Strauss, Zemlinsky, Ravel & Respighi Art nouveau Teodora Gheorghiu and Jonathan Aner

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2013

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
17.12.2013

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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FLAC 88.2 $ 15,40
  • Richard Strauss (1864-1949): Lieder op. 22 Nr. 1-4 (Mädchenblumen, nach Gedichten von Felix Dahn)
  • 1I. Kornblumen01:48
  • 2II. Mohnblumen01:41
  • 3III. Epheu02:56
  • 4IV. Wasserrose03:20
  • Lieder op. 67 Nr. 1-3 (Lieder der Ophelia)
  • 5I. Wie erkenn ich mein Treulieb vor andern nun?02:59
  • 6II. Guten Morgen's ist SanktValentinstag01:24
  • 7III. Sie trugen ihn auf der Bahre bloss03:41
  • Alexander Zemlinsky (1872-1942): Walzer-Gesänge nach toskanischen Volksliedern von Ferdinand Gregorovius op. 6
  • 8I. Liebe Schwalbe01:32
  • 9II. Klagen ist der Mond gekommen01:25
  • 10III. Fensterlein, nachts bist du zu01:05
  • 11IV. Ich geh' des Nachts00:59
  • 12V. Blaues Sternlein01:52
  • 13VI. Briefchen schrieb ich01:01
  • Maurice Ravel (1875-1937): Cinq mélodies populiares grecques (5 griechische Volkslieder)
  • 14I. Le Réveil de la Mariée01:29
  • 15II. Làbas, vers l'église01:49
  • 16III. Quel galant m'est comparable00:59
  • 17IV. Chanson des cueilleuses de lentisques02:42
  • 18V. Tout gai!00:54
  • 19Ballade de la reine morte d'aimer04:30
  • 20Reves01:29
  • 21Manteau de fleurs03:40
  • 22Tripatos (Danse chantée)01:43
  • Ottorino Respighi (1879-1936): Deità silvane (5 Lieder nach Texten von Antonio Rubino) (1917)
  • 23I. I Fauni02:01
  • 24II. Musica in horto02:01
  • 25III. Egle03:19
  • 26IV. Acqua03:21
  • 27V. Crepuscolo03:50
  • Total Runtime59:30

Info zu Strauss, Zemlinsky, Ravel & Respighi Art nouveau

Young women dressed loosely wrapped in soft tissue and fluids covered flowers and arabesques, this is what you can see on the posters of Alfons Mucha, whose cover evokes the style. The staging of beauty, the removal of a realistic representation, the stylization of man and nature in a sensual aesthetic ideal is typical of this time of the turn of the 20th century and is reflected in the art in all areas. Vienna, Paris and Munich centers are a current pictorial and literary evolving towards art pour l'art.

“Gheorghiu's ability to discern and convey the appropriate vocal style and to encapsulate the essence of a song is matched by her appealing timbre and sense of drama to strike home winningly.” (Gramophone)

“Gheorghiu gets a prize not only for her singing...but also for her intelligence and creativity in assembling this programme and in giving it a coherent art nouveau theme...she has an uncommonly sensitive 'way with words'...and an impressive ability to illuminate the texts by fine-tuning her voice's colours without coming across as fussy” (International Record Review)

Teodora Gheorghiu, soprano
Jonathan Aner, piano


Teodora Gheorghiu
Sometimes a singer’s destiny catches up with them. For Teodora Gheorghiu, who had spent much of her early life in her native Romania believing she would be a flautist, that moment occured courtesy of Jose Carreras, at the Julian Gayarre International Singing Competition. She had not won and Carreras, who was on the jury that year, was outraged. He approached her and told her that in his opinion she had deserved the prize, and insisted on giving her a scholarship equivalent to the prize money, from his own pocket. To have such a great tenor make such a gesture meant the world to the young soprano. “It was the first time that someone had told me I had a future as a singer”, she says. Her path was set.

But artistic destiny is usually rooted in nature, and as a baby Gheorghiu had sung before she could speak. Then the flute came along when she was 12, she won competitions and studied seriously for a career. “But at the same time I was in a children’s choir” she recalls, “and that felt so natural, whereas playing the flute in concert I would get so nervous. Singing on stage and mixing my voice with those of the other girls was pure pleasure.” Her soprano developed fast, until it no longer blended with her friends and the conductor of the choir told her she must study singing and became her first vocal teacher. She started slowly, with folk and then sacred music – Bach, Telemann, Händel (to this day she often feels singing to be a spiritual act – “it starts in the very core of you and pours out”) – until she finally discovered opera.

After the Carreras gift, another contest (the Enescu Competition, in which she did win a prize) so impressed the directors of the Romanian Opera and the Vienna Staastoper that there and then they both invited her to join their companies. After her debut in Vienna, still only 25 years old, she decided she needed more preparation before joining such a major company, so (with a few more good wins under her belt, notably the Queen Elisabeth Competition and the Herbert von Karajan scholarship), she joined the Lucerne Theatre. After two years there under chief conductor John Axelrod, she felt ready to return to Vienna. She re-auditioned and won a principal artist’s contract, and was back at the Staatsoper the following season.

This time she stayed, singing a wide array of leading roles, including Adele (Die Fledermaus), the Queen of the Night (Die Zauberflöte), Nanetta (Falstaff), Fiakermilli (Arabella), Adina (L’Elisir d’Amore), Elvira (L’Italiana in Algeri), Sophie (Werther), and Eudoxie (La Juive). More important, this time she felt ready. “The time in Lucerne was very important for me,a wonderful period. I started to know myself, to try things out on the stage, understanding how far you can push things, and when it gets too risky. For a stage like the Vienna Staatsoper you need the finished product, and I returned much more secure to sing big roles.”

She describes the experience of singing in the top flight now in one word, “joy”. And although she credits the top-flight colleagues with whom she has worked, among them Juan Diego Florez, Neil Shicoff, Leo Nucci, Ramon Vargas, Seiji Ozawa, Adam Fischer, Marco Armiliato, Bertrand de Billy and Franz Welser-Möst (also another famous Romanian soprano, Leontina Vaduva, with whom she now sometimes studies as well as sings) – “with colleagues like these, it’s impossible not to sing well” – the bel canto soprano was by now being recognised as one of the world’s most exciting young talents. Other successes have included the role of The Italian Singer in Capriccio at the Richard Strauss Festival in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, and Susanna (Le nozze di Figaro) at the Antibes Festival.

When she decided to leave Vienna in 2010, this time to spread her wings for a freelance career, conductor Christophe Rousset approached her with an idea for her first recording, an homage to the 18th-century soprano Anna De Amicis. The resulting album, on the Harmonia Mundi-distributed Aparté label, included mostly premiere recordings of arias by Mozart, Gluck, Borghi, Cafaro and Myslivecek and was named “Disc of the Month” by International Record Review (which praised Gheorghiu’s “stunning vocalism”) and by Opera magazine, and was BBC Radio Three’s “Disc of the Week” for three consecutive weeks.

With all this success, her approach to her art is about as far from the stereotypical bel canto diva’s as it is possible to get. “I will always try to be an honest artist, to serve the art, not the opposite,” says Gheorghiu, “I don’t want to put myself in the middle.”

Jonathan Aner
has performed as a soloist with Israel’s leading orchestras, including the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra under Zubin Mehta. Further engagements as a soloist followed in Germany (Berliner Philharmonie), Italy and China, where he recently performed at the closing concert of the NCPA (National Centre for the Performing Arts) May Festival. He has won international prizes at the Città di Senigallia International Piano Competition in Italy, the International Schubert Competition and the Ben-Haim Competition.

Described as “a chamber musician par excellence” (Frankfurter Rundschau) Jonathan Aner is a member of the Brillaner Duo with clarinetist Shirley Brill and of the Oberon Trio. He has collaborated with such leading artists as violist Tabea Zimmermann, the concertmasters of the Berliner Philharmoniker and with the Vogler and the Jerusalem String Quartets. As a former member of the Tel Aviv Trio, he has won prizes at the Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition in Australia, the Città di Trapani and the Vittorio Gui International Chamber Music Competitions in Italy, the Joseph Joachim and the “Erst-Klassik” Competitions in Germany, and the European Chamber Music Competition in France.

Mr. Aner performed recitals and chamber music concerts in such prestigious concert halls as the Berliner Konzerthaus, Carnegie Hall, Auditorium du Louvre in Paris, Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., Wallace Collection in London, Conde Duque in Madrid, Dom Muzyki in Moscow, Tivoli Hall in Copenhagen, as well as in Asia, Australia and in his native Israel. He has taken part in the Bergen, Schleswig-Holstein, Rheingau, Heidelberg and Radio France Festivals. In addition, he has participated in the Deutsche Grammophon’s “Yellow Lounge”. Mr. Aner is a graduate of the Musikhochschule Hannover where he studied with Professor Arie Vardi, of the Musikhochschule Lübeck as a student of Professor Konrad Elser and of the New England Conservatory in Boston. In addition, he has worked closely with pianists Murray Perahia and András Schiff. Since 2010 Jonathan Aner is a professor of chamber music at the Academy of Music “Hanns Eisler” in Berlin.

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