Schubert, Franz , Staud, Johannes Maria: Die schöne Müllerin
At the suggestion of the great Schubert interpreter Christoph Prégardien, I have orchestrated Schuberts large-scale song cycle Die Schöne Müllerin [The Lovely Maid of the Mill] (1823) for a 19-piece ensemble and combined it with seven of my own songs set to poems by Emily Dickinson (18301886). The two strands are intertwined and naturally lead to a new interpretation of this timeless and enduring subject matter. Of course, one might immediately think of Hans Zender's compositional interpretation of the Winterreise from 1993. However, as much as I admire that work, my approach is quite different. With my instrumentation of the 20 Schubert songs in the cycle, I bring Schuberts vibrant melodies and inventiveness into the present very close to the original text. A misunderstood historicity would make little sense here. My own songs, obviously composed in a completely different tonal language, function as a deliberate counterpoint, as a commentary from the here and now, and as the work proceeds, they merge with Schubert's cycle on a superordinate level. In the late work of Emily Dickinson (written, by the way, only a few decades after Wilhelm Müllers on the other side of the Atlantic in New England), I found magnificent, laconic poems that fit wonderfully into the world of Die Schöne Müllerin. They complement it, expand it, contradict it, ironically question its romanticized image of nature and in doing so take on a radically feminine perspective. From the perspective of the Müllerin, who in Schubert/Müller remains merely a projection screen for male desire, I thus take a new look at the narratives of Schuberts songs reflected by nature: wandering strangeness desire unrequited love suicide. (Johannes Maria Staud, 2024)
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tenor and orchestra
979-0-004-18992-4
9790004189924
EB 9512
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