Katalógové číslo:
ALPHA911
Autori:
Clara Schumann, Claude Debussy, Franz Liszt, Franz Schubert, Henri Duparc, Hugo Wolf, Lili Boulanger
Interpreti:
David Kadouch, Sandrine Piau
1. Franz Liszt: 3 Lieder aus Schillers "Wilhelm Tell", S. 292: No. 1, Der Fischerknabe (Es lächelt der See)
Hugo Wolf: Mörike-Lieder
2. No. 23, Auf ein altes Bild
3. No. 8, Begegnung
4. No. 12, Verborgenheit
Franz Schubert: 4 Gesänge aus 'Wilhelm Meister', D. 877
5. No. 3, Lied der Mignon [II]. Nicht zu langsam
6. No. 2, Lied der Mignon [I]. Langsam
Clara Schumann:
7. 6 Lieder, Op. 13: No. 2, Sie liebten sich beide
8. Lorelei, KochS WoO 19
9. Scherzo No. 2, Op. 14
Franz Schubert
10. Erlkönig, D. 328 4:05
11. Der Tod und das Mädchen, D. 531
12. Mignon, D. 321
Henri Duparc
13. L'invitation au voyage
14. La vie antérieure
Lili Boulanger: Clairières dans le ciel
15. No. 6, Si tout ceci n'est qu'un pauvre rêve
Claude Debussy: 5 Poèmes de Baudelaire, CD 70
16. No. 4, Recueillement
Lili Boulanger: Clairières dans le ciel
17. No. 8, Vous m'avez regardé avec toute votre âme
18. Cortège
Claude Debussy: 5 Poèmes de Baudelaire, CD 70
19. No. 3, Le jet d'eau
20. No. 5, La mort des amants
21. Franz Liszt: Comment disaient-ils, S. 276
Sandrine Piau and the pianist David Kadouch have formed a new duo whose first concerts have been enthusiastically received. As is her wont, the French soprano enjoys intermingling languages and the worlds of different composers and poets around a theme; here Schubert, Liszt, Wolf and Clara Schumann rub shoulders with Lili Boulanger, Duparc and Debussy. Sandrine Piau explains: ‘The promise of new horizons, the joy of new encounters: the journey in all its forms was the common thread of this recital for David and me. From the quest for a longed-for yet inaccessible elsewhere to the ultimate transition to death, it maps out our aspirations, our obstacles and the “joyous getaways” offered to us by the whirlwind of life. She quotes a beautiful poem often attributed to Pablo Neruda: ‘He dies slowly who does not travel, who does not read, who does not listen to music, who does not know how to find grace in his own eyes.’