Composer: Erich Zeisl, Joseph Achron, Arnold Schönberg, Georg Kreisler, Ruth Schonthal, Ilse Weber, Mischa Spoliansky, Othmar Schoeck, Rudi Stephan
Performer: Pia Davila, Linda Leine
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Es-Dur
Release: 2022
Size: 624 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: cover
Zeisl: Sieben Lieder
01. No. 1 Vor meinem Fenster
Achron: Drei Lieder, Op. 53
02. No. 2 Das Täubchen flog vorüber
03. Schönberg: Im Fliederbusch ein Vöglein saß
Kreisler: Sonate für Klavier
04. Waltz, graceful, but not too Fast
Schonthal: Seven Songs of Love and Sorrow
05. No. 3 Poor Bit of a Wench
Zeisl: Sieben Lieder
06. No. 7 Die fünf Hühnerchen
07. Kreisler: Frühlingslied (Tauben vergiften im Park)
08. Zeisl: So regnet es sich langsam ein
Zeisl: November, 8 Stücke für Klavier
09. Ein Regentag
10. Weber: Und der Regen rinnt
11. Zeisl: Regen
12. Kreisler: Zufall auf den Wiesen
Spoliansky: 100 Meter Glück
13. Ich bin ein Vamp!
Schönberg: Brettl-Lieder:
14. No. 1 Der genügsame Liebhaber
Schoeck: Fünf venezianische Epigramme, Op. 19b
15. No. 7a Warum leckst du dein Mäulchen?
Stephan: Ich will dir singen ein Hohelied
16. No. 2 Pantherlied
Zeisl: Sieben Lieder
17. No. 5 Der Schäfer
Zeisl: Pieces for Barbara
18. The Lonely Shepherd
19. Weber: Wiegala
20. Ben-Chaim: Arabic Song (Version for Piano and Voice)
21. Mamlok: On Top of a Hill
Schonthal: Seven Songs of Love and Sorrow
22. No. 5 A Woman’s Last Word
Wertheim: Vier Lieder nach niederländischen Gedichten
23. No. 1 Scherzo
24. Reisfeld: Mein kleiner grüner Kaktus
Fried: Sieben Lieder für eine Singstimme mit Pianoforte, Op. 7
25. No. 2 So sprach ein Weib voll Schüchternheit
26. Zeisl: Kater
Wolpe: Drei Lieder nach Gedichten von Erich Kästner
27. No. 3 Ansprache einer Bardame
28. Heymann: Irgendwo auf der Welt
Out of the drawers!
Pia Davila and Linda Leine give new perspectives on “ostracised music”.
Erich Zeisl, Ilse Weber, Rosy Wertheim, Georg Kreisler – we know them all as great composers of the early 20th century. Above all, however, we know not only their music but also the stories about their humiliation, expulsion or death at the hands of those in power of the National Socialist regime. Many of their works are only slowly re-entering the public consciousness and concert halls, in this case mostly under the title of “Verfemte Musik” (ostracised music).
Too often, found soprano Pia Davila and pianist Linda Leine. The two musicians have been successfully making music together since 2014; the first prize at the Verfemte Musik competition in Schwerin was the beginning of their joint work on this theme. In doing so, they are pursuing a common goal: “This music is so beautiful, it has such great harmonies and so many subtleties – and it is new every time you play it! That’s why we want so much for this music to be performed more often and simply played as a matter of course in the repertoire,” says Pia Davila. “These artists are always named only as ‘ostracised composers’ – we think that’s such a shame, because it means that they are seen mainly from this one angle, ‘What has been done to them?’ It’s really time to look at and listen to these composers differently.”
And so the composers that Linda Leine and Pia Davila have chosen for their first joint album, Somewhere in the World, have one thing in particular in common: almost all of them have a tragic life story, but their works are characterised by humour, radiate a love of life and cheerfulness. “We were particularly struck by the fact that the humour of the artists we selected 100 years ago is still relevant today. And not only the lyrics of the songs are humorous, the music is too! We notice this especially in our concerts: people are often amused by the solo piano pieces because the music is so mischievous,” says Linda Leine. This was also used by performers of the time, such as the Comedian Harmonists, who celebrated great successes in the early 1930s with the album’s eponymous title, Irgendwo auf der Welt (Somewhere in the World), or the song Mein kleiner grüner Kaktus (My Little Green Cactus). The better-known repertoire on the album is complemented by numerous first recordings, such as On Top of a Hill by Ursula Mamlok, Arabic Song by Paul Ben-Chaim or Kater and The Lonely Sheperd by Erich Zeisl.
The songs chosen for Somewhere in the World have one more thing in common: they are all about nature and animals. A deliberately chosen theme, because “we all know how nature influences our lives, we all know animals that we love and pamper”, as the musicians write in the foreword to the CD. And: “We all know their language, see ourselves in them”. On the subject of animals, Othmar Schoeck and Rudi Stephan also enrich the recording, the only composers represented on the album who do not share the fate of ostracism with the others.
Thus, on Irgendwo auf der Welt, Pia Davila and Linda Leine take us on a humorous journey, show us how much animalism there can be in people and remind us: Erich Zeisl, Ilse Weber, Rosy Wertheim and all the other composers whose songs we can hear on Irgendwo auf der Welt were, above all, fantastic musicians whose works belong on stage!