Archive for October 22, 2010


Kurt Weill was both well respected and popular in his own day, and in the years since his death in 1950 his reputation has only increased. As a result, many of the songs on “The Unknown Kurt Weill “(recorded in 1981) are no longer quite so unknown.
Perhaps that’s because Weill’s melodies are so catchy that they take up residence in your brain after just a listen or two. No wonder “Mack the Knife” (not included here) became an enormous pop hit for Bobby Darin. But crossover appeal aside, these are songs that beg for individual interpretation.

Teresa Stratas is a Weill specialist, having been tapped by Weill’s widow – the gravel-voiced chanteuse Lotte Lenya – to carry the musical torch. The notoriously volatile Stratas is no longer singing (due to a faulty throat operation), but on this recording, she sounds terrific, sinking her teeth into stunning songs like “Und was bekam des Soldaten Weib” (Ballad of the Soldier’s Wife) and “Nanna’s Lied” (both with texts by Bertolt Brecht).

Of this production Harold Lawrence writes “Easily one of the outstanding early digital releases is this Nonesuch recording of 14 songs of Kurt Weill’s theater music. The soprano, Teresa Stratas, who made such a deep impression in the role of Jenny in the Metropolitan Opera’s revival of “Mahagonny”, sings 14 songs by Weill in this release, Kurt Weill’s widow, Lotte Lenya, was in the audience on opening night and wrote Miss Stratas that ‘nobody can sing Weill’s music better than you do.’ She offered Stratas a number of unpublished songs that she had guarded since her husband’s death in 1950. The result was a New York concert in January 1980 in which these songs formed the nucleus of the program. The event attracted the interest of Jac Holzman, Nonesuch’s enterprising director. Holzman lost no time in signing up Teresa Stratas and pianist Richard Woitach to commit the concert to disc. The album is a fascinating collection, spanning some 20 years. Teresa Stratas sings with total understanding of the different sides of the composer and the recording, on Nonesuch Records, ranks as one of the best early digital efforts.”
.
This recording is a revelation because it testifies to Weill’s heritage and place in music: from the profane to the metaphysical, the seedy to the classic, it connects Weill to both the German dance- and concert-halls. Stratas interpretation places this music in the Berg tradition, using a wide range of color and emotion that rushes the melodious songs at you in a brilliant and immediate way. This is an album that I would grab first in a fire and I believe is a true classic in recording history.

Teresa Strata – The Unknown Kurt Weill (1981)

Valuable as an index of theatrically inclined or jazz-addled female pop vocalists, this rosy little compilation mingles famous and relatively obscure singers in a sequence of pleasantly old-fashioned performances recorded from 1924 to 1931. Jane Green, Helen Kane, Annette Hanshaw, the Brox Sisters, Ruth Etting, Zelma O’Neal, and Esther Walker come across as fetching, zippy, and cute. Marion Harris, Blossom Seeley, Sophie Tucker, and Margaret Young represent a closer affiliation with vaudeville and real jazz. Libby Holman, Kate Smith, Mildred Hunt, Aileen Stanley, Lee Morse, and Greta Keller resort to the tried and true formula of sounding sentimental and blue, whereas Gertrude Lawrence, Lillian Roth, and Helen Morgan use the conventionally sugary and romantic approach.

The fine art of gender-bending is represented here with lesbian overtones by Ruth Etting, who declines an opportunity to alter the lyrics to Irving Berlin’s “It All Belongs to Me,” and even more outrageously by the Brox Sisters with their enthusiastically campy rendition of “Red Hot Mama.” An intriguing time capsule, this album is both entertaining and historically informative.

This compilation is a tribute to the irresistible women of the Twenties, be they flappers, vamps or sweet young things. The 20 delightful examples range from the “Boop-boop-a-doop” girl Helen Kane to “red-hot mama” Sophie Tucker, from torch singer Libby Holman to the ultimate musical star, Gertrude Lawrence. How can anyone NOT love this sort of historical music?

No link.

Valuable as an index of theatrically inclined or jazz-addled female pop vocalists, this rosy little compilation mingles famous and relatively obscure singers in a sequence of pleasantly old-fashioned performances recorded from 1924 to 1931. Jane Green, Helen Kane, Annette Hanshaw, the Brox Sisters, Ruth Etting, Zelma O’Neal, and Esther Walker come across as fetching, zippy, and cute. Marion Harris, Blossom Seeley, Sophie Tucker, and Margaret Young represent a closer affiliation with vaudeville and real jazz. Libby Holman, Kate Smith, Mildred Hunt, Aileen Stanley, Lee Morse, and Greta Keller resort to the tried and true formula of sounding sentimental and blue, whereas Gertrude Lawrence, Lillian Roth, and Helen Morgan use the conventionally sugary and romantic approach.

The fine art of gender-bending is represented here with lesbian overtones by Ruth Etting, who declines an opportunity to alter the lyrics to Irving Berlin’s “It All Belongs to Me,” and even more outrageously by the Brox Sisters with their enthusiastically campy rendition of “Red Hot Mama.” An intriguing time capsule, this album is both entertaining and historically informative.

This compilation is a tribute to the irresistible women of the Twenties, be they flappers, vamps or sweet young things. The 20 delightful examples range from the “Boop-boop-a-doop” girl Helen Kane to “red-hot mama” Sophie Tucker, from torch singer Libby Holman to the ultimate musical star, Gertrude Lawrence. How can anyone NOT love this sort of historical music?

No link.

“Verboten und verbannt” – “forbidden and banned” – a phrase used with Jewish composers whose music was proscribed by the Nazis brings to mind more than musical censorship, but also the atrocities that culminated in the Holocaust.

 
While some of the composers represented by this phrase died before the Third Reich, others lived through it, and like the works of their predecessors preserved on this recording, they endured the horrors of this dark period of the twentieth century. This recital is an attempt to use music of composers so wrongly branded and proscribed to reverse the situation and make the label “Verboten und verbrannt” into an emblem of their merit. The best explanation of the purpose of this recital from the 2005 Salzburg Festival is included in the liner notes by Gottfried Kraus:
“As in previous years, the programme extended over two evenings, the first of which featured Hampson alone, whereas for the second he was joined by femail colleagues who shared his commitment to the subject. In both he confronted his festival audience with the works of composers whom the National Socialists had banned, outlawed, driven into exile and in some cases even murdered. Both programmes were titled “Verboten und verbannt” (“Forbidden and Banned”). Hampson’s aim was not so much to engage on a political level with one of the darkest chapters in human history. Instead, he wanted to show that art is ultimately more powerful than evil and brute force. Many of the songs and composers’ names, especially in the second programme, may well have been unfamiliar to his Mozarteum audience, while even familiar works such as Mendelssohn’s “Auf Flügeln des Gesanges,” which opened both programmes, functioning as a kind of motto, and Mahler’s Rückert-Lieder, which brought the first evening to a close, appeared in a new and different light when heard in their present context.The result was certainly not a lieder recital in the customary sense of the term, but a festival concert as it ought to be be, a distinction that it owed not only to the choice of programme and its intelligent structure but also to the way in which the audience was prepared. . . .”

This recording preserves the recital from 18 August 2005 and provides an excellent overview of the Lieder by a body of proscribed composers. With Mendelssohn’s “Auf Flügeln des Gesanges” (“On the wings of song”) opening the program, the connotes a conventional Lieder recital through the use of this familiar song that has been part of many such performances since its composition. Just the same Mendelssohn’s “Altdeutsches Frühlingslied” is another song that transcends the artificial boundaries connected to nationality and politics, but rather communicates the poet – and the composer’s – experience of rebirth. These and other selections of Mendelssohn’s songs evoke the nineteenth century, a time when Mendelssohn would have been known and admired, but hardly forbidden and banned. These songs anchor the recital in the tradition of the German Lied, an element that is wholly part of the culture in which the other composers worked. It was not an idiom for social, religious, or political activity, but rather an artistic milieu that crossed any of those artificial boundaries. This hardly means that prejudice or labeling were unknown. While it may have been less so for Mendelssohn, Mahler faced the anti-Semitic press, and the bias against his Jewish nationality certainly influenced the reception of his music in lifetime and afterward.
 
With Meyerbeer, the songs represent an unfamiliar side of the composer, who is known best for grand opera. The three selections chosen for this recital show Meyerbeer’s facility with the Lied in two settings of Heine and one of Michael Beer. The first two are somewhat conventional Lieder, but the third, “Menschenfeindlich” shows a more dramatic and, to a degree ironic, side of Meyerbeer. This song calls for a tight ensemble between the singer and the pianist, and the applause included in the recording demonstrates the audience’s appreciate for this bravura piece. Wit the songs of Zemlinsky that follow, the harmonic idiom is more complicated. Mit “Trommeln und Pfeifen”, for example, Zemlinsky is a wonderfully colorful setting of Liliencron’s Wundhorn-like text, with modal inflections in the vocal line that underscore the sung text. Of Schoenberg’s Lieder, the setting of Viktor Klemperer’s verse in “Der verlorene Haufen” is highly evocative, and its proximity to Pierrot lunaire emerges in the passages of Sprechstimme and the pointillistic writing in the piano that underscores the vocal line in other places. Schoenberg’s proximity to Mahler and, by extension, the nineteenth-century Lied tradition may be found in his more conventional setting “Wie Georg von Frundsberg von sich selber sang” (“Mein Fleiß und Müh ich nie hab’ gespart”), with its text from “Des Knaben Wunderhorn”.

The modernism that Schoenberg expressed in his songs is part of the idiom that Alban Berg adopted for his own style, and in so doing both created music that eventually became associated with artistic decadence. It is possible to hear Berg’s challenges to convention in even the early songs included in this recital, with a piece like “Schlummerlose Nächte” poised keenly between traditional structure and turn-of-the-century innovation. Other Lieder are, perhaps, less experimental, with the fine examples from the young composer Erich Zeisl being a bit anachronistic. Mahler has the final word with this set of five Rückert-Lieder found at the close. Four of the songs were on the program, with the last, “Liebst du um Schönheit” offered an encore.

This recording preserves essentially all of Hampson’s performances of this important part of the 2005 Salzburg Festival. It is no surprise to find Hampson balancing the attention to the lines of text with the execution of the musical line and never at the expense of one over the other. His phrasing of Mahler’s Rückert-Lieder is exemplary, with the comfortable ensemble with Rieger apparent on those pieces and throughout the recording. It is a fine contrbituion on various counts, with the sometimes infrequently performed literature here executed masterfully. The focus of the recital itself merits attention for its supra-musical motivation whcih, in this live recording were hardly lost on the audience. The overall quality of the reproduction is fine, and while some of the audience and stage sounds sometimes intrude on several selections, such details contribute the sense of immediacy that the audience itself experienced. While music that was forbidden and banned by the Third Reich has been the subject of various books and articles, as well as London’s series of recordings labeled “Entartete Musik” – proscribed music – this concise exploration of the subject speaks volumes. – James Zychowicz

(192 kbps)

Formed in 1970, Ton Steine Scherben were one of Germany’s first real homegrown rock bands (as opposed to bands covering American and British rock songs), and although they weren’t commercially successful in the normal sense, the group’s influence in Germany has been long-lasting.

With a lineup of vocalist Rio Reiser, guitarist R.P.S. Lanrue, drummer Funky Götzner, bassist Kai Sichtermann, and keyboardist Martin Paul, Ton Steine Scherben (or TSS, as they came to be known) released several independent records on their own dime, recordings that were frequently highly political and controversial.
In time, Ton Steine Scherben shifted ground just slightly and explored more personal territory in their lyrics, but they never abandoned a sort of renegade stance, what in later years would be dubbed “punk.” The first incarnation of TSS disbanded in 1985, but Reiser’s death in 1996 reunited the surviving members for a farewell concert that same year, and they came together again in 2005 for a successful reunion tour and played a gig at the revolutionary May demonstration in Berlin this year.

Here´s another colaboration with the left wing cabaret Kollektiv Rote Rübe, called “Liebe, Tod, Hysterie”.
.

Ton Steine Scherben & Kollektiv Rote Rübe – Liebe, Tod, Hysterie (1979)

The Weavers celebrated their 15th anniversary by performing two concerts — May 2 and 3, 1963 — at Carnegie Hall, the site of their historic 1955 comeback concert, and inviting back former members Pete Seeger and Erik Darling as well as introducing new member Bernie Krause.

 
The shows served to reaffirm the status of a group that had fostered the folk boom of the late 1950s and early 1960s, yet had been bypassed by it as others scored with their songs, notably Peter, Paul and Mary, who had taken the early Weavers song “If I Had a Hammer” into the Top Ten.

The group reclaimed that song and others, such as “Wimoweh” (pilfered by the Tokens as “The Lion Sleeps Tonight”); performed their own old hits, such as “Goodnight, Irene”; and covered such new material as Tom Paxton’s “Ramblin’ Boy” (actually a solo performance by Seeger). On record, the numerous lead singers make the show sound more like a folk festival than a performance by one group, but this remains a spirited effort very much in tune with the first Carnegie Hall show.

(192 kbps)

Its lowly budget status notwithstanding, Joan Baez “In San Francisco” is, in fact, a crucial addition to any collection – albeit one that even completists are unlikely to play more than once or twice.

It comprises the album-length session that the then unknown teenager recorded in June 1958, as she later recalled. “I… was still in high school [when] two guys approached me and said ‘hey little girl, would you like to make a record?’ They were rogues, but I didn’t know that. [So] off we went to San Francisco [where] I recorded everything I knew on a gigantic borrowed Gibson guitar.”

A dozen songs ranged from recent hit songs like “La Bamba”, “Young Blood” and Harry Belafonte’s “Island In The Sun”, to folk club standards “Oh Freedom” and “I Gave My Love A Cherry”, and it must be confessed, no matter how beautiful Baez’s voice was, the material lets it down almost every time. True, her version of “Dark As A Dungeon” was fine, and she obviously retained enough affection for “Scarlet Ribbons” to include it aboard her “Rare, Live and Classic” box set. Otherwise, however, “Joan Baez in San Francisco” is little more than a curio from the very dawn of her career, a demo tape that failed in its stated purpose of landing her a record deal, and which should have been archived accordingly. But it resurfaced in 1964, once Baez’s fame was assured and, while she did succeed in getting an injunction against it at the time, it has continued resurfacing ever since.

No link.

Originally released in 1959 on Elektra, this is the second of three Yiddish albums Bikel recorded for Elektra Records.

In a career that has spanned over 50 years, Bikel has excelled in all aspects of the entertainment industry. He has appeared in numerous stage productions, and costarred with Mary Martin (at her insistence) in the original Broadway production of “The Sound Of Music,” and has performed the role of Tevye in over 2,000 performances of “Fiddler On The Roof”.

His many film credits include “The African Queen” with Humphrey Bogart and Katherine Hepburn, “The Defiant Ones”, for which he received an Academy Award nomination, “My Fair Lady”, “The Russians Are Coming”, and the Frank Zappa cult classic, “200 Motels”.

As a singer, Bikel has been an important mentor and influence on artist such as Judy Collins, Peter Paul and Mary, The Limelighters, and Bob Dylan.

“Theodore Bikel Sings MORE Jewish Folk Songs” is a wonderful and joyous celebration of Yiddish Folk songs and is welcome addition to any folk music collection!

Tracks
1. Hulyet, Hulyet Kinderlech
2. Lomir Alle Zingen [Let Us All Sing]
3. A Zemer
4. A Fidler
5. Drie Techterlech
6. Der Bekher
7. Kinder Yorn
8. Dona, Dona
9. Unter a Kleyn Beymele
10. Der Fisher
11. Drei Yingelech
12. Papier Iz Doch Veis
13. Az Der Rebbe Zingt
14. Di Zun Vet Aruntergeyn

(192 kbps)

Among the earliest and most influential Delta bluesmen to record, Skip James was the best-known proponent of the so-called Bentonia school of blues players, a genre strain invested with as much fanciful scholarly “research” as any.

Skip James made his original reputation with 17 recordings that he cut during February 1931, when he was 28. Although fluent on both the guitar and (to a lesser extent) the piano, James was most notable for his storytelling lyrics, his haunting high-pitched voice, and his distinctive interpretations of the Delta blues.
James was rediscovered 33 years after his early recordings, in time to appear at the 1964 Newport Folk Festival. He was quite active during 1964-1966, making the music on this solo album (his last record) three years before his death in 1969. One can easily hear the influence that Skip James’ music had on the then flourishing folk music movement, and he still sang his country blues with great intensity.

Skip James – Devil Got My Woman (1966)
(192 kbps, cover art included)

Among the earliest and most influential Delta bluesmen to record, Skip James was the best-known proponent of the so-called Bentonia school of blues players, a genre strain invested with as much fanciful scholarly “research” as any.

Skip James made his original reputation with 17 recordings that he cut during February 1931, when he was 28. Although fluent on both the guitar and (to a lesser extent) the piano, James was most notable for his storytelling lyrics, his haunting high-pitched voice, and his distinctive interpretations of the Delta blues.
James was rediscovered 33 years after his early recordings, in time to appear at the 1964 Newport Folk Festival. He was quite active during 1964-1966, making the music on this solo album (his last record) three years before his death in 1969. One can easily hear the influence that Skip James’ music had on the then flourishing folk music movement, and he still sang his country blues with great intensity.

Skip James – Devil Got My Woman (1966)
(192 kbps, cover art included)