
Alexander von Zemlinsky / Franz Schreker
Alexander von Zemlinsky : Die Seejungfrau
Following on from their critically acclaimed albums of Stravinsky, Elgar and
Tchaikovsky, the award winning team of Vasily Petrenko and the RLPO turn to
Zemlinsky and Schreker.
Premiered in the same concert as his brother-in-law Schoenberg’s ‘Pelleas und
Melisande’ in 1905, Zemlinsky’s Die Seejungfrau (after Hans Christian Andersen)
was almost ignored by the reviewers.
Considered too conservative for the
progressives, and too progressive for the conservatives, Zemlinsky struggled to
overcome the negative reviews of this masterpiece and withdrew it in the
immediate aftermath of the premiere.
Vasily Petrenko for this recording uses the
original version of the score which restores the ‘bei der Meerhexe’ episode to
the 2nd movement.
Schreker’s Dance Pantomime ‘Der Guburtstag der Infantine’ (story by Oscar Wilde)
was given its premiere in 1908 and was his first big success.
One of the most
progressive of the Viennese composers of this period, Schreker’s star would
sadly wane, aided by the rise of anti – Semitism and the Nazis. Stripped of his
official posts, he died in 1934 of a stroke.