Forgotten Songs: Dawn Upshaw Sings Debussy
|
| Price: | $7.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
22 new or used available from $4.54
Average customer review:Track Listing
- Pantomime ('Pierrot qui n'a rien d'un Clitandre'), song for voice & piano, L. 31
- En sourdine ('Calmes dans le demi-jour'), song for voice & piano, L. 28 (first version)
- Mandoline ('Les donneurs de s�r�nades'), song for voice & piano, L. 29
- Clair de lune ('Votre �me est un paysage choisi'), song for voice & piano, L. 32
- Fantoches ('Scaramouche et Pulcinella'), song for voice & piano, L. 21
- Coquetterie posthume ('Quand je mourrai, qu l'on me mette'), song for voice & piano, L. 39
- Romance ('Silence ineffable de l'heure'), song for voice & piano, L. 43
- Musique ('La lune se levait, pure, mais plus glac�e'), song for voice & piano, L. 44
- Paysage sentimental ('Le ciel d'hiver si doux, si triste, si dormant'), song for voice & piano, L. 45
- Romance ('Voici que le printemps, ce fil l�ger d'avril'), song for voice & piano, L. 52
- La Romance d'Ariel ('Au long ds ces montagnes douces'), song for voice & piano, L. 54
- Regret ('Devant le ciel d'�t�, ti�de et callme'), song for voice & piano, L. 55
- Ariettes oubli�es (6), song cycle for voice & piano, L. 60: No.1: C'est l'extase langoureuse
- Ariettes oubli�es (6), song cycle for voice & piano, L. 60: No.2: il pleure dans mon coeur
- Ariettes oubli�es (6), song cycle for voice & piano, L. 60: No.3: L'ombre des arbes
- Ariettes oubli�es (6), song cycle for voice & piano, L. 60: No.4 Chevaux de bois
- Ariettes oubli�es (6), song cycle for voice & piano, L. 60: No.5: Green
- Ariettes oubli�es (6), song cycle for voice & piano, L. 60: No.6: Spleen
- Po�mes (5) de Baudelaire, song collection for voice & piano, L. 64: No.1: le Balcon
- Po�mes (5) de Baudelaire, song collection for voice & piano, L. 64: No.2: Harmonie du soir
- Po�mes (5) de Baudelaire, song collection for voice & piano, L. 64: No.3: le Jet d'eau
- Po�mes (5) de Baudelaire, song collection for voice & piano, L. 64: No.4: Recueillement
- Po�mes (5) de Baudelaire, song collection for voice & piano, L. 64: No.5: la Mort des amants
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #32621 in Music
- Brand: Sony
- Released on: 1997-03-18
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .25 pounds
Customer Reviews
the debussy songbook
Thank you Dawn Upshaw for programming on one CD the 'big' collections of the Debussy vocal repertory. The only other recording which has most of these vocal collections is Barbara Hendrick's 'Melodies' CD which has the Ariettes oubilees and the Baudelaire Poems, but it lacks the Vasnier Songbook. Upshaw's disc is a rare find with its wider-encompassing collection. She is accompanied by the very capable, James Levine, NY MET Conductor. Levine's touch and balance in voicing chords gives the right 'color' to accompany the fluid lines of Debussy's text setting. Upshaw is able to connect long lines with that 'milky' texture her voice is known for, giving an impassioned performance for the listener.
Returning to the Recital Hall: A Soiree
Dawn Upshaw is one of the most intelligent and creative and adventuresome singers on the concert stage today. Just reviewing the list of her recordings available and it is obvious that she has paid attention to both contemporary and established composers in a way that is truly refreshing.
Here the program is devoted to the works of Claude Debussy, a composer for whom Upshaw has a particular penchant. Her voice is crystal clear, perfectly focused and yet not afraid to animate when the lyrics demand. She covers three cycles here: 'Ariettes oubliees' (for this listener the most successful on the album), 'Racueil Vasnier', and 'Cinq Poemes de Charles Baudelaire' (contrast these with the recently released Susan Graham version and see what interpretation is all about!).
The collaboration between Upshaw and James Levine is sensitive (if not always the pianism of others..). But the entire recital is uplifting and satisfying for the variation in the songs, recorded sound, the generosity of the disc, and most of all for the musical intelligence in which these songs are performed! Grady Harp, April 05
Not quite perfection, but not be be forgotten, either
I had the fun of playing the accompaniment once to some of the songs in this cycle with a friend-soprano. That gave me a real appreciation for what musical intricacies are in this song cycle. Debussy was a master composer who didn't let the piano languish doing upty-oomps while the singer roars all over the staves. Instead, Debussy weaves the singer and piano in a sort of pas-de-deux, letting each musician shine and add color the music while creating a true duo, challenging each musician to play to his or her utmost ability.
Sadly, Dawn Upshaw, who has a great voice, seems to be trying to temper her power and warm tone to accommodate the delicacy of Debussy's miniatures. It seems to be a mismatch which frankly surprised me. I thought if anyone had the flexibility and drama to do the "Forgotten Songs" it would have been Upshaw. But for whatever reason, the recording is slightly unfulfilling. A few songs ("Mandoline", "Balcon") are completely satisfying, but on the whole, this is not a one-hundred percent triumph. Perhaps Upshaw is more suited to a long, endurance work of increasingly soaring tones such as her recording of Gorecki's Third Symphony, where she is unsurpassed. I have not heard her do Strauss, but I'll bet she does it well, as I think her voice is more suited to that composer than here with Debussy.
I had no real problems with Levine's piano work, but sometimes it seems bit flat in dynamics. Levine is, however, well suited here to adapt his playing to fit a singer, since his "day job" is conducting opera.
Still, not that many singers have chosen to record these pretty litte songs, so I do play this CD often and with enjoyment.




