SKU: BT.ALHE19450
French.
'Oui, dans les Bois et dans la Plaine'.
SKU: BT.ALHE8315
Contents:
Rêverie - Si Mes Vers Avaient Des Ailes - Moi - Paysage - L'Enamourée - Seule - La Nuit - Offrande - Trois Jours De Vendange - Infidelité - Fêtes Galantes - Cimetière De Campagne - Fleur Fanée - L'Incredule - Les Cygnes - D'Une Prison - Dernier Voeu - Seraphine - Nocturne - A Phidyle.
SKU: BT.ALHE27627
Quand la nuit n'est pas étoilée - Cantique - La Délaissée - La Chère Blessure - Théone - Le souvenir d'voir Cante - Quand je fus pris au pavillon - Chanson au bord de la fontaine - Sur l'eau - Fumée - Le printemps - Dans la nuit - Les fontaines - Chloris - Le Rossignol des lilas - nos morts ignorés - Ma jeunesse - Le plus beau présent - Puisque j'ai mis ma lèvre - La douce paix.
SKU: HL.49045824
Max Kowalski (18821956) was a full-time lawyer who never gave up on his passion for music: singing lessons during his law studies, conducting and counterpoint classes, among others, at Dr. Hochs Konservatorium in addition to his work at his own law office in Frankfurt. While studying, he already published his first works; 15 song cycles were published until 1933. In the years that followed, the Jewish-born Kowalski was restricted in working both as a lawyer and as a composer due to his persecution by the National Socialists. In 1938 he was arrested, deported to the concentration camp of Buchenwald and finally forcedto flee into exile in London. Contemporaries called Kowalski a lyricist among the composers. The choice of texts of his songs shows his great knowledge and love of German literature. For example, he set to music texts by Friedrich Holderlin or Rainer Maria Rilke, but also Indian or Japanese poems. Kowalski left numerous unpublished songs which are published by Schott Music in a two-volume edition: Volume 1 (ED 22586) contains his Jewish songs (1935-37), the Heinrich Heine cycle (1937) and all English-language songs (1941-46). Volume 2 (ED 22587) contains Kowalski's late works: the songs based on texts by Friedrich Holderlin (1950) and the Geisha Lieder according to Klabund (1951).