Kate Molleson 

Janáček: Moravian Folk Songs CD review – clear, candid voices

The twisting modal tunes and jagged lyrics of Janáček’s Czech folk songs are rendered here with clarity without overstatement or excess glossiness
  
  

Martina Jankova
Singing songs of real life … Martina Jankova Photograph: Handout

Leoš Janáček wrote thousands of rural Czech songs; he loved the twisting modal tunes, the jagged lyrics. The title of his most important published collection – Moravian Folk Poetry in Song – hints at the attention he paid to the rogue rhythm of the words as well as the melodies. His settings never over-prettify the music, keeping vocal lines direct and a strong flavour of cimbalom, organ, fiddle and stomping feet in the piano accompaniments. Mostly he believed these songs should feel like real life: “the dance song should choke in sweat, in people’s vapour and steam, while the melancholy weeping of the bride should be reflected in wedding songs.” Some operatic voices overstate or over-gloss the raw spirit, but soprano Martina Jankova and baritone Tomáš Král have clear, candid voices with a gentle touch from pianist Ivo Kahánek.

 

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