Mahler: Symphony No. 4; Das Lied von der Erde; Lieder
Eduard van Beinum
Label
Decca
Catalogue No.
4828147
Barcode
00028948281473
Format
2-CD
About

The complete Decca-recorded legacy of an illustrious Mahlerian, newly remastered, with several recordings receiving their first international CD release on Decca.

The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra lays claim to the closest and longest relationship with the music of Mahler. It was a relationship nurtured by the friendship between the composer and the orchestra’s second music director, Willem Mengelberg, one which has endured to this day. Eduard van Beinum succeeded Mengelberg in 1945 and he was a reluctant Mahlerian to begin with, unwilling to step in the footsteps of his predecessor and unnerved by what he saw as the neurotic element in Mahler’s music. Nonetheless, as the new and detailed account of Van Beinum’s work with this music makes clear in the accompanying booklet, he was never less than a sympathetic and committed interpreter of what he did choose to perform.

In 1946, not long after signing as a Decca artist, he recorded Mahler’s formative song-cycle, ‘Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen’, though not in Amsterdam but with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and the Polish mezzo-soprano Eugenia Zareska. Back at home in the Netherlands, there followed in 1952 the Fourth Symphony, Mahler’s most Classically formed work and therefore one well suited to Van Beinum’s musical temperament. The delicacy and refinement of this recording made it an instant classic, and one reissued on countless budget labels ever since, an instructive counterpoise to Mengelberg’s much more extrovert account.

Four years later, Van Beinum set down ‘Das Lied von der Erde’, another outlier in the composer’s output to the extent that the music rewards virtues of reserve and restraint more than traditionally Mahlerian transports of agony and ecstasy. With responsive singing from the tenor, Ernst Haefliger and, in particular, the mezzo-soprano, Nan Merriman, this recording was also quickly recognised as claiming a very select high ground, occupied at the time only by Ferrier, Walter and the VPO. Merriman was then the soloist for Van Beinum’s last Mahler recording, a remake of ‘Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen’. All four recordings are now compiled together on Decca for the first time.

TRACK LISTING / ARTISTS

GUSTAV MAHLER
CD 1
Symphony No. 4 in G major
Margaret Ritchie, soprano
Concertgebouworkest
Eduard van Beinum

Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen*
Eugenia Zareska, mezzo-soprano
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Eduard van Beinum

CD 2
Das Lied von der Erde*
Ernst Haefliger, tenor
Nan Merriman, contralto
Concertgebouworkest
Eduard van Beinum

Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen*
Nan Merriman, contralto
Concertgebouworkest
Eduard van Beinum

*FIRST INTERNATIONAL CD RELEASE ON DECCA

Recording information

Recording Producers: John Culshaw (Symphony No. 4); Victor Olof (Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen: Zareska); Jaap van Ginneken (Das Lied von der Erde, Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen: Merriman)
Balance Engineers: Kenneth Wilkinson (Symphony No. 4); Arthur Haddy (Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen: Zareska); Henk Jansen, Cees Huizinga (Das Lied von der Erde, Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen: Merriman)
Recording Locations: Kingsway Hall, London, UK, 27 November 1946 and 16 December 1947 (Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen: Zareska); Grote Zaal, Concertgebouw, Amsterdam, 29, 30 April and 1–3 May 1952 (Symphony No. 4), 3–6 December 1956 (Das Lied von der Erde), 8–12 December 1956 (Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen: Merriman)
Remastering Engineer: Chris Bernauer
Original LP Releases: Decca K1624–25 (Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen: Zareska); LXT 2718 (Symphony No. 4); Philips A00410–11 (Das Lied von der Erde: Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen: Merriman)

Reviews

‘Nan Merriman’s version of the ‘Songs of a Wayfarer’ is the best in the current catalogue.’ High Fidelity, November 1957

‘The finest performance is Eduard van Beinum’s. Van Beinum imparts a sense of inevitable growth to the first movement, sharply defines the moods of the second, and is one of the few conductors not to allow the slowest parts of the third to run away.’ (Symphony No.4) High Fidelity, October 1967

‘This is a simply stupendous account of ‘Das Lied’. Even given that this is a monaural recording, how has it possibly ever been allowed to slip out of print for even a day?’ Fanfare, September/October 2017