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Anna Prohaska & Eric Schneider - Behind The Lines (2014) [CD Rip]

Anna Prohaska & Eric Schneider - Behind The Lines (2014) [CD Rip]
  • Title: Behind The Lines
  • Year Of Release: 2014
  • Label: Deutsche Grammophon
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (image + .cue, log, artwork)
  • Total Time: 76:04 min
  • Total Size: 298 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. German Folksong: Es geht ein dunkle Wolk herein
02. Ludwig van Beethoven: Die Trommel geruhret
03. Hanns Eisler: Kriegslied eines Kindes
04. Hugo Wolf: Der Tambour
05. Hugo Wolf: Der Soldat II
06. Sergei Rachmaninov: Polyubila ya na pecal' svoyu
07. Thomas Traill: My Luve's in Germanie
08. Charles Ives: In Flanders Fields
09. Charles Ives: '1, 2, 3'
10. Charles Ives: Tom Sails Away
11. Roger Quilter: Fear No More the Heat o' the Sun
12. Hanns Eisler: Panzerschlacht
13. Hanns Eisler: Die letzte Elegie
14. Hanns Eisler: Die Heimkehr
15. Michael Cavendish: Wandring in This Place
16. Franz Schubert: Kriegers Ahnung
17. Franz Schubert: Ellens Gesang I
18. Wolfgang Rihm: Untergang
19. Franz Liszt: Jeanne d'Arc au bucher
20. Robert Schumann: Die beiden Grenadiere
21. Francis Poulenc: Le retour du sergent
22. Robert Schumann: Der Soldat
23. Gustav Mahler: Wo die schonen Trompeten blasen
24. Kurt Weill: Beat! Beat! Drums!
25. Kurt Weill: Dirge for Two Veterans

In a scene where the recordings of young sopranos tend toward an extreme sameness, Austria's Anna Prohaska would deserve kudos simply for the ambition of this release of soldiers' songs. The idea, especially for a female singer, is original, and the music draws on a great variety of sources, from Scottish song to Wolfgang Rihm. Better still is the execution, which shows Prohaska's extreme versatility. She's one of the few non-Anglophone singers to get the difficult combination of vernacular American English and popular-classical crossover referentiality in the three Charles Ives songs included, and she moves effortlessly from the edgy anger of Kurt Weill and Hanns Eisler to the more delicate tragic sense of Roger Quilter. Few of the songs beyond Schubert's Ellens Gesang, which receives a really uncanny performance, are really well known, and this is the kind of album that leaves one wondering how anyone missed all this music. The cover photos of Prohaska in a trench coat, trudging through sere meadows, may be a bit much, but the accompaniment of Eric Schneider is nicely understated, and the sonic presentation is clear and unfussy. Highly recommended. -- James Manheim


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