BBC Music Magazine

This Be Her Verse

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Songs by N Boulanger, R Clarke, E Mayer, C Schumann and Kathleen Tagg

Golda Schultz (soprano),

Jonathan Ware (piano)

Alpha Classics ALPHA 799 58:46 mins The classical music industry still all-too-often pays only lip service to the idea of centring women’s creative voices, but This Be Her Verse is the real deal. Here’s a thoughtful celebratio­n of songs by women, performed with flair and imaginatio­n by stellar South African soprano Golda Schultz and outstandin­g pianist Jonathan Ware.

In the opening four songs by

Clara Schumann, Schultz brings a marvellous sense of warmth and wonder. An alternativ­e version of Erlkönig by little-known 19th-century composer Emilie Mayer thrums with every bit as much heart-thumping drama as Schubert’s famous setting, and finds Ware on especially fine form during the twinkling passages accompanyi­ng the ‘voice’ of the Erlking himself. A handful of powerful songs by Rebecca Clarke includes a truly ferocious setting of ‘The Tiger’, while Schultz seems especially at home with Nadia Boulanger’s luminous works.

Composer Kathleen Tagg and poet Lila Parmer’s vibrant This Be Her Verse provides a welcome contempora­ry account of female experience. Commission­ed by the performers themselves, the cycle riffs on Philip Larkin’s famous poem and fizzes with black humour and percussive energy, and Schultz’s voice by turns soars and stings.

A pity there’s no real musicologi­cal detail in the album’s booklet. For such a skilfully compiled set of repertoire, it is a shame not to have more informatio­n about individual works. However, in every other respect This Be Her Verse is an outstandin­g album: expertly programmed and performed with terrific verve. Kate Wakeling

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

 ?? ?? Powerful celebratio­n: Golda Schultz gives voice to women composers
Powerful celebratio­n: Golda Schultz gives voice to women composers
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