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Elly Ameling: The Queen of Lieder Offers an All-Goethe Program
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10961 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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6 / 1986 |
1,380 Words |
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Emerson Randolph
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The all-German recital delivered at New York City's Carnegie Hall by Dutch-born soprano Elly Ameling on the second of April held no surprises. Elly Ameling is as dependable artist. She is always good.
Miss Ameling, who has been called today's foremost female lieder and concert singer, performed a two-hour program consisting exclusively of musical settings of the poverty of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, to the exceptional piano accompaniment of Rudolf Jansen, before a near-capacity crowd.
Elly Ameling is clearly a recitalist before she is anything else. While this recital was characterized by a lesser degree of dramatic involvement than the recitals of many who sing primarily opera--and interpret their materials more broadly and theatrically--her realization of her material was always sure, tasteful, and to the mark, a satisfying aesthetic experience.
The prolific Goethe, of course, impelled a great many romantic composers into the fires of creation, so many that, notwithstanding the restrictions imposed upon the program by assembling it around musical settings of the work of this single writer, there was a great breadth of variety.
The nine programmed composers included Beethoven, Mozart, Schubert, Loewe, Schumann, Wolf, Brahms, Mendelssohn, and Liszt. Tchaikovsky showed up in an encore.
Consistently notable in Miss Ameling's work is the uncommon degree of control her finely developed craft enables her to exercise over her material, as well as the
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