Dorothea Röschmann releases her new recital album including well
known songs by Schubert, Schumann, Strauss and Wolf. She is accompanied
by Malcolm Martineau who is recognized as one of the leading
accompanists of his generation.
"The idea for this program of
female portraits took seed a long time ago, when I was studying in
London with the wonderful teacher, Vera Rozsa. I used to make frequent
pilgrimages to the extraordinary National Portrait Gallery where one is
surrounded by the most imposing portraits of British personalities and
royalty, such as the Tudors and Queen Elizabeth I, as well as countless
figures from British history – poets, physicians and so on - all
concentrated and condensed within the confines of the building.
A
portrait represents a very intense encounter with a person and you
believe you know them better after having studied the picture for some
time. It can only give you a glimpse of the personality, but also
creates an impression of how the person wanted to be portrayed. In
songs, a portrait is the musical interpretation of a fictionalized
person from literature (Gretchen, Mignon), or real life (Mary Stuart),
but the process of character portrayal and trying to get deeper and
deeper through different layers, has to happen musically. As a portrait,
it can only attempt to portray a snapshot of all the emotions of the
character but the longer you live with a song, the more you find in it,
as in all music.
This fascination with character interpretation in
song and in opera, led to my desire to put together a programme with
portraits that reflect the finely shaded nuances of the figures
presented here. In the same way, female characters such as Mignon and
Gretchen, created by Goethe, and Mary, Queen of Scots, have stimulated
the imagination of poets, composers and artists alike. We have included
songs by Richard Strauss as every one of them can be regarded as a
miniature mood portrait.
The original Schubert setting of
‘Gretchens Bitte’ is only a fragment of Goethe’s poem so we have chosen
Benjamin Britten’s ‘complete’ version as it gives a more comprehensive
characterization of Gretchen." Dorothea Röschmann. (Presto Classical)
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