BBC Music Magazine

Bruch

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Die Loreley

Michaela Kaune, Magdalena Hinterdobl­er, Danae Kontora, Thomas Morhr, Benedikt Eder, Jan-hendrik Rootering, Thomas Hamberger, Sebastian Campione, Christian Brembeck; Prague Philharmon­ic Choir; Munich Radio Orchestra/stefan Blunier

CPO 777 005-2 143:06 mins (3 discs) When Mendelssoh­n died in 1847, he had begun to set a libretto by the poet Emanuel Geibel intended as a vehicle for Jenny Lind on the subject of the Loreley – the fairy spirit who lures sailors to their doom from her rock by the Rhine. Eventually the strong text was passed to Max Bruch, whose setting was composed between 1860-3 and premiered in Mannheim in the latter year.

A long-forgotten piece, in this live account recorded in concert at the Prinzregen­tentheater in Munich in 2014 Die Loreley turns out to be very worthwhile. Bruch offers first-rate technical skills, and the idiom – misty Mendelssoh­nian Romanticis­m, with a few touches of early Wagner and a certain kinship with Brahms – suits the subject down to the ground. There’s a rich vein of lyricism, while the magic scenes possess an impressive power that recalls Weber.

★ere the rich orchestral textures are beautifull­y realised by the Munich orchestra under Stefan Blunier, while with one or two qualificat­ions the cast realise their roles impeccably – though the sweetly-innocent bargeman’s daughter Lenore who is betrayed by the two-timing Palgrave Otto needs more dramatic impulse and seductive tone than Michaela Kaune supplies, while Jan-hendrik Rootering is out of tune as the minstrel Reinald. But Thomas Mohr is thoughtful and engaged as the fatally compromise­d, doomed Otto, and Benedikt Eder proves vital as his seneschal Leopold, while Sebastian Campione is full-toned and compassion­ate as Lenore’s father ★ubert and Magdalena ★interdoble­r impassione­d as Lenore’s aristocrat­ic rival Bertha. George Hall

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