Lotte Lehmann - Lieder Recordings, Vol. 2 (1937-1940)

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BRAHMS / SCHUMANN / WOLF / SCHUBERT
Lotte Lehmann - Lieder Recordings, Vol. 2 (1937-1940)
Erno Balogh (Piano) / Lotte Lehmann (Soprano)

[ Naxos Historical Great Singers / CD ]

Release Date: Sunday 16 July 2006

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

In remastering my transfers for this Naxos reissue, I have removed many pops and clicks that were in the original release, and have re-equalised all the tracks in order to present a comparatively warmer sound. In addition, several of the tracks have been entirely re-transferred, including all the duets with Melchior.

Lotte Lehmann has gone down in history as the most celebrated Marschallin of her time in Richard Strauss's Der Rosenkavalier. Opera, however, was not all, and her abilities as a consummate Lieder singer must never be overlooked, nor her final career at the Music Academy of the West in Santa Barbara. Emigrating to the United States in 1938, she continued singing at the somewhat critical age of fifty, then took citizenship and stayed on the West Coast as a successful voice teacher for the rest of her life.

Sixty years ago, singers trained for a longer time than they do today; they were more patient about working their way up from the bottom of the profession under a strict discipline, not, as now, under early pressure to perform. Conditions were such that the wisest of them, including Lotte Lehmann, sang from their vocal income, not from its capital.

Lotte Lehmann came from Mecklenburg in North Germany, was blessed with a pure voice from birth, but in spite of her father's discouragement (he was a civil servant) she was accepted as a pupil with free tuition at a private academy in Berlin. After a year she found herself at odds with her teacher, and the principal of the school dismissed the young Lehmann at the end of 1908 because she had 'no talent'. Her father's suggestion that she should become a teacher was a spur to the determined girl. She wrote to the great Mathilde Mallinger (Wagner's first Eva) and sang for her. 'No talent, indeed!' scoffed Mallinger, who took Lehmann as a special pupil, renewing her confidence and vocal freedom.

The Hamburg Opera accepted her in 1910 where she became friendly with another young soprano, Elisabeth Schumann. Thanks to Artur Nikisch, Enrico Caruso and Otto Klemperer, who were all helpful to her, she progressed from tiny parts to the major ones until, by early 1915, she was singing Elsa and Sieglinde - and Micaëla in Carmen. The last casting turned out to be very important for her, because Hans Gregor, the new director of the Vienna Court Opera, had come to Hamburg to hear the Don José in Carmen, but he was far more impressed with Lehmann's Micaëla, and immediately offered her a contract. In the following October she gave a proving performance as Eva in Die Meistersinger.

Now she had become 'a property', and her new agent arranged appearances for her in London with Thomas Beecham, Hans Pfitzner in Cologne and at Zoppot with Richard Tauber, all before her first appearance in Vienna. On arrival she was regarded as a provincial in speech, manners and clothes, her Prussian coldness and stiffness equally unwelcome, but she sang well, and became a member of the company in August 1916 when her contract with Hamburg had expired.

The ways of the German northerners were very different from the central European Viennese who considered Lehmann to be bourgeois, badly dressed, with a curious accent and boorish. The great Maria Jeritza never so much as spoke to her. This disconcerted Lehmann considerably. Soon after she arrived, however, she was given an important understudy rôle in a new opera by Richard Strauss and Hugo von Hofmannsthal. Very shortly before the première, the two creators told her that she was going to sing The Composer in Ariadne auf Naxos because the famous Marie-Gutheil Schoder, originally cast, had missed too many rehearsals. After the first night (4 October 1916) everybody in Vienna had heard of Lotte Lehmann and her future was assured. This was the first of her three Strauss world premières (hers was also the first Arabella in Vienna).

Lehmann remained a member of the Vienna Opera until 1937, singing 54 different rôles. There were many dates in South America, London, Paris, Chicago, the Met and her always beloved Salzburg between 1927 and 1937 involving her in association with many fine singers and conductors, and a growing number of Lieder recitals. She enjoyed a substantial career between the years 1916 and 1938, and because her personality and voice were warm, with something of a mezzo-soprano's mellowness, it was inevitable that she should be a successful concert singer and recording artist, especially in major nineteenth-century Lieder. It is likely that Lehmann gave her first proper song recital in Argentina in 1922. It was not until Salzburg in 1934 that she and Bruno Walter gave the first of their 'Lieder Evenings' where she realised how easily she could hold audiences by this very personal form of music-making. The 'two darlings of Salzburg' were to pack the concert hall at the annual Salzburg Festival until 1937, as well as appearing together in Vienna.

Lotte Lehmann was a prolific recording artist. In the primitive studios before electrical recording, her introduction to the large acoustic horn was in 1921 with Richard Strauss's Cäcilie and Morgen for Polydor. She was an Odeon artist between 1924 and 1933, and, because they favoured the 10-inch 78 rpm record, she was encouraged to extend her output of Lieder. The fashion of the time was for orchestrated accompaniments, often of an inappropriate and schmaltzy nature, rather than solo piano as originally intended. In 1933 Lehmann began recording for HMV, before transferring her allegiance to the Victor Recording Company in 1935. By the time she left Vienna, her operatic voice was no longer as luxurious as it had been, but these recorded Lieder reflect the care which she had always taken of that priceless asset, coupled with the years of experience which give great artists depths. Including previously unissued 'takes' which open up new discoveries about Lehmann, there are 64 pre-war Victor recordings of Lieder, representing her voice and artistry at a very high level.

On 17 October 1935, her first day in the Victor studios, she recorded ten 10-inch 78 rpm discs. The Lieder programme of Mozart, Schubert, Brahms and Hugo Wolf would seem to be aimed at the specialist collector, but Lehmann's voice and personality won over new listeners. The second session in March the following year included five lighter songs, the first of which is by Ernö Balogh. The Hungarian pianist Balogh had studied composition with Bartók and Kodály in Budapest, but was known in the United States mainly as a fine accompanist. He said that his happiest artistic association was with Lehmann, and judging by the rate at which they completed the session (with two recording machines going) it would appear that they worked as though it were a recital: one Lied after another, using the alternative recording machine to keep up the momentum. Certainly the frequency with which the first of two 'takes' was chosen indicates a spontaneity not always accomplished in the studio.

The next recording session took place a year later, shortly before the Anschluss in Austria, when Lehmann was already worrying about her husband and his (not her) four, part-Jewish, children in Vienna. She was occupied for the rest of 1937 and 1938 with many personal troubles. Her husband and the children had to be ransomed for a huge sum in order to get them out of Austria, and he never recovered from the anxiety and misery of this. There were no further recordings by Lehmann for Victor until January 1939 when Balogh yielded to another accompanist, Paul Ulanowsky, who became her recital partner until her retirement in 1951.

Ulanowsky was Austrian, and had been thoroughly trained in musicology, violin and viola and composition, as well as the piano. After playing piano and celesta with the Vienna Philharmonic for ten seasons, he went in 1935 to the United States as accompanist to his compatriot, the contralto Enid Szantho, and remained there. Two years later he met Lehmann, and their professional partnership turned out to be ideal. Ulanowsky memorised all the music and could easily transpose into any key (so long as she told him which one it was to be). He could also adjust to Lehmann's spontaneous rhythmic variations which depended on an almost telepathic sympathy between them. They had performed together so frequently during the year that when they came to make recordings, it was hardly necessary for them to make more than two 'takes' of any song. One can be forgiven for not regarding Lehmann as a mainstream Hugo Wolf interpreter since so few examples of her singing this repertoire were recorded, but judging by the records she did make, she was one of Wolf's most skilled advocates.

As to the question of which composer best represented Lehmann, Schubert would have to be high on the list. In her last session for RCA records she recorded eleven Lieder from the Winterreise. Only Elena Gerhardt among female singers had essayed the 'Winter journey' on disc, but she had only made eight of them whereas Lehmann was to continue to record the complete cycle. It affected her so deeply that she was compelled to spread the feeling of loneliness and tragedy that it engendered by painting a picture of each of the 24 songs - all in blue.

By contrast Lehmann could be full of fun, and the Schumann duets with Lauritz Melchior, her partner in many Wagner performances going back to 1926, illustrate an unexpected aspect of their collaboration. It is difficult to believe that Lehmann was able to present her part with such delightful relish, considering that these records were made in the shadow of her husband's death only eight days before.

© Alan Jefferson

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Producer's Note

The present collection was originally released in 1994 by Romophone as the second disc in a two-CD set devoted to Lehmann's 1935-40 Victor recordings. In remastering my transfers for this Naxos reissue, I have removed many pops and clicks that were in the original release, and have re-equalised all the tracks in order to present a comparatively warmer sound. In addition, several of the tracks have been entirely re-transferred, including all the duets with Melchior.

The miking of the original 78s was extremely close, and Lehmann's voice frequently overloads the recording equipment. In addition, the piano tone of the 1937 sides as recorded is very tinny; and while things seem to improve for the 1939 sessions, they regress somewhat by 1940. While not Victor's finest hour from an engineering standpoint, these recordings, several of which were unissued on 78 rpm, feature Lehmann in a variety of repertoire she never otherwise set down on disc, and are thus valuable despite their flaws.

Mark Obert-Thorn

Tracks:

12 Gedichte aus F. Ruckerts Liebesfruhling, Op. 37: No. 12. So wahr die Sonne scheinet
12 Gedichte, Op. 35: No. 12. Alte Laute
4 Duette, Op. 34 (excerpts)
4 Duette, Op. 78: No. 2. Er und Sie
4 Duette, Op. 78: No. 3. Ich denke dein
49 Deutsche Volkslieder, WoO 33: No. 25. Mein Madel hat einen Rosenmund
5 Lieder, Op. 107: No. 3. Das Madchen spricht
5 Lieder, Op. 47: No. 1. Botschaft
Drink to me only with thine eyes (arr. J.W. Calcott)
Goethe Lieder: No. 28. Fruhling ubers Jahr
Italienisches Liederbuch (excerpts)
Italienisches Liederbuch: No. 8. Nun lass uns Frieden schliessen
Morike Lieder (excerpts)
Morike Lieder: No. 28. Gebet
Visions (Tonerna)
Winterreise, Op. 89, D. 911 (excerpts)