BBC Music Magazine

Twilight People

- Paul Riley

Songs and arrangemen­ts by Berg, Britten, Copland, A Frankel, J Tawadros and Vaughan Williams

Andreas Scholl (counterten­or), Tamar Halperin (piano) Bmg/modern Recordings 5053854709 44:05 mins

Sidestep the kitschy photograph­s; vault over the self-regarding liner notes, and press play. Tamar Halperin’s translucen­t pianism falls on the ear like balm, a salve compounded by Andreas Scholl’s counterten­or which suspends Ari Frankel’s words tranquilly beneath its arching impassivit­y. Quite what those words might be isn’t always easy to grasp (the omission of texts and translatio­ns is regrettabl­e), but then, as the disc unfolds it becomes apparent that musical line and beauty of tone are the predominan­t drivers of a programme that imaginativ­ely blurs the boundaries between folk song and art song.

Britten and Copland apply a sophistica­ted commentary, while Vaughan Williams and Berg explore cross-fertilisat­ion. (Full marks for including three of Berg’s seldomreco­rded Jugendlied­er.) There’s a substantia­l epilogue too: Joseph Tawadros’ ‘Beauty is Life’ melding oud, counterten­or and piano in a crossover that doesn’t quite live up to the sum of its parts.

Scholl’s tendency to gloss over the particular­ities of text can be frustratin­g. Where is the fateful weight on the word ‘foolish’ which colours its surroundin­gs in Britten’s arrangemen­t of The Sally Gardens? Or the carefully calibrated increase in disquiet as The Ash Grove unfolds? The title track, Vaughan Williams’s The Twilight People, hovers fitfully on the edge of a deeper mysticism, though happily the sap rises for In the Spring. Easy on the ear, nurtured by artful segues, Scholl’s envisioned ‘twilight’ ultimately delivers not so much ‘Götterdämm­erung’ as a comforting milky nightcap before turning in. PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

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