Hanna-Elisabeth Müller & Juliane Ruf – Reine de coeur (2020) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Hanna-Elisabeth Müller & Juliane Ruf – Reine de coeur (2020)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:06:12 minutes | 1,03 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © PentaTone

On her Pentatone debut “Reine de coeur”, star soprano Hanna-Elisabeth Müller brings the German and French art song traditions together, focusing on song cycles by Robert Schumann, Alexander von Zemlinsky and Francis Poulenc, accompanied by pianist Juliane Ruf. The album presents a highly personal anthology of songs that address love and loss, and the heights and depths of the human soul. While Schumann’s Sechs Gesänge Op. 107 and Sechs Gedichte und Requiem Op. 90 offer the quintessence of the Romantic German Lied, Zemlinsky’s turn-of-the-century Walzer-Gesänge introduce the listener to a later and less well-known chapter in the genre’s history. Poulenc’s La courte-paille and Fiançailles pour rire provide an atmospheric, at times humoristic complement to the Weltschmerz of the German songs.

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Adam Fischer, Düsseldorfer Symphoniker & Hanna-Elisabeth Müller – Mahler: Symphony No. 4 (2017) [Official Digital Download 24bit/48kHz]

Adam Fischer, Düsseldorfer Symphoniker & Hanna-Elisabeth Müller – Mahler: Symphony No. 4 (2017)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/48 kHz | Time – 56:50 minutes | 540 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © CAvi-music

“The Fourth is Mahler’s most transparent and lyrical symphony – almost a chamber symphony. Probably also due to its rather reduced format, it has been received in unique and contradictory ways. Even during the time when international audiences had practically no knowledge of Mahler’s music, the Fourth remained relatively popular. Today it is regarded as less impressive than the First, Second, Third, Fifth and Sixth Symphonies; from my point of view, however, this stems from an unacceptable misunderstanding. Stylistically, the Fourth poses a truly special challenge I find quite exciting. It is Mahler’s “Pastoral Symphony”. The musical style of the Vienna Secession movement tended to integrate elements of Viennese musical tradition into purely classical works. Many listeners did not take that tendency seriously and branded it as harking back to overbaked ideas (I overheard statements to this effect when I was a child). Of all Mahler’s symphonies, the Fourth is perhaps the one where he puts those Viennese elements most clearly on display. I once even heard the cruel remark that Mahler’s Fourth Symphony amounted to nothing else than the expression of his sadness for not being Schubert. Frankly, this music is everything else but a Schubert imitation. Much of Schubert – and of Haydn – admittedly does resurface here, along with typical Viennese effects including a particular kind of glissando, for instance, and those stylistic means are one of the Fourth’s essential elements. We should therefore perform them in a way that makes them quite noticeable.” (from booklet)

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