BBC Music Magazine

R Strauss – Out-rageous

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R Strauss: Kramerspie­gel, Op. 66; Gesänge des Orients, Op. 77, etc; Behle: Der Schmetterl­ing

Daniel Behle (tenor),

Oliver Schnyder (piano)

Prospero PROSP 0011 59:44 mins

The jester so vividly illustrate­d on the cover of this release only pops up once in the first half of this intriguing not-quite-allstrauss recital: tenor Daniel Behle slips his own perfect little Strauss pastiche setting, Hermann Hesse’s ‘Der Schmetterl­ing’ (The Butterfly), into the opening nature sequence. Other tenors (and sopranos) should take it up as a mystery encore, but Behle’s way with it, and the rest, is inimitable. Miraculous longbreath­ed phrases in the slower winter and wood meditation­s, big near-heroic outbursts and a unique way with inward reflection all mark out the highest artistry.

How wonderful, too, that he’s chosen the settings of the Persian poet Hafez – as translated into German by Hans Bethge, of Das

Lied von der Erde fame – in the six Songs of the Orient. They’re not all of equal quality, ending on an uneasy note with ‘Huldigung’ (Homage), but ‘Ihre Augen’ (Her Eyes) is one of Strauss’s most crystallin­e games with harmonies, and Behle brings out a femininity in head voice when it’s needed.

The selling-point is the longwinded parody-attack on greedy publishers, the Kramerspie­gel (Shopkeeper’s Mirror) cycle. The first batch of songs, at least, would shine with serious texts; Behle plays it straight, while his pianist, Oliver Schnyder, so good in supportive sublety, needs to burst out a bit in moments of comic-extravagan­t rhetoric. But the Schumannes­que inspiratio­n which rises above all the worldly squabbles and later became the ‘Moonlight Music’ in Strauss’s final opera Capriccio is beautifull­y done, and brings a surprising work to a heavenly end. David Nice PERFORMANC­E ★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★

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