A new benchmark is set for barber’s songs

65 min read

Pianist Dylan Perez assembles a crack team of soloists for this complete survey, raising the bar in the process, says Terry Blain

RECORDING OF THE MONTH

Crisis without melodrama: Mary Bevan records Barber’s Hermit Songs with Dylan Perez
RESONUS LTD

Barber The Complete Songs

Mary Bevan (soprano), Jess Dandy (contralto), Fleur Barron (mezzo-soprano), Julien Van Mellaerts (baritone), Nicky Spence (tenor), William Thomas (bass) et al; Dylan Perez (piano)

Resonus RES10301 158:40 mins (2 discs)

Deutsche Grammophon’s classic survey of Barber’s songs has ruled the catalogue for three decades, but its dominance may be over. This new Resonus collection not only includes 19 songs never recorded before, but uses ten different singers to DG’s two (Cheryl Studer and Thomas Hampson), adding valuable variety to the overall listening experience.

And what an experience it is: even from the earliest opus numbers Barber’s songs ripple with acuity and emotional intelligence, with no hint of a young composer struggling to find his feet. Bass William Thomas’s plangent take on Op. 2’s ‘With rue my heart is laden’ and tenor Nicky Spence’s risingly intense ‘Rain has fallen’ from Op. 10 are two striking examples of how tellingly Barber aligned words and music from the outset.

Quite how punctiliously Barber stitched sound, rhythm and syntax together is underlined in Nuvoletta, where he sets a snapshot story from James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake. A lilting waltz, droll quotations from Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde, pointillistic depictions of tears dropping at twilight – Barber glides easily from one dream image to another, dextrously flipping idioms and playfully inflecting the Joycean neologisms ‘sfumastelliacinous’ and ‘engauzements’. Soraya Mafi is the intelligent soloist.

Hermit Songs is the major cycle here, and again this recording really hits the mark. In the opening ‘At St Patrick’s Purgatory’, soprano Mary Bevan conveys a sense of spiritual crisis without resorting to squally melodrama. ‘Church Bell at Night’ has a limpid clarity with just a touch of sensuality, while ‘The Heavenly Banquet’ is puckish but shorn of bluster. Bevan’s ‘The Desire for Hermitage’ closes the cycle in ideally ruminative fashion.

Soprano Samantha Clarke’s alluring ‘Sure on this shining night’ and baritone Julien Van Mellaerts’s sentient Dover Beach (supported by the Navarra String Quartet), are other highlights. But almost any song on this absorbing issue can be listened to with joy.

Among the premiere recordings there are riches too, in the affectionatel