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Schubert: Winterreise
Mark Padmore, Paul Lewis
Schubert: Winterreise
Genres: Pop, Classical
 
Tenor Mark Padmore and pianist Paul Lewis perform one of the greatest song-cycles ever.

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Mark Padmore, Paul Lewis
Title: Schubert: Winterreise
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Harmonia Mundi
Release Date: 9/8/2009
Album Type: Import
Genres: Pop, Classical
Styles: Vocal Pop, Chamber Music, Historical Periods, Classical (c.1770-1830)
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 093046748425

Synopsis

Album Description
Tenor Mark Padmore and pianist Paul Lewis perform one of the greatest song-cycles ever.
 

CD Reviews

Consistently beautiful and sensitive -- but Winterreise asks
Santa Fe Listener | Santa Fe, NM USA | 12/10/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Although a reviewer below declares that Mark Padmore is the best contemporary tenor for lieder singing, his reputation stands far below his fellow Englishman's, Ian Bostridge. Both have that piping, heady timbre that is beloved in the British Isles, a grown-up version of the choir boy. I barely endure such a voice, to be frank, and therefore Padmore is barely on my radar. But recent exposure to him as the Evangelist in Bach's St. John Passion made me sit up, and curiosity attracted me to this new Winterreise.



What does Padmore have going for him? First, a rising star at the piano. Paul Lewis is already renowned in Britain; he's cut from the same classical cloth as his mentor, Alfred Brendel, himself a noted lieder accompanist. Right off, one notices that Lewis is listening to his singer and making small expressive adjustments in phrasing. That's a big plus -- too many celebrity accompanists forge ahead without a flexible regard for the vocal line. As for Padmore himself, he's sensitive and musical. Schubert wrote Winterreise for a light tenor, yet over the years the tragic import of the cycle has drawn heavier voices to it. One must admit that when he sings loud or tries to be forceful, Padmore's vocal lightness lets him down. Soft and poignant is his natural domain, as another previous reviewer notes. Lewis remains too reticent, no doubt to be in harmony with Padmore. Winterreise asks for a passionate cry from the heart, and it's not quite there.



The same reviewer says, and I agree, that this Winterreise doesn't build; Padmore's style remains essentially the same from beginning to end. Bostridge outdoes him in variety and intensity of expression. For real dramatic impact, one must turn to tenors on the order of Peter Pears and Peter Schreier, or if you want a voice as light as Padmore's, the excellent German, Werner Gura. This CD was greeted like the second coming in Britain, but I'm by no means convinced."
A mutilation of Schubert
Michael Lorenz | Wien | 01/08/2010
(1 out of 5 stars)

"What on earth will Alfred Brendel say when he hears this? Paul Lewis plays like a totally ignorant musically illiterate beginner. In "Wasserflut" he applies the infamous 'flexible dotting', turning the notes in the left hand into triplets (a nonsensical interpretion that has justly been derided by recent Schubert scholarship). In "Der Leiermann" he plays a completely different text than the one Schubert wrote: first he plays the grace note in the first two bars ON THE BEAT which is simply wrong, sounds just awful and is total nonsense here. And second (and I couldn't believe my ears first), he CONTINUES to play the dissonant note (the sharp fourth together with the fifth) on the first eighth note of the dotted half notes throughout the whole song (as if Schubert had written "segue" into the score and the whole song were an "ad libitum number"). Consequently the whole cycle now has to end with a dissonant chord instead of A minor. Schubert is rotating in his grave while the journalists praise this crap and consumers happily buy it!"
A Winterreise for some, but not for everyone
Bella | UK | 10/28/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)

"
Although I very much admire Padmore in Baroque repertoire, his lieder rarely wholly involves me; I like the soft singing in this Winterreise, and Lewis's piano playing is wonderful, but I feel I am listening to fine songs sensitively, at times poignantly, performed, rather than compelled to participate in an increasingly bleak journey. Maybe I just prefer less art and more edge."