• logo

Reiner Goldberg, Ilona Tokody, Eve Queler - Strauss: Guntram, op. 25 (2009)

Reiner Goldberg, Ilona Tokody, Eve Queler - Strauss: Guntram, op. 25 (2009)
  • Title: Strauss: Guntram, op. 25
  • Year Of Release: 2009
  • Label: Sony Classical
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:55:59
  • Total Size: 529 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. Act One: Overture (00:10:04)
2. Scene 1: “Hier, ihr Guten, rastet, erholt euch” (00:08:16)
3. Scene 2: “Ein glückliches Loos?” (00:07:54)
4. “Endlich, endlich entflohn dem Schwarm” (00:07:06)
5. “Freihild! Was hör ich?” (00:02:07)
6. Scene 3: “Freihild, mein Kind, mein süsses Kind!” (00:03:22)
7. “Verdammtes Volk, hab ich euch gefasst?!” (00:05:05)
8. Act Two: Overture (00:01:27)
9. Scene 1: “Heil dem Herrscher, dessen Seele” (00:02:13)
10. “Freihild! Noch scheinst du traurig” (00:11:49)
Guntram (заключение) (Richard Strauss)
11. Act Two: Scene 1: “Was soll der Sang?” (00:01:40)
12. Scene 2: “Krieg, Krieg, Krieg, mein Herzog” (00:01:25)
13. “So verfalle das Reich in Schutt und Staub” (00:10:44)
14. Scene 3: “Fass’ ich sie bang” (00:04:48)
15. Act Three: Overture; Scene 1: “Et lux perpetua” (00:03:32)
16. “Hinweg, hinweg! Drohe mir nicht” (00:00:56)
17. Scene 2: “Guntram! Guntram, was ist dir?” (00:10:02)
18. Scene 3: “Gegrüsst Guntram, grosser Sünder” (00:10:41)
19. Scene 4: “Heil dir, Geliebter” (00:10:14)
20. “Freihild, leb’ wohl” (00:02:34)

Performers:
István Gáti (baritone), Tamás Bátor (bass), Pál Kovács (baritone), József Gregor (bass), Tamara Takács (contralto), Attila Fülöp (tenor), János Bándi (tenor), Sandor Sólyom-Nagy (bass), Ilona Tokody (soprano), Reiner Goldberg (tenor), Hungarian Army Chorus, Hungarian State Orchestra, János Tóth (bass)
Eve Queler

Richard Strauss’s first opera owes much to the influence of Wagner, to the extent that, like the older composer, he wrote his own libretto and even the names of the characters and the plot reveal Wagnerian influences with its 13th-century setting and a singing contest which takes place at court. The central role of Guntram is also typical of later Strauss in terms of the demands he makes on the tenor voice — one of the reasons that stage productions are so infrequent.




As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
  • Unlimited high speed downloads
  • Download directly without waiting time
  • Unlimited parallel downloads
  • Support for download accelerators
  • No advertising
  • Resume broken downloads