BBC Music Magazine

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Das Lied von der Erde Roberto Saccà (tenor), Stephen Gadd (baritone); Bamberger Symphonike­r/ Jonathan Nott Tudor 7202 (hybrid CD/SACD) 61:28 mins

Why has no previous baritone, Dietrich Fischer-dieskau for Bernstein included, ever convinced me that Mahler’s option for an alternativ­e voice-type to a mezzo in three of his song-symphony settings really works, while the little-known name of Stephen Gadd proves the exception? Much of it has to do with the natural balances between voices and orchestra on this seemingly effortless­ly-engineered last instalment of Jonathan Nott’s Bamberg Mahler cycle. Both tenor and baritone sound simply like two more instrument­s in Mahler’s very careful texturing, the ones which carry the greater impetus of heartache words.

Both Gadd and Roberto Saccà tend to a wide vibrato at times. But it’s under control, and Saccà strikes me as ideal: in the little miniature

‘On Beauty’ where I’ve never heard a lighter touch or more delight in the text, not even from Wunderlich. He’s a lyric with Helden potential, keeping it fresh where Kaufmann, on Nott’s other recording of the work (reviewed left), can sound older and more worn. Best of all, Gadd injects real, tearful emotion into the great releases of the ‘Farewell’ – I was more moved here than by Kaufmann. In the Bamberg orchestra, Nott has a team of players responsive to his every nuance; I even prefer the Bamberg winds to their Vienna counterpar­ts. They’re just a little more ‘speaking’ – and that’s the great virtue of this very singular and involving interpreta­tion as a whole. David Nice

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