs
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Philips
Release Date: 8/14/2007
Album Type: Original recording remastered
Genres: Pop, Classical
Styles: Vocal Pop, Opera & Classical Vocal
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 028947585077

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CD Reviews

The great Jessye
Desert Girl | 09/20/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Is Vier Letze Lieder better served by a lyric rather than a dramatic soprano? Jessye's profound reading of text is always deeply moving, and her supreme legato line and dark oceanic voice is a marvel to hear. She screeches a little on "wunder der vor mir" in Fruhling, and over-emphasizes or over-expresses "es zittert durch meine Glieden deine selige Gegenwart" at the end of the song, to its disadvantage, I feel. September is exquisitely sung and ends in poignant tenderness; the way she sculpts the line "Langsam tut er die mudgeword Augen zu" is enough to make you cry. In Beim Schlafengehen she forces her voice on the line "und die Seele, unbewacht", reaching for that pitch, but breaks your heart at the end with the sustained crescendo to forte on "zu leben." Jessye is good at the ending of songs. Im Abendrot is a slow, pensive meditation, and in the ending line "ist dies etwa der Tod? (can this be death?) she conveys a keen but almost delicate resignation and acceptance. I personally think the Four Last Songs are better with a voice lighter in tone and with a more effortless fluidity -- Strauss's extremely demanding tessitura demands such a nimble voice. However, this is a superb recording by a great American soprano, done in 1983, somewhere in mid-career. The orchestra under Kurt Masur is masterful and expressive. Having four versions of these songs (Norman, Te Kanawa, Schwarzkopf and Fleming), I think the Norman and Te Kanawa are, beyond a doubt, the best."
DIVINE
B. Martinez | 06/16/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"OK, so I'm NOT crazy. It seems everyone agrees, this is the most beautiful rendition of the four last songs recorded to date. When I first heard this album as a young man I was transported. I was obsessed! And I was very fortunate to meet Miss Norman at a Tower Records (remember Tower Records?) and she signed my copy of the sheet music! Put this album in your iPod, put in your ear buds, close your eyes and prepare to be lifted to the heavens!"
UNSURPASSABLE NORMAN
Douglas Modig | Sweden | 10/04/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"If I had to chose to bring two albums and obligated to discard of all the rest this is one of the recordings I would chose. These Lieder have been recorded by the best of the very best, ranging from Schwarzkopf to Ludwig, and, yet, none of them live up to Ms Norman's standard on this blessed album. Strauss was infatuated with Schwarzkopf but would have fallen in love head over heals had he ever had the oppurtunity to listen to Ms Norman.



First of all, let it be emphazied, the Leipziger Orchestra is outstanding. Ms Norman simply rests in one of the best musical renditions of Strauss' Lieder ever. The forceful Norman holds back and sings in a perfect German with a delicacy that gives credibility to every word of the lovely lyrics. She's not trying to sound German. She is German with an indepth understanding of Strauss and his ailments. She does him honor.



Ms Norman sings in a restrained, refined voice, freed from all traces of affectation and bravura, and the result is simply breathtaking.



Due to actual events and the austere Preussian tradition, everything German, including the langage, has been rejected globally for it's sternness and ugliness. This, however, is not true. German poetry, music and the language are actually very lyrical and rich and ms Norman lives up to every expectation.



Not being a German myself and previously somewhat reluctant to listen to most repertoire in the language, Ms Norman helped me cross the barrier and open up a whole world of wondrous things which she is able to transcend to a degree where one has to capitulate ( Strauss, Bach and Schubert Lieder).



Norman is great at languages. Her French is impeccable. But I believe her German is even better. This album contains some of her best work ever, as in the case of the Leipziger Orchestra. Simply outstanding ! Douglas Modig



This is art at it's peak."