September 17, 2014

Jonas Kaufman’s You Mean The World To Me Released

World Renowned Tenor Jonas Kaufmann Releases New Album of
Melodies from Germany’s Golden Era

“I love the tenor hits from the age of the talkies,” says Jonas Kaufmann. “My grandfather was studying in Berlin at that time, and he used to whistle these songs in the street. Besides that, I’ve always been fascinated by this ‘legendary era’ in Germany’s cultural history. It was a time of incredible productivity. True, a great many of its hits have survived, but what we know of it today is only the tip of the iceberg. There are lots of wonderful pieces waiting to be rediscovered.”

Jonas Kaufmann has often sung standards such as “Dein ist mein ganzes Herz,” “Freunde, das Leben ist lebenswert,” or “Du bist die Welt für mich” as encores at engagements, including his Berlin Waldbühne concert with Anna Netrebko and Erwin Schrott in August 2011. That is when the idea arose for his new album titled You Mean the World to Me, which will be available September 16 from Sony Classical. It needed a solid concept: no bland arrangements, just the original sound. The huge field of light music between Offenbach and Abraham was narrowed down to the period between 1925 and 1935 – from the hits of Franz Lehár and Richard Tauber to the heyday of the movie song, from the Roaring Twenties to the expulsion and blacklisting of all the songwriters, lyricists and singers who effectively defined the genre.

“No repertoire has challenged me more than this one!” says Kaufmann, who sings Siegmund and Parsifal, Don Carlo and Alvaro, Don José and Werther, Die Winterreise and Das Lied von der Erde. “It’s called ‘easy listening’ because the music sounds easy to the audience,” the singer explains. “But most of the standards from Lehár, Kálmán, Stolz and Abraham are extremely demanding on the voice. Easy listening, maybe, but not easy performing!”

Never before has Kaufmann had to be so vocally flexible as on his new album. After pop songs like Paul Abraham’s “Diwanpüppchen” and movie hits like “Irgendwo auf der Welt,” which call for a gentle croon, he risked a laryngeal tour de force with Künneke’s “Lied vom Leben des Schrenk” – a song only Helge Rosvaenge, Rudolf Schock and Fritz Wunderlich had ventured to sing before him. The hit tunes that Franz Lehár wrote for his friend Richard Tauber demand the full range of his voice, from hovering piano and sensual cantilena to a radiant Heldentenor. In professional circles, standards such as “Dein ist mein ganzes Herz” and “Freunde, das Leben ist lebenswert” fall under the heading of “Puccini/Lehár.” Even “Du bist die Welt für mich,” Richard Tauber’s most famous composition, sounds much easier than it actually is.

The scene of the action is Berlin. Here’s where the “legendary era” began, namely with the German première of Lehár’s Paganini at the Berlin Künstlertheater in January 1926. Thanks to Richard Tauber, it was a roaring success and launched an incomparable run of hits, lasting until the première of Giuditta at the Vienna State Opera in 1934.

The entertainment industry ran at full throttle, not only in the theatre but in every medium. The horrors of the Great War and the economic crises had brought forth an insatiable appetite for entertainment and diversion. Radio and gramophone companies vied for the audience’s favors, and the merry-go-round spun even faster with the invention of “talkies.”

The recording sessions took place in the outstanding acoustics of the Nalepastraße Broadcasting Studio (the former headquarters of East German Radio) and were pure pleasure for everyone involved. Kaufmann’s duet partner Julia Kleiter, conductor Jochen Rieder, the musicians of the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra: all immediately fell under the spell of the music and joined in the swing. And though “easy listening” is anything but easy to sing, for Jonas Kaufmann it was “sheer and utter delight. I had heaps of fun doing it. And I want more!”

Sony Masterworks comprises, Masterworks, Okeh, Portrait, Sony Classical, RCA Red Seal, and Masterworks Broadway imprints. For email updates and information please visit www.SonyMasterworks.com.

Website: www.jonaskaufmann.com | Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kaufmannjonas

TRACKLIST
1. Franz Lehár: Girls Were Made to Love and Kiss (Gern hab’ ich die Frau’n geküsst) from Paganini
2. You Are My Heart’s Delight (Dein ist mein ganzes Herz!) from Das Land des Lächelns · The Land of Smiles · Le Pays du sourire
3. Richard Tauber: Du bist die Welt für mich from Der singende Traum
4. Franz Lehár: My Little Nest of Heavenly Blue (Hab’ ein blaues Himmelbett) from Frasquita
5. Robert Stolz: Im Traum hast du mir alles erlaubt from Das Liebeskommando
6. Emmerich Kálmán: Grüß mir mein Wien from Gräfin Mariza
7. Werner Richard Heymann: Irgendwo auf der Welt from Ein Blonder Traum
8. Hans May: My Song Goes Round the World (Ein Lied geht um die Welt)
9. Franz Lehár: Freunde, das Leben ist lebenswert! from Giuditta
10. Paul Abraham: Reich mir zum Abschied noch einmal die Hände from Viktoria und ihr Husar
11. Ralph Benatzky: It Would Be Wonderful Indeed (Es muss was Wunderbares sein) from Im weißen Rössl · The White Horse Inn · L’Auberge du Cheval-Blanc
12. Paul Abraham: Diwanpüppchen from Die Blume von Hawaii
13: Robert Stolz: Don’t Ask Me Why from Das Lied ist aus
14: Mischa Spoliansky: Heute Nacht oder nie from Das Lied einer Nacht
15: Eduard Künneke: Das Lied vom Leben des Schrenk from Die große Sünderin
16. Erich Wolfgang Korngold: Glück, das mir verblieb from Die tote Stadt
17. Franz Lehár: Je t’ai donné mon cœur (Dein ist mein ganzes Herz!) from Das Land des Lächelns

Jonas Kaufmann tenor
Julia Kleiter soprano (10/12/16)
Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin
Jochen Rieder conductor

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