Franz Mittler: Lieder nach Karl Kraus, Wilhelm Busch, Rainer Maria Rilke

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
While much attention has recently been paid to composers who lost their lives in the Holocaust, those who survived but lost their careers have gone virtually unnoticed. One of these was Franz Mittler (1893-1970), highly regarded in his native Austria as the composer of over 200 works, primarily songs. In America, where he emigrated in 1938, he became known mainly for his arrangements and pleasant teaching materials, and for his collaboration with three other European musicians in the First Piano Quartet. In Vienna, he was considered one of the foremost vocal accompanists and chamber music player; his most unusual partner was the poet, writer, critic and monologist Karl Kraus, many of whose poems he set to music. Kraus was famous for his solo readings of Nestroy's comedies and Offenbach's operettas, but since he could neither sing nor read notes, Mittler, hidden behind a screen, provided the music. This record includes two instrumental works in addition to the songs. Of the Piano Pieces (1926), the first is somewhat Schumannesque, the second humorous, and the third is a brilliant imitation of a child's mechanical clock, complete with winding up and running down. The piano writing is splendid, as is the performance by Mittler's daughter Diana. The Piano Trio (1912) frankly acknowledges all the influences that formed the 19-year-old composer; romantically expressive, it is written straight from the heart. Mittler's many-faceted stylistic originality shows most clearly in his songs, especially in his ability to capture and underline the poetry's contrasting character, mood and texture, from tender, morose, ironic, to Viennese "pop", with lyrical and jagged vocal lines and surprisingly dissonant and impressionist harmonies. This record should help re-discover an unjustly neglected composer, abetted by the persuasive advocacy of Holzmair and Ryan; their wonderfully idiomatic performance brings out every verbal and musical nuance, from the trenchant Kraus settings to Rilke's hauntingly beautiful, simple "Folksong." --Edith Eisler

Franz Mittler: Lieder nach Karl Kraus, Wilhelm Busch, Rainer Maria Rilke, Music, Lawrence Zoernig, Franz Mittler, Diana Mittler, Russell Ryan, Anton Miller, Wolfgang Holzmair, Chamber, Chamber Music, Classical, Classical Vocals, Keyboard, Music for Keyboard, Vocal, Vocal Music
Franz Mittler: Lieder nach Karl Kraus, Wilhelm Busch, Rainer Maria Rilke
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    Franz Mittler: Lieder nach Karl Kraus, Wilhelm Busch, Rainer Maria Rilke

    Manufacturer: Preiser Records
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    General ModernGeneral Modern | Modern, 20th, & 21st Century | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Chamber Music | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
    ASIN: B0001GASAU
    Release Date: 2004-08-31

    Amazon.com

    While much attention has recently been paid to composers who lost their lives in the Holocaust, those who survived but lost their careers have gone virtually unnoticed. One of these was Franz Mittler (1893-1970), highly regarded in his native Austria as the composer of over 200 works, primarily songs. In America, where he emigrated in 1938, he became known mainly for his arrangements and pleasant teaching materials, and for his collaboration with three other European musicians in the First Piano Quartet. In Vienna, he was considered one of the foremost vocal accompanists and chamber music player; his most unusual partner was the poet, writer, critic and monologist Karl Kraus, many of whose poems he set to music. Kraus was famous for his solo readings of Nestroy's comedies and Offenbach's operettas, but since he could neither sing nor read notes, Mittler, hidden behind a screen, provided the music. This record includes two instrumental works in addition to the songs. Of the Piano Pieces (1926), the first is somewhat Schumannesque, the second humorous, and the third is a brilliant imitation of a child's mechanical clock, complete with winding up and running down. The piano writing is splendid, as is the performance by Mittler's daughter Diana. The Piano Trio (1912) frankly acknowledges all the influences that formed the 19-year-old composer; romantically expressive, it is written straight from the heart. Mittler's many-faceted stylistic originality shows most clearly in his songs, especially in his ability to capture and underline the poetry's contrasting character, mood and texture, from tender, morose, ironic, to Viennese "pop", with lyrical and jagged vocal lines and surprisingly dissonant and impressionist harmonies. This record should help re-discover an unjustly neglected composer, abetted by the persuasive advocacy of Holzmair and Ryan; their wonderfully idiomatic performance brings out every verbal and musical nuance, from the trenchant Kraus settings to Rilke's hauntingly beautiful, simple "Folksong." --Edith Eisler

    Track Listings:

    1. Georg Friedrich Händel: Suites For Keyboard
    2. George Enescu: Symphonie Concertante, Op. 8; Sept Chançons, Op. 15; Chamber Symphony, Op. 33
    3. German Techno Classics [Import]
    4. Gregorian Anthology
    5. Gregorian Requiem
    6. Gustav Mahler: Symphony No. 5
    7. Haydn: Symphonies 66 - 68
    8. Haydn: Symphonies 83-85
    9. Holst, Vaughan Williams: Choral Music
    10. Iannaccone: Trio for Flute, Clarinet & Piano; Woodwind Quintets; Bicinia

    Track Listings

    track listings

    Track Listings

    Tropical Brainstorm [Enhanced] [Import]

    Barbirolli Conducts New York PO

    Blue on Blues [Original recording remastered]

    The Bird You Never Heard

    Oldies But Goodies, Vol. 2 & 3

    Are You Ready [CD-single] [Enhanced] [Import]

    Anthologie, Vol. 8 [Import]

    Bach: Ouvertures, BWV 1066-1069; Sinfonias, BWV 29 &146 [Box set]

    Back & Fourth [Original recording remastered] [Import]

    Bird of Paradise

    Awake [Enhanced] [Explicit Lyrics]

    Al Sabor De Quebradita

    15 Nortenas de Oro, Vol. 2

    Texas Flood

    Lester Young: Portrait