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Hugo Wolf
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==Recording projects== Individual songs have been included in the recorded repertoire of many singers. Significant early Wolf recording artists included [[Elisabeth Schumann]], [[Heinrich Rehkemper]], [[Heinrich Schlusnus]], [[Josef von Manowarda]], [[Lotte Lehmann]], [[Karl Erb]] and others.<ref>R.D. Darrell, ''The Gramophone Shop Encyclopedia of Recorded Music'' (Gramophone Shop, Inc., New York 1936).</ref> Early post-War collections were recorded by [[Suzanne Danco]], [[Anton Dermota]] and [[Gérard Souzay]] (all before 1953), [[Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau]] (1954), [[Hans Hotter]] (1954), [[Erna Berger]] (1956), [[Heinrich Rehfuss]] (1955) and Elisabeth Schumann (1958), and important individual songs by [[Elisabeth Schwarzkopf]], [[Nicola Rossi-Lemeni]], and [[Elisabeth Höngen]].<ref>''A Complete List of HMV, Columbia, Parlophone and MGM Long Playing Records Issued up to and including June 1955'' (EMI, London 1955); ''The Art of Record Buying 1960'' (EMG, London 1960).</ref> [[Gerald Moore]] was a distinguished accompanist in Wolf song recordings. Fischer-Dieskau recorded a large collection of Mörike songs with Moore in March 1959.<ref>(HMV ALP 1618-1619).</ref> Some major projects have attempted more comprehensive coverage. ===Hugo Wolf Society edition=== In September 1931 the Hugo Wolf Society was formed under the aegis of the United Kingdom's [[His Master's Voice (British record label)|His Master's Voice]] supervised by Walter Legge<ref>[[Elisabeth Schwarzkopf]], ''On and Off the Record'' (Faber and Faber 1982), p. 215.</ref> for the recording of a substantial proportion of the song repertoire. These were to be issued to subscribers in limited editions.<ref name="Hugo Wolf Society Publications 1936">Hugo Wolf Society Publications (HMV, Hayes 1931-1936).</ref> The artists participating were restricted to those under contract to this company. Each volume consisted of six His Master's Voice red-label discs (unobtainable separately) and retailed new at $15.00 Am. The Wolf Society recordings were re-released in 1981.<ref>E. Schwarzkopf, ''On and Off the Record'', p. 215.</ref> <br /> * Volume I, entirely performed by [[Elena Gerhardt]] accompanied by [[Coenraad V. Bos]], presented a selection mainly from the Spanish and Italian songbooks and the Mörike songs. For many years this scarce set<ref>It became rare because HMV claimed that to reissue it would betray the original terms of the limited edition. This was deplored, on behalf of the singer, by [[Desmond Shawe-Taylor (music critic)|Desmond Shawe-Taylor]] ('Elena Gerhardt and the Gramophone', in E. Gerhardt, ''Recital'' (London, Methuen 1953), 168) and by Gerald Moore (''Am I Too Loud?'' (Harmondsworth 1966), 93).</ref> was regarded as a collector's prize, and forms a distinct corpus within her recorded art. Later volumes always included more than one singer. * Volume II: 16 of the 51 Goethe songs, all (apart from McCormack's ''Ganymed'') accompanied by Coenraad V. Bos, but with Friedrich Schorr's ''Prometheus'' with the orchestral accompaniment. * Volume III: A selection of 17 items, including three Michelangelo songs, three Mörike songs, four from the ''Spanisches Liederbuch'' and six from the ''Italienisches Liederbuch''. All accompanied by Coenraad V. Bos. * Volume IV: 30 items from ''Italienisches Liederbuch''. Accompaniments by Coenraad V. Bos, [[Michael Raucheisen]] and [[Hanns Udo Müller]]. * Volume V: A selection of 20 songs (mainly Mörike and ''Spanisches Liederbuch''). * Volume VI: Settings of Mörike, Robert Reinick, Goethe, Heyse and Geibel, Just and Kerner. Artists included [[Alexander Kipnis]] (III, IV, V); [[Herbert Janssen]] (II, V, VI); [[Gerhard Hüsch]] (II, III, IV, V); [[John McCormack (tenor)|John McCormack]] (accompanied by [[Edwin Schneider]]) (II); [[Alexandre Trianti]] (II, III); [[Ria Ginster]] (IV, V); [[Friedrich Schorr]] (II); [[Elisabeth Rethberg]] (IV, V); [[Tiana Lemnitz]] (VI); [[Helge Roswaenge]] (VI); [[Marta Fuchs]] (VI) and [[Karl Erb]] (VI).<ref>See E. Sackville-West and D. Shawe-Taylor, ''The Record Year 2'' (Collins, London 1953), 683-693. Also a listing in the His Master's Voice ''Recorded Music'' Catalogue (Hayes, Middlesex: 1943-44), p. 290.</ref> Each volume was accompanied by a booklet containing a short essay by [[Ernest Newman]] (I: ''Words and Music in Hugo Wolf'', II: ''Wolf's Goethe Songs'', III: ''A Note of Wolf as Craftsman'', IV: ''The Italienisches Liederbuch'') together with German texts, English translations (by Winifred Radford) and notes on each song (by Newman).<ref name="Hugo Wolf Society Publications 1936"/> ===DGG Hugo Wolf Lieder Edition=== A Hugo Wolf Lieder Edition was recorded by [[Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau]] and [[Daniel Barenboim]] during the 1970s for [[Polydor Records|DGG]], each volume containing three records. Volume I (1974): Mörike Lieder (Paris Grand Prix du Disque). Volume II (1976): Lieder on poems by [[Johann Wolfgang von Goethe|Goethe]], [[Heinrich Heine|Heine]] and [[Nikolaus Lenau|Lenau]]. Volume III (1977): Lieder on poems by Eichendorff, Michelangelo, [[Robert Reinick]], [[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare]], [[George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron|Byron]], [[August Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben|Hoffmann von Fallersleben]], [[Joseph Viktor von Scheffel]], etc. The accompanying volumes include essays by Hans Jancik, texts of the poems, and translations by [[Lionel Salter]] (English) and Jacques Fournier and others (French).<ref>Hugo Wolf Lieder Publications (Deutsche Grammophon, 1974-1977).</ref> ===Oxford Lieder Festival edition=== The first project to record every song by Wolf was commenced in 2010, the 150th anniversary of the composer's birth, by [[Stone Records]] and the [[Oxford Lieder Festival]]. This series of live recordings, featuring a wide variety of singers and [[Oxford Lieder Festival]]'s artistic director [[Sholto Kynoch]] at the piano, was completed in 2023 with the release of the 11th disc.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://stonerecords.co.uk/album/hugo-wolf-the-complete-songs-vol-11-goethe-lieder-part-2/|title=Hugo Wolf – the complete songs – vol.11: Goethe Lieder part 2 – Stone Records}}</ref> ===Austrian Radio Anniversary edition=== In 2010 Austrian Radio and the Departure Centre for Creative Design in Vienna marked Hugo Wolf's anniversary with a recital series in which 188 of the songs were performed against visuals created by leading designers. The series was intended to bring Lieder to a new audience and was held at the initiative of baritone [[Wolfgang Holzmair]], who was joined by a team of Austrian singers and pianists. The concerts were released on DVDs the following year, and in 2012 [[Bridge Records]] released the Spanish and Italian songbooks on CDs.
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