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CENTRO STUDI ERIC SAMS per la ricerca sul Lied tedesco
Direttore Erik Battaglia
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Home > Music Reviews > Schubert
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Schubert: Lieder. Elly Ameling (soprano), Dalton Baldwin (piano). Philips
This record, to judge by the cover and the sleeve-notes, seems
designed to suggest a series of character-studies in song. Gretchen
and Ellen are about to step singing from the pages of Goethe or
Scott, spinning-wheel or harp at the ready. The piano is to set the
scene while the voice enacts it. But I felt that the right stage was
never quite reached. Take, for example, D367, which despite its
comparative obscurity is given star billing. In this pathetic little
ballad, Gretchen tells a tale of faithfulness unto death, far away
and long ago in remote
Of course the lyric approach may reasonably be rated acceptable, or even preferable, by some Schubertians; and on any assessment there is lavish compensation. Dalton Baldwin's unobtrusive excellence contributes its own distinct eloquence, as in the perfectly struck bell-notes of D828, which also speak for the generally good balance and sound quality. In most of these songs, moreover, the piano part is especially designed to enhance the vocal expressiveness, as in Ellen's harp or horn accompaniments or Suleika's breeze and bird imagery. Thus buoyed and sustained, the singing very often takes wing and soars delightfully; but I feel that it remains too effortless to achieve the highest flights of which it is capable.
© gramophone, Apr. 1978 (p. 1761)
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