20.6.12

Schubert: Rosamunde; Die Zauberharfe Overture; Ständchen



"Rosamunde" is one of Schubert's most gratifying works: it's filled with lovely melodies, and this classic mono recording from 1952/53 is quite simply the one to have. Late in 1823 Schubert, who had just completed his song cycle "Die Schone Mullerin," was asked to supply incidental music to Helmina von Chezy's play "Rosamunde." Chezy was once described as "a stout, elderly lady with all the qualities of a real blue-stocking, careless and slovenly in her appearance, not blessed with any earthly goods, but with a great deal of self-sufficiency." Apparently the play (now lost) was really terrible: it closed after only two performances. Schubert had to write this music in great haste to meet the premiere's deadline - reportedly he completed it in only 5 days! There was no time to write a separate overture, so instead Schubert borrowed one from his opera "Alfonso and Estrelle." Later the 1820 overture to his opera "The Magic Harp" was substituted, and that is the one we know today as the "Rosamunde" overture.

My suggestion: start your listening with the Magic Harp overture on track 12 (DG has mis-numbered the CD tracks here, inadvertently assigning track 11 twice: the jacket indicates Magic Harp as being on track 11, but it's really on track 12). It's one of Schubert's finest works and has those charmingly obsessive rhythmic patterns that would flower at their fullest in his 9th Symphony (and virtually all the symphonies of Bruckner as well). The Alphonse and Estrella overture on track 1 is much less interesting, and Lehmann's performance of it is a tad hard-boiled.

The rest of the performances are simply wonderful: excellent choral work and some lustrous playing by Furtwangler's Berlin Philharmonic. The contralto singing of Diana Eustrati in the charming Romance is beautiful, and the wind playing throughout is some of the finest on records: note especially the Shephard's Melody (track 8) for unaccompanied winds and the Act II ballet music (track 11) - clearly a foretaste of Dvorak.

The last track (identified as 12 but really 13) features the exquisite serenade "Zogernd leise," for female choir and piano (accompanied here by the excellent Lieder pianist Michael Raucheisen, who also recorded a great Winterreise with Hotter). This genial late work (1827) is in some ways the highlight of the entire set.

My only quibbles: no texts for the vocal parts, the aforementioned track mis-numberings, and recorded sound which, while perfectly acceptable, is a shade dry when compared with the fuller, warmer sound of the original 2-disc LP set. I was also a little saddened to discover that Schubert's setting of Psalm No. 23 "Gott mein Zuversicht" for piano and woman's chorus, which was on the original LP issue, has been left out here.

The short-lived Fritz Lehmann (1904-1956) was one of Germany's finest conductors: he died suddenly during the intermission of a performance of Bach's Saint Matthew Passion at Munich. DG has already released two of his greatest recordings on CD: a magnificent Brahms Requiem and my very favorite readings of Handel's Water Music and Royal Fireworks. Lehmann's old-fashioned but wonderful reading ("live" 1949) of the St. Matthew Passion is available on a Music and Arts CD set: it has Helmut Krebs as an expert Evangelist and, as Jesus, the 24 year old Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau. Lehmann's superbly incisive accompaniment in Stefan Askenase's Chopin Piano Concerto #2 can be heard in that pianist's wonderful 7-disc Chopin CD set on DG.

Hopefully DG will re-issue more of Lehmann's best recordings: the two Mendelssohn Piano Concertos with Helmut Roloff (superior, I think, to Perahia's and Serkin's), the Dvorak Serenade for Strings (second only to Talich's), Mozart's Serenade #10 (even better than Furtwangler's), his very romantic Schubert "Unfinished" and Mozart 40th, and Brahms' Tragic Overture and Schicksalslied.

Warmly recommended. --By Jeffrey Lipscomb

Overture “Rosamunde”


Franz Schubert (1797-1828)




When Schubert was pired, music took shape in his mind faster than his pen could move across paper. And in his incidental music to the Romantic drama Rosamunde, Princess of Cypress he was often in spired. He began composing on November 30, 1823, and finished on December 18, 1823, two days before the premiere. Not much time was left to rehearse either the music or the production’s two ballets, and no time at all to compose an overture. In fact Schubert never did compose an overture to Rosamunde. Instead he used an overture already composed for an earlier work.
                One of Schubert’s close friends, the famous Romantic painter Moritz von Schwind, describing the Rosamunde premiere to a mutual friend, wrote that the Overture was taken from Schubert’s opera, Alfonso and Estrella. But Schubert’s opera, Alfonso and Estrella. But Schwind’s comments on the music do not fit the Overture to Alfonso and Estrella. On the other hand, they do fit Schubert’s Overture to an earlier “magic play” (Zauberstück) called The Magic Harp (Die Zauberharte). Add to this the fact that the Zauberharte Overture was published (in a four-hand piano version) shortly before Schubert’s death as the Overture to Rosamunde, and the conclusion seems almost inescapable. It is the Zauberharte Overture that is customarity performed today under the title of Overture to Rosamunde.
                The drama Rosamunde, Princess of Cypress survived for exactly two performances. Even though Schubert’s music had been singled out by the Viennese press for high praise, it fell into obscurity along with the play and was not brought to light again in its entirely until 1867, when Sir Arthur Sullivan made a joint expedition to Vienna for the purpose of unearthing Schubert’s still-neglected manuscripts. The two men were successful beyond their wildest dreams, and in the booty they brought back to London were parts of Schubert’s Rosamunde music, which was performed, in London, for the first time since the Viennese production of the drama.
                The orchestra for the Rosamunde (Zauberharte) Overture calls for 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, timpani, and the standard choir or strings.

                                                                                 Edward Downes