BBC Music Magazine

GODS & MONSTERS

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Songs by Beethoven, Brahms, Mahler, Mendelssoh­n, Schubert, Schumann, Brahms and Wolf Nicholas Phan (tenor),

Myra Huang (piano)

Avie AV 2368 64:27 mins

From creepy Grimm-style fairytales to the idyll of Ancient Greece; American lyric tenor Nicholas

Phan’s fourth solo disc sees his first venture into the German ballad repertoire. This recital – inspired by Phan’s recent work with children – is dedicated to storytelli­ng.

The programme is in four parts. It opens with ‘Mount Olympus’, four of Schubert’s Greek myth songs. Then follows ‘Knights and Kings’, an unusual set of Schubert, Brahms, Mahler and Beethoven. The third section, ‘Things that Go Bump in the Night’, treats supernatur­al topics. Finally, ‘Fairytales’ includes Schumann’s delightful Der

Sandmann and three characteri­stically witty songs by Wolf. Brahms’s

Sandmännch­en, a tender lullaby arranged for Robert Schumann’s children, lulls us at the close.

In this repertoire, the devil is in the detail. Phan has a beautifull­y sweet tone, but his vibrato can be distractin­gly unruly, and there are various slips in his German. More importantl­y, though, both artists handle songs like Schubert’s terrifying Der Zwerg or Wolf’s Feuerreite­r too tamely. These forays into the sinister side of this repertoire need more bite in the sound, risk with the text, and flexibilit­y with the score.

Still, it is good to hear a male singer perform Brahms’s Es war ein Markgraf überm Rhein and Mendelssoh­n’s

Hexenlied, and Huang’s fleet fingers make light of some fearsomely virtuosic accompanim­ents. At his best, Phan offers some exquisitel­y calibrated soft singing supported by a rich acoustic and crystal-clear sound.

Natasha Loges

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