Description
As a composer Hans Sommer became well known for his songs and especially for his operas. Since, however, no opera of Sommer's could hold it's own in the repertoire for any length of time, one overlooked easily the quality of his works and his contribution to the further development of the opera genre. The songs, sung frequently during their lifetime, disappeared from the repertoire of the singers through the time-boundness of the selected poems; Hans Sommer wrote the most important contributions in the area of the art song at a time when his star was already sinking and he no longer had a large audience. The fact that he published his operas and parts of his song making in self-publishing and the publisher Litolff, who had published at least half of the total of about 300 songs Hans Sommer's was dissolved in 1940, a possible revival of works by Hans Sommer's has been simply impossible until now. Sommer's final compositions, which are centered mainly on Goethe's texts, serve as a message to posterity, advocating an intellectual mindset that, throughout his life, was rooted in Naturphilosophie, a philosophical approach to nature that flourished in the German-speaking world in the early 19th century. The selection of texts furthermore bears eloquent testimony to Sommer's loneliness in his final years and the unwavering "optimism of an incorrigible idealist".
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1. Die Blume Verbl?ht 2. Wozu Soll Ich Reden? 3. H?RT Mich, Ihr Grausamen G÷tter! 4. Nicht Lange Ist's Her 5. Ich Singe Der Kraft 6. Weine Nicht 7. Mir Gl?nzen Die Augen 8. Wandl' Ich in Dem Morgentau 9. Das K÷hlerweib Ist Trunken 10. Singst Mein Schatz Wie Ein Fink 11. Nachtzauber, Op. 9, No. 3 12. Du Milchjunger Knabe 13. Die Begegnung 14. Desdemona, Op. Deest 15. Auf Einer Burg 16. Lorelei, Op. 7 17. Nachtzauber 18. Mignons Heimath, Op. Deest 19. Mignons Sehnen 20. Mignon Singt, Als Engel Angetan 21. Stumme Liebe