Klassik  Chor/Lied
Diverse Intepreten & Thomas E. Bauer & Chia Chou & Uta Hielscher & Christine Müller & Sibylla Rubens & Andreas Weller Engelbert Humperdinck: Sämtliche Lieder für Singstimme und Klavier OC 807 2 CD
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Format2 Audio CD
Ordering NumberOC 807
Barcode4260034868076
labelOehmsClassics
Release date9/1/2007
salesrank17852
Players/ContributorsMusicians Composer
  • Humperdinck, Engelbert

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      Sämtliche Lieder für Singstimme und Klavier
      (Weihnachtslieder, Frühe und späte Lieder, Kinderlieder, etc.)
      Complete Songs for Voice and Piano
      (Christmas Songs, Early and Late Songs, Childrens’ Songs, and others)
      Sibylla Rubens, soprano · Christine Müller, mezzosoprano
      Thomas Bauer, baritone · Andreas Weller, Tenor
      Chia Chou, piano · Uta Hielscher, piano

      Engelbert Humperdinck’s fairy-tale opera Hansel and Gretel is one of the hits of the operatic repertoire, the opera The King’s Children can at least be heard now and again. The rest of Humperdinck’s vocal works however enjoy a niche market. This double-CD set includes the complete oeuvre for a singing voice and the piano. This includes numerous Christmas songs, songs based on children’s rhymes and songs based on lyrical texts from poets in Humperdinck’s vicinity. It is the early songs, until ca. 1890, that demonstrate the great admiration of the composer for Richard Wagner, who studied under Hiller in Cologne and under Lachner and Rheinberger in Munich. The convergence with the style of the folk song and its unostentatious diction explains the great popularity of many of the songs, which also appear as adaptations for choirs, orchestras and chamber ensembles.
      The present recording is based on a new musicological edition that was prepared by the Music Work Shop of Engelbert Humperdinck in Siegburg.

      Engelbert Humperdinck: Lieder

      Hänsel und Gretel, one of the three most performed operas in the world – the others being Zauberflöte and Carmen – became Engelbert Humperdinck’s fate: while his posthumous glory quickly faded after his death in 1921, this successful opera continued triumphant on stages throughout the world after its premiere in 1893. Today, the name Humperdinck is connected only with this one work – occasional productions of his second, ambitious opera Königskinder notwithstanding – as well as with the doubtful attribute of being a Wagner imitator.

      When the 26-year-old Humperdinck was introduced to Richard Wagner in 1880 in Naples, he had already completed his studies at the Cologne Music Conservatory with Ferdinand Hiller and in Munich with Franz Lachner and Gabriel Josef Rheinberger at the Royal School of Music. This traditional but painstaking conservatory training became the foundation of his virtuosic mastery of composition, as Humperdinck’s unusually polyphonic – but always delicate and transparent – orchestral writing shows, proving the great writer of melodies to be just as great a contrapuntal composer and master of orchestration.

      Hänsel und Gretel brought Humperdinck fame and financial independence. In 1897, the premiere of the first version of Königskinder followed; in 1900 he was appointed director of a master class for composition at the Royal Academy of Arts in Berlin. His second worldwide success and the crowning achievement in his oeuvre was the second version of the fairy-tale opera Königskinder (1910). From 1911 to 1920, Humperdinck was the director of the theory and composition department of the Royal University of Music in Berlin. Highly esteemed as a teacher, his students included Siegfried Wagner, Carl Schuricht and Leo Blech, among others. He died in Neustrelitz in 1921.

      Above all, Humperdinck was a stage and vocal composer. His earliest successes were ballads for chorus; his major works are six operas. In addition, he wrote stage music for countless Shakespeare dramas and was in great demand as a publisher of numerous children’s and folksong collections. The only genre he continually wrote for, from the time of his youth until his very last years, was the Lied.

      His first explorations in this genre are still oriented on Mozart and Schubert (Der Garten, Vom Häslein und Mägdlein). He wrote his first masterpiece in 1875: the unfinished Ballade. Humperdinck only implied the close of this work, because it was apparently meant to take up an earlier passage again. In the edition used for this recording, publisher Christian Ubber has provided a version that adds an ending to the work in the manner that Humperdinck presumably intended.

      Due to the many Lieder Humperdinck composed in 1876, this year can be called his “Lied-year”. The jump in quality is evident: vocal lines become more melodic; piano accompaniments show a finer sense of the instrument. The two Lieder with the title Oft sinn ich hin und wieder, which are completely different from one another (and can thus not be referred to as two “versions” of one Lied, but are two different compositions), each expressing different moods, characterizing the same text differently and with different musical means. The same is true for the three compositions In einem kühlen Grunde. The Lied Der Ungenannten finally won Humperdinck the Frankfurt Mozart Prize in 1876.

      Two Lieder in particular show Humperdinck to be a Wagner admirer: Die Wasserrose (1878), written immediately after Humperdinck had seen the complete Ring des Nibelungen in Munich, and Scheiden (1882), the first Lied composed after Humperdinck met Wagner. The independent, orchestral piano accompaniment elucidates the text, e.g. using harmony (chromatics, contrasting keys); the voice is only one of several equally important voices. The immediate influence of Wagner must be understood as a characteristic of Humperdinck’s early period; at this time he did not yet have his own true style and was searching through a broad palette of styles and techniques. Only gradually did he develop his own style out of the many influences that he experienced from Rheinberger and Wagner.

      His stylistic proximity to Wagner can be relativized, even if some later Lieder still show Wagnerian stylistic elements (e.g. Sonntagsruhe with its reminiscences of Parsifal). The focus on melody which comes ever more strongly to the foreground shows much more nearness to the folksong. Most of Humperdinck’s Lieder written after 1882, with their catchy melodies, have a touch of the traditional, while simultaneously having carefully, almost chamber-musical crafting with high motivic density. Examples of such songs include Romanze, Liebesorakel, Wiegenlied, Am Rhein, Rosmarin or his Christmas songs. The musical and technical demands of many of these songs are relatively simple – despite the highest compositional expertise that went into them – because Humperdinck wrote them for lay musicians. Not without reason were they so popular in the composer’s lifetime. They appeared in countless arrangements: for men’s a cappella chorus, for orchestra, string or salon orchestra, and for every imaginable type of chamber ensemble. Humperdinck’s closeness to the ‘common folk’ also showed itself in his use of texts in dialect (Oi’ Schwalb’ macht koi’n Sommer).

      It is conspicuous, however, that Humperdinck set few literarily top-rate poems. He often set – mostly for reasons of courtesy – texts from his personal environment, e.g. by his father Gustav or sister Adelheid Wette. This means that many of his occasional compositions such as the Mosel wine songs, Am Rhein or the Lied for Boer General Christian de Wet have a weak text and remain musically simple throughout. Lieder such as the last-mentioned, or the Kaiserlied or Reiterlied from Bunte Welt also show Humperdinck’s conservative political mentality.

      The last Lied in the cycle Junge Lieder, Maiahnung, is a so-called ‘bound’ melodrama for “speech voice”, whose pitch is fixed in notes. Humperdinck developed this procedure for his second opera Königskinder (first version, 1897). He was searching for a middle course between speaking and singing that would allow a focus sometimes more on singing, sometimes more on speaking, depending on the expression needed. For the first time, the melodrama was expanded for an entire stage work; the linking of the speaking voice to pitch was also new. (Sprechgesang – or “speech-song” – was repeatedly used during the 20th century, but its invention is often falsely attributed to Schoenberg.) It is not surprising that Humperdinck used this ‘bound’ melodrama not only in opera but in Lied as well; the reason is the same thematic material: love and the month of May. The Jungen Lieder are doubtless the apex of Humperdinck’s Lieder. They were published in 1898 as part of a precious edition entitled Trifolium. Moritz Leiffmann (texts), Engelbert Humperdinck and Alexander Frenz (illustrations) created a gesamtkunstwerk in which poetry, music and art were meant to be equals.

      As of circa 1905, a stylistic change becomes evident in Humperdinck’s Lieder: they are simpler in style, harmony and form. This was accompanied by a conspicuous preference for children’s songs, e.g. the Sang und Klang fürs Kinderherz collection published by Humperdinck. In addition to this came commissioned works such as Hab ein Blümlein gefunden or the Dideldumdei and Bunte Welt cycles. Among Humperdinck’s many cradle songs, Su, su, su, du Windchen has a particular status as evidence of the composer’s long friendship with Hugo Wolf. Many years after Wolf’s death, while suffering from mental derangement, Humperdinck took Wolf’s small Piano Piece in G Major and composed a melodic line to it based on a text from his sister Adelheid.

      The Musikwerkstatt Engelbert Humperdinck Siegburg, called to life in the city of the composer’s birth, has published Humperdinck’s Lieder in a new complete edition that makes many of these songs available for the first time – or for the first time in many years. This complete recording of his songs is based on the musical edition and emphasizes the significance of a late-romantic composer located clearly between tradition and modernity, one who is well worth rediscovering.

      Christian Ubber
      Translation: Elizabeth Gahbler


      The Artists

      SIBYLLA RUBENS · Soprano

      Sibylla Rubens studied concert and opera singing at the State Academy in Trossingen and at the Academy for Music and Theater in Frankfurt a.M. She was a member of Irwin Gage’s master class for Lied and supplemented her training with numerous master classes, e.g. with Edith Mathis and Elsa Cavelti in Basel.

      The highlights of her concert activities until now include appearances with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra under Philippe Herreweghe, with Hartmut Haenchen, Heinrich Schiff, Heinz Holliger and Jeffrey Tate. Sibylla Rubens works especially closely with Helmuth Rilling and the Stuttgart Bach Academy. Numerous recordings attest to this work, including many Bach cantatas as well as the composer’s Christmas Oratorio and Mass in B Minor. She also tours regularly with Philippe Herreweghe and his Collegium Vocale Gent. In addition, she has appeared with such conductors as Roger Norrington, Herbert Blomstedt, Ton Koopman, Peter Schreier, Heinrich Schiff, Leopold Hager, Jonathan Nott, Michael Gielen, Marek Janowski and Christian Thielemann.

      Sibylla Rubens gave her first Lied recital with Irwin Gage in 1999 at the Ludwigsburg Schlossfestspiele, followed by recitals in Barcelona, Amsterdam und Nuremberg. The artist has recorded numerous CDs on renowned labels.

      Christine Müller · Mezzosoprano

      Christine Müller studied voice at the State Academy in Trossingen and at the Academy of Music in Vienna. Master classes with Brigitte Fassbaender, Edith Mathis and Jessica Cash, among others, as well as work with Elisabeth Glauser and Anna Reynolds supplemented her studies. In addition to vocal studies, she completed degrees in musicology and art history in Tübingen and Vienna.

      In the meantime, Christine Müller is in demand in concert halls nationally and internationally. Her multifaceted repertoire ranges from baroque music to works of the 20th century.

      Christine Müller has made a name for herself as an instructor at the Academies in Trossingen and Rottenburg as well as of master classes.

      Vocal chamber music plays an important part in her artistic activities. She works with such pianists as Anthony Spiri, Ulrich Eisenlohr, Chia Chou and Uta Hielscher.

      Thanks to her musicological training, Christine Müller often works together with archives to uncover forgotten musical treasures. Her next recording project will be dedicated to works of the 19th century and fin d’siècle French vocal music.

      Andreas Weler · tenor

      Stuttgart tenor Andreas Weller received his first vocal training at the age of eight as a member of the Stuttgart Hymnus-Chorknaben. He began university vocal studies with Prof. Bruce Abel at the Music Academy Stuttgart, where he simultaneously studied vocal and orchestral conducting.

      From 1998 to 2000, he completed additional studies with James Wagner at the Academy for Music and Theater in Hamburg followed by studies in Wagner’s solo class at the Music Academy of Lübeck. In 2005 he completed his studies in Christoph Prégardien’s solo class and together with his piano accompanist Götz Payer, in an additional course of studies in Lied duo with Irwin Gage at the Academy of Music in Zurich.

      Andreas Weller is internationally renowned as an Evangelist and oratorio singer. He has sung under Frieder Bernius, Helmuth Rilling, Philippe Herreweghe, Sigiswald Kuijken, Masaaki Suzuki, William Christie, Daniel Harding, Marcus Creed, Konrad Junghänel, Thomas Hengelbrock, Enoch zu Guttenberg, Hartmut Höll, Roger Vignoles and The King’s Singers and appeared with renowned international festivals.

      He has participated in numerous CD productions and was a prizewinner of numerous competitions, including the Elise Meyer-Competition Hamburg, Michel Vocal Competition Hamburg as well as the 13th International Bach Competition in Leipzig.

      Thomas E. Bauer · Bariton

      Thomas E. Bauer is the winner of many prizes and one of the most renowned baritones today. In 2003 he was awarded the “Schneider-Schott Musikpreis” for his outstanding performance of contemporary music as well as the coveted “Aoyama Music Award” for his debut Lied recital in the Japanese Emperor city of Kyoto.

      Thomas E. Bauer works with conductors like Bernard Haitink, Philippe Herreweghe, Krzysztof Penderecki, Jos van Immerseel and Ivan Fischer and currently concertizes in the Gewandhaus Leipzig, Konzerthaus Wien, Accademia Santa Cecilia Rom, Palais des Beaux Arts Brüssel, Cité de la Musique Paris, Concertgebouw Amsterdam, Chicago Auditorium, Tokyo Metropolitan and the Berlin, Cologne and Munich Philharmonic Halls.

      His repertoire ranges from Notre-Dame school organum to music of the 21st century. Thomas E. Bauer has become known to a broad sector of the public in recent years with spectacular musical projects such as his role as the protagonist in Moritz Eggert’s soccer oratorio Die Tiefe des Raumes. Klaus Voswinckel’s documentary “Winterreise – Schubert in Sibiria”, about Bauer’s adventurous concert trip from Moscow to Peking, now finds its acoustic sequel in a spectacular live concert recording from Irkutsk, now released by OehmsClassics (OC 907).

      Uta Hielscher · Piano

      The Tokyo-born pianist studied at the Academy for Theater and Music in Munich with Michael Schäfer, Siegfried Mauser and Helmut Deutsch. She won prizes and scholarships at the “Deutscher Musikwettbewerb”, the “Konzerte junger Künstler” and the International Chamber Music Competition in Pavia. In 2003, she was awarded the Aoyama Music Award Kyoto.

      Uta Hielscher has performed at such venues as the Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival, the International Beethoven Festival Bonn, the Schubertiade Schwarzenberg, the Schwetzinger Festival, the Académies Musicales Saintes, the Munich Opera Festival, the Mahler Festival Toblach, the Lofoten Festival and the Vocal Journeys Chicago as well as many other festivals in Europe, the USA, Japan, North Africa and the Middle East.

      The pianist has often impressed critics: she embodies the type of interpreter who – as the Süddeutsche Zeitung put it – does not simply accompany in the conventional sense, but “who strongly emphasizes her own personality in a manner that makes true duoperformances possible”.

      Chia Chou · Piano

      Chia Chou was born in Taiwan and grew up in Canada, where he performed in public for the first time at the age of seven. After completing school, he studied with Prof. Lieselotte Gierth at the Stuttgart Music Academy, where he also obtained his diploma. While still a student, Chia Chou won first prizes at the Mendelssohn-Competition in Berlin and the Sydney International Piano Competition, subsequently concertizing in Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Asia and the USA. He also won the Bronze Medal at the Concours Reine Elisabeth in Brussels.

      In Germany he has appeared with conductors such as James Conlon, Charles Dutoit, Karl Münchinger and Edmond de Stoutz and with orchestras such as the Weimar Staatskapelle, Dusseldorf Symphonic, RSO Stuttgart and Gürzenich Orchestra Cologne. Chia Chou has been a member of the Trio Parnassus since 1990. The ensemble was awarded the “Echo Klassik” prize in 2001 and the “Preis der Deutschen Schallplattenkritik” in 2006.

      Chia Chou was appointed professor of chamber music at the University for Music and Performing Arts in Graz in 2004.

      Tracklist hide

      hide CD 1
      • Lieder der Jahre 1889–1904
        • 1.Die Lerche (Julius Sturm)01:21
        • 2.Liebesorakel (Theodor Stromberg)01:47
        • 3.Die Lerche (Adelheid Wette)01:33
        • 4.Rosmarin (aus „Des Knaben Wunderhorn“)03:10
        • 5.Am Rhein (Johann von Wildenradt)03:55
        • 6.Verratene Liebe – Amore denunziato (Adelbert von Chamisso)02:18
        • 7.Sonntagsruhe (Julius Sturm)02:45
        • 8.Unter der Linde (Walther von der Vogelweide)03:34
        • 9.Jager und Senn’rin (Fliegende Blätter)01:38
        • 10.Rosenringel (Kinderreigen aus dem Märchen „Königskinder“, Ernst Rosmer)00:40
        • 11.„’s Sträußle“ (Fliegende Blätter) Textfassung 200:56
        • 12.Das Waldvöglein (Adelheid Wette)01:25
        • 13.Zeitlied (Otto Julius Bierbaum)02:39
        • 14.Dein grünes, stilles Tal (Carl Hessel)04:34
        • 15.Oi’ Schwalb’ macht koi’n Sommer (Gustav Seuffer)01:03
        • 16.Ein Lied von de Wet (Johannes Trojan)02:45
        • 17.Die Schwalbe (G. Chr. Dieffenbach)01:18
        • 18.Kennt ihr die Heimat trauter Seelenlust (Gustav Humperdinck)04:46
        • 19.Romanze (E. Bunse)01:55
        • 20.Wiegenlied – neue Ausgabe (Elisabeth Ebeling)02:51
      • Kinderlieder
        • 21.Auf Vaters Knien (aus „Dideldumdei“ (Albert Sergel)) 190900:36
        • 22.Käferlied (E. H. Strasburger) 1909
        • 23.Abzählen (aus „Dideldumdei“, Albert Sergel) 190900:31
        • 24.Reiterlied (aus „Bunte Welt“, Albert Sergel)00:33
        • 25.Wiegenliedchen (aus „Dideldumdei“, Albert Sergel) 190901:09
        • 26.Der Winter (aus „Sang und Klang fürs Kinderherz“, Matthias Claudius) 191001:14
        • 27.Weihnachten (aus „Bunte Welt“, Albert Sergel)01:18
        • 28.Abendlied (aus „Bunte Welt“, Albert Sergel)01:05
      • Liederzyklus „Junge Lieder“ (Moritz Leiffmann), 1898
        • 29.Blumensprache00:27
        • 30.Mein Gruß00:47
        • 31.Blauveilchen .01:34
        • 32.Lenzknospen00:56
        • 33.Flattern00:50
        • 34.Geheimnis02:10
        • 35.Entsagung02:26
        • 36.Maiahnung (Melodram)01:48
      • Total:01:04:17
      more CD 2
      • Weihnachtslieder
        • 1.Der Stern von Bethlehem (Hedwig Humperdinck)02:14
        • 2.Das Licht der Welt (Otto Jakobi)01:50
        • 3.Die Engel singen (aus „Bübchens Weihnachtstraum“, Gustav Falke)01:25
        • 4.Weihnachtsfreude (Richard Dehmel)02:55
        • 5.An das Christkind (Hella Karstein)01:37
        • 6.Altdeutsches Weihnachtslied (1550)01:29
        • 7.Gesang der Heiligen Drei Könige (aus „Bübchens Weihnachtstraum“, Gustav Falke)01:30
        • 8.Christkindleins Wiegenlied (aus „Des Knaben Wunderhorn“)04:10
        • 9.Weihnachten (Adelheid Wette)02:49
      • Frühe und späte Lieder
        • 10.Der Ungenannten (Ludwig Uhland)02:04
        • 11.Vom Häslein und Mägdlein (Wilhelm Grimme)01:39
        • 12.Der Garten (Wilhelm Grimme)01:50
        • 13.Oft sinn ich hin und wieder (Wilhelm Bodenstedt), 1. Kompositon01:49
        • 14.Oft sinn ich hin und wieder (Wilhelm Bodenstedt), 2. Kompositon01:55
        • 15.Scheiden (J. Victor von Scheffel)03:27
        • 16.Winterlied (August Graf von Platen)01:10
        • 17.Im Freien zu singen (Adelheid Wette)00:49
        • 18.In einem kühlen Grunde (Joseph von Eichendorff), 1. Komposition02:56
        • 19.In einem kühlen Grunde (Joseph von Eichendorff), 2. Komposition03:23
        • 20.In einem kühlen Grunde (Joseph von Eichendorff), 3. Komposition03:13
        • 21.Schlummerlied (Adelheid Wette-Humperdinck)01:22
        • 22.Röslein-Walzer .01:21
        • 23.Das Kaiserlied (aus der Hymne „Sang an den Kaiser“, Hermann Sudermann)00:49
        • 24.Herz und Wald (Adelheid Wette-Humperdinck)01:06
        • 25.Katt un Mus (Hermann Wette) .01:30
        • 26.Hab ein Blümlein gefunden (Hans Bodenstedt)01:08
        • 27.An die Nachtigall (Mathilde Hartmann)01:52
        • 28.Die Wasserrose (Josef Giehrl)01:41
        • 29.Altdeutsches Liebeslied (Werner vom Tegernsee)01:33
        • 30.Rheinlied03:08
        • 31.Ballade (Hans Arnold)02:34
        • 32.Das Lied vom Glück (Elly Gregor)02:45
        • 33.Wiegenlied (aus „Bübchens Weihnachtstraum“, Gustav Falke)03:01
        • 34.Wiegenlied (Adelheid Wette-Humperdinck) nach einem Klavierstück von Hugo Wolf01:26
      • Drei Kinderlieder von Margarethe Bruch
        • 35.Schlafliedchen im Sommer01:11
        • 36.Taubenlied .01:19
        • 37.Holzmann und Holzfrau00:54
      • Total:01:12:54