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Diana Damrau: Recital at Baden-Baden / Documentary ’Diva Divina’ | Virgin 9849169

Diana Damrau: Recital at Baden-Baden / Documentary ’Diva Divina’

Label: Virgin

Cat No: 9849169

Barcode: 5099998491698

Format: DVD

Number of Discs: 1

Release Date: 27th May 2013

This product has now been deleted. Information is for reference only.

Contents

Works

Debussy, Claude

Apparition
Arabesques (2)
» no.1 (arr. for harp)
Beau Soir
Clair de lune (song), L32
Fleur des bles
Le Lilas, L22
Mandoline
Nuit d'etoiles

Faure, Gabriel

Impromptu for solo harp, op.86
Poeme d'un jour, op.21
» no.3 Adieu
Songs (2), op.3
» no.2 Serenade toscane
Songs (2), op.46
» no.2 Clair de lune
Songs (3), op.7
» no.1 Apres un reve
Songs (3), op.23
» no.1 Les berceaux
» no.2 Notre amour

Gounod, Charles

Ave Maria (after JS Bach)

Schumann, Robert

Liederalbum fur die Jugend, op.79
» no.24 Er ist's
Myrthen, op.25
» no.1 Widmung
» no.3 Der Nussbaum
» no.7 Die Lotosblume
» no.9 Lied der Suleika
» no.11 Lied der Braut I (Mutter! Mutter!)
» no.12 Lied der Braut II (Lass mich ihm am Busen hangen)

Strauss, Richard

Lieder (4), op.27
» no.4 Morgen
Lieder (5), op.41
» no.1 Wiegenlied
Lieder (5), op.48
» no.1 Freundliche Vision
» no.3 Kling!
Lieder (6), op.17
» no.2 Standchen
Lieder (8), op.10 TrV141 (Gedichte aus 'Letzte Blatter')
» no.2 Nichts
» no.3 Die Nacht
Schlichte Weisen (5), op.21
» no.1 All mein' Gedanken

Artists

Diana Damrau (soprano)
Xavier de Maistre (harp)

Works

Debussy, Claude

Apparition
Arabesques (2)
» no.1 (arr. for harp)
Beau Soir
Clair de lune (song), L32
Fleur des bles
Le Lilas, L22
Mandoline
Nuit d'etoiles

Faure, Gabriel

Impromptu for solo harp, op.86
Poeme d'un jour, op.21
» no.3 Adieu
Songs (2), op.3
» no.2 Serenade toscane
Songs (2), op.46
» no.2 Clair de lune
Songs (3), op.7
» no.1 Apres un reve
Songs (3), op.23
» no.1 Les berceaux
» no.2 Notre amour

Gounod, Charles

Ave Maria (after JS Bach)

Schumann, Robert

Liederalbum fur die Jugend, op.79
» no.24 Er ist's
Myrthen, op.25
» no.1 Widmung
» no.3 Der Nussbaum
» no.7 Die Lotosblume
» no.9 Lied der Suleika
» no.11 Lied der Braut I (Mutter! Mutter!)
» no.12 Lied der Braut II (Lass mich ihm am Busen hangen)

Strauss, Richard

Lieder (4), op.27
» no.4 Morgen
Lieder (5), op.41
» no.1 Wiegenlied
Lieder (5), op.48
» no.1 Freundliche Vision
» no.3 Kling!
Lieder (6), op.17
» no.2 Standchen
Lieder (8), op.10 TrV141 (Gedichte aus 'Letzte Blatter')
» no.2 Nichts
» no.3 Die Nacht
Schlichte Weisen (5), op.21
» no.1 All mein' Gedanken

Artists

Diana Damrau (soprano)
Xavier de Maistre (harp)

About

This DVD, centred on the dazzling German soprano Diana Damrau, complements a ravishing recital with a fascinating documentary.

In March 2013, Damrau achieved “a daring victory” (in the words of the New York Times) when the Metropolitan Opera witnessed her first-ever performances of Verdi’s La traviata. In recent years she has made the transition from glittering, stratospheric roles, such as Mozart’s Queen of the Night and Strauss’ Zerbinetta, to lyrical heroines of greater emotional complexity, such as Gilda in Rigoletto, Adina in L’elisir d’amore and Lucia di Lammermoor. A series of triumphs at the Met have made her a favourite singer in New York – as she is in other leading opera houses around the world.

One of the warmest personalities on the opera and concert stage today, soprano Diana Damrau has put together a beguiling program for her recital at the Festspielhaus Baden-Baden. The selection of Romantic to fin-de-siècle pieces not only underscores her own vocal artistry, but also pays tribute to her accompanist Xavier de Maistre and, in particular, to the diaphanous delicacy of his instrument, the harp.

The use of the harp to replace the piano in a voice recital is a truly unique and unexpected musical treat. De Maistre does more than simply transpose the piano part to his instrument; under the fingers of the Wiener Philharmoniker's solo harpist, the ethereal sound of this instrument melds consummately with the soprano's finely honed vocal part, so that the masterpieces by composers such as Schumann, Fauré and Debussy sound as if they had been conceived for voice and harp.

The unrivalled intimacy of a chamber concert is conveyed by the placing of the soloists and public within touching distance on the stage of the Festspielhaus. This distinctly informal atmosphere is captured by Emmy Award winning director Brian Large. Discreetly highlighting the interpretative subtleties and spontaneous personality of Diana Damrau, he helps confirm her status as one of the most exciting, expressive and, above all, natural and unaffected sopranos of our time.

The recital, filmed at the impressive Festspielhaus in Baden-Baden, pairs Damrau with the French harpist Xavier de Maistre in an exquisite selection of songs by Schumann, Fauré, Debussy and Strauss. Among the best-loved items in the programme are: Schumann’sWidmung’; both Fauré’s and Debussy’s settings of Verlaine’s poem ‘Clair de lune’; Fauré’s ‘Après un rêve’; a harp arrangement of Debussy’s piano Arabesque No 1; Strauss’ ‘Morgen‘ and ‘Ständchen’ and, among the encores, the famed Bach-GounodAve Maria’.

Reviewing the performance in Baden-Baden – for which the audience joined Damrau and de Maistre on the stage, rather than being distanced from them in the expansive auditorium – the Badische Neueste Nachrichten wrote of Damrau as a recitalist “whose vocal material and abilities as a storyteller approach perfection”, while the Badisches Tagblatt said: ”Damrau’s diction is a pleasure, her vocal flexibility amazing. She sings phrases with ample breath, while her nuanced shadings create subtle changes of mood from song to song”.

Die Rheinpfalz described the “gentle, sometimes ethereal tones of the harp” as being in perfect harmony with the “exceptionally subtle and detailed vocal art of the soprano … particularly exceptional are the delicate tracery and colours of Diana Damrau’s singing. Her shaping and accenting of the text is meticulous, her phrasing is of great sensitivity and her dynamics are richly nuanced, yet her song performances are never mannered, rather always full of lyrical feeling”.

Director: Brian Large
Filmed at the Festspielhaus Baden-Baden, 2009
Running Time : 86’55’’

Diana Damrau – Diva Divina
Nine months with the German Opera Star: A film by Beatrix Conrad

In the documentary 'Diana Damrau – Diva Divina', the soprano explains that, when she was just 12 years old, it was La traviata (in Franco Zeffirelli’s lavish 1982 cinematic version) that inspired her to make a career in opera. The documentary, directed by Beatrix Conrad, follows Damrau over the course of nine months, covering operatic performances and rehearsals in Geneva, New York, Paris and Munich, recitals, recordings and the arrival of her first child, Alexander.

In private moments with her parents and her first teacher, Damrau talks about her childhood and youth, about her discovery of opera while watching TV, her early career and her international breakthrough in 2002 in roles such as Donna Anna and Zerbinetta ("the pillar of my profession", she says about the demanding coloratura role in Strauss' "Ariadne auf Naxos").

The film portrays an exciting, high-intensity, fast-paced jet-set life tempered by the harmony of a rewarding family life with her husband, her parents and, at the end of the film, with her brand-new baby!

Running Time: 52’

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