Gramophone Magazine
June 2025
Editor's Choice
Christian Gerhaher (baritone), Gerold Huber (piano)
Brahms: Sehnsucht, Op. 14, No. 8
Brahms: Der Überläufer, Op. 48, No. 2
Brahms: Vor dem Fenster, Op. 14, No. 1
Brahms: Von ewiger Liebe, Op. 43, No. 1
Brahms: Vom verwundeten Knaben, Op. 14, No. 2
Brahms: Der Gang zum Liebchen, Op. 48, No. 1
Brahms: 9 Lieder und Gesänge, Op. 32
Brahms: "Regenlied"-Zyklus: Walle, Regen, walle nieder "Regenlied" (Frühfassung von Op. 59 No 3)
Brahms: "Regenlied"-Zyklus: Dein blaues Auge (Frühfassung von Op. 59 No. 8)
Brahms: "Regenlied"-Zyklus: Mein wundes Herz (Frühfassung von Op. 59 No. 7)
Brahms: "Regenlied"-Zyklus: Regentropfen aus den Bäumen "Nachklang" (Frühfassung von Op. 59 No. 4)
Brahms: Meine Lieder, Op. 106, No. 4
Brahms: Geheimnis, Op. 71, No. 3
Brahms: Die Mainacht, Op. 43, No. 2
Brahms: Auf dem Kirchhofe, Op. 105, No. 4
Brahms: O kühler Wald, Op. 72, No. 3
Brahms: Treue Liebe, Op. 7, No. 1
Brahms: Herbstgefühl, Op. 48, No. 7
Brahms: Lerchengesang, Op. 70, No. 2
Brahms: Die Kränze, Op. 46, No. 1
Brahms: Regentropfen aus den Bäumen, WoO 23
For their latest album, recorded live at the Reitstadel in Neumarkt, Christian Gerhaher and his long-time duo-partner, Gerold Huber, have revisited the songs of the great Romantic composer Johannes Brahms (1833-1897). Yet it is not their first time: on their debut album in 2002 you´ll already find the ‘Four Serious Songs’ Op. 121, and in 2017 they released their version of ‘Romances from L. Tieck´s Magelone’, Op. 33. However, with this album, they bring single songs and cycles to the fore that testify to an intense striving by Brahms to create a new ‘folk tune’. Embedded into social changes of the 19th century, Brahms here tries to establish the art song as a reflection of its own imagined history as well as a reminiscence and portrayal of a naturalness gradually becoming lost during the rise of the modern world – similar to the ambivalence between tradition and progress, noticeable in his instrumental works.
As always, thanks to their ideal interweaving of words and music, Gerhaher and Huber introduce a new perspective to these songs. Among the works recorded here, apart from the exemplary cycle of the ‘Neun Lieder und Gesänge’ Op.32 and the ‘Regenlied’ cycle of posthumously published poems by Klaus Groth (which are heard here in their rarely performed early version) you will find well-known pieces such as ‘Sehnsucht’ and ‘Von ewiger Liebe’.
"As so often, they cast a very individual spell over the music, their interpretative approach – introspective but alert, melancholy, often exquisite in its detail and delicacy – drawing all the songs together so that they come across as a coherent whole." - Gramophone Magazine, June 2025