Complete Lieder Recordings on Deutsche Grammophon

~ Release by Dietrich Fischer‐Dieskau (see all versions of this release, 1 available)

Annotation

A 107-CD collection of Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau's complete song recordings for Deutsche Grammophon, Philips, and Decca. Includes a 240-paage book with essays and complete track listings.

Due to licensing constraints, omits the DVD The Art of Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau and another which includes eight Schubert songs with accompaniment by Sviatoslav Richter. These were not Deutsche Grammophon recordings, but film recordings licensed for a limited time to DG.

Annotation last modified on 2024-05-11 10:20 UTC.

Tracklist

1CD: C. P. E. Bach
2CD: Beethoven I
3CD: Beethoven II
4CD: Beethoven III
5CD: Beethoven IV
6CD: Brahms I
7CD: Brahms II
8CD: Brahms III
9CD: Brahms IV
10CD: Brahms V
11CD: Brahms VI
12CD: Brahms VII
13CD: Brahms VIII
14CD: Brahms IX
15CD: Brahms X / Dvořák
16CD: Brahms XI
17CD: Brahms XII
18CD: Liszt I
19CD: Liszt II
20CD: Liszt III
21CD: Liszt IV
22CD: Loewe I
23CD: Loewe II
24CD: Mahler I
25CD: Mahler II
26CD: Mahler III
27CD: Nietzsche
28CD: Reger / Pfitzner
29CD: Schoeck I
30CD: Schoeck II / Von Einem
31CD: Schubert I
32CD: Schubert II
33CD: Schubert III
34CD: Schubert IV
35CD: Schubert V
36CD: Schubert VI
37CD: Schubert VII
38CD: Schubert VIII
39CD: Schubert IX
40CD: Schubert X
41CD: Schubert XI
42CD: Schubert XII
43CD: Schubert XIII
44CD: Schubert XIV
45CD: Schubert XV
46CD: Schubert XVI
47CD: Schubert XVII
48CD: Schubert XVIII
49CD: Schubert XIX
50CD: Schubert XX
51CD: Schubert XXI
52CD: Schubert XXII
53CD: Schubert XXIII
54CD: Schubert XXIV
55CD: Schubert XXV
56CD: Schubert XXVI
57CD: Schubert XXVII
58CD: Schubert XXVIII
59CD: Schubert XXIX
60CD: Schubert XXX
61CD: Schubert XXXI
62CD: Schubert XXXII
63CD: Schumann I
64CD: Schumann II
65CD: Schumann III
66CD: Schumann IV
67CD: Schumann V
68CD: Schumann VI
69CD: Schumann VII
70CD: Schumann VIII
71CD: Schumann IX
72CD: Schumann X
73CD: Schumann XI
74CD: Schumann XII
75CD: Shostakovich I
76CD: Shostakovich II / Britten
77CD: Strauss I
78CD: Strauss II
79CD: Strauss III
80CD: Strauss IV
81CD: Tchaikovsky
82CD: Wolf I
83CD: Wolf II
84CD: Wolf III
85CD: Wolf IV
86CD: Wolf V
87CD: Wolf VI
88CD: Wolf VII
89CD: Wolf VIII
90CD: Wolf IX
91CD: Wolf X
92CD: Wolf XI
93CD: Wolf XII
94CD: Zemlinsky
95CD: Melodramas I
96CD: Melodramas II
97CD: Berg / Schoenberg / Webern
98CD: Christmas Songs
99CD: Debussy / Ravel / Ives
100CD: Debussy / Stephan / Lutosławski
101CD: Haydn / Beethoven / Weber
102CD: Henze / Fortner / Martin
103CD: Songs by Artist-Composers
104CD: Meyerbeer / Early Goethe Settings I
105CD: Early Goethe Settings II / A Life Retold
106CD: Interview I
#TitleRatingLength
1Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau Talks About His Career and His Repetoire (Interview 2005): Introduction “Over the length of my stage and recording career”
recorded in:
Berlin, Germany (in 2005-04)
producer:
Rupert Wagg
spoken vocals:
Dietrich Fischer‐Dieskau (baritone) (in 2005-04)
4:29
2Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau Talks About His Career and His Repetoire (Interview 2005): “Before I began my classes with Weißenborn”
recorded in:
Berlin, Germany (in 2005-04)
producer:
Rupert Wagg
piano:
Daniel Barenboim (pianist and conductor)
baritone vocals:
Dietrich Fischer‐Dieskau (baritone)
spoken vocals:
Dietrich Fischer‐Dieskau (baritone) (in 2005-04)
partial recording of:
Die Winterreise, op. 89, D. 911: I. Gute Nacht (catch-all for arrangements)
lyricist:
Wilhelm Müller (German poet)
composer:
Franz Schubert (composer) (in 1827)
arrangement of:
Winterreise, op. 89, D. 911: I. Gute Nacht
part of:
Die Winterreise, op. 89, D. 911 (catch-all for arrangements)
10:44
3Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau Talks About His Career and His Repetoire (Interview 2005): “Schumann's lieder are really very much more complex”
recorded in:
Berlin, Germany (in 2005-04)
producer:
Rupert Wagg
piano:
Christoph Eschenbach (pianist and conductor)
baritone vocals:
Dietrich Fischer‐Dieskau (baritone)
spoken vocals:
Dietrich Fischer‐Dieskau (baritone) (in 2005-04)
partial recording of:
Dichterliebe, op. 48: I. Im wunderschönen Monat Mai
lyricist:
Heinrich Heine (German poet)
composer:
Robert Schumann (German classical composer) (in 1840)
part of:
Dichterliebe, op. 48
partial recording of:
Dichterliebe, op. 48: II. Aus meinen Tränen sprießen
lyricist:
Heinrich Heine (German poet)
composer:
Robert Schumann (German classical composer) (in 1840)
version of:
Aus meinen Thränen sprießen
part of:
Dichterliebe, op. 48
5:52
4Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau Talks About His Career and His Repetoire (Interview 2005): “And so now Schumann has begun to take us right into the anxious soul of the poet”
recorded in:
Berlin, Germany (in 2005-04)
producer:
Rupert Wagg
piano:
Sviatosalv Richter (Sviatoslav Richter, pianist)
baritone vocals:
Dietrich Fischer‐Dieskau (baritone)
spoken vocals:
Dietrich Fischer‐Dieskau (baritone) (in 2005-04)
partial recording of:
Mörike-Lieder: No. 1. Der Genesene an die Hoffnung “Tödlich graute mir der Morgen”
lyricist:
Eduard Mörike (German Romantic poet, † 1875)
composer:
Hugo Wolf (Austrian composer of Slovenian descent)
part of:
Mörike-Lieder (for voice and piano)
6:36
5Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau Talks About His Career and His Repetoire (Interview 2005): “I recorded the Wolf lieder for Deutsche Grammophon with Daniel Barenboim in 1972 and 1973”
recorded in:
Berlin, Germany (in 2005-04)
producer:
Rupert Wagg
piano:
Jörg Demus (pianist)
baritone vocals:
Dietrich Fischer‐Dieskau (baritone)
spoken vocals:
Dietrich Fischer‐Dieskau (baritone) (in 2005-04)
partial recording of:
4 ernste Gesänge, op. 121: Nr. 1. Denn es gehet dem Menschen wie dem Vieh
lyricist:
[anonymous] (special purpose artist)
composer:
Johannes Brahms (German composer)
translator:
Martin Luther (German theologian of the Reformation)
part of:
4 ernste Gesänge, op. 121
6:31
6Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau Talks About His Career and His Repetoire (Interview 2005): “It was this music of Brahms that led me to my first meetings and an audition with Wilhelm Furtwängler”
recorded in:
Berlin, Germany (in 2005-04)
producer:
Rupert Wagg
baritone vocals:
Dietrich Fischer‐Dieskau (baritone)
spoken vocals:
Dietrich Fischer‐Dieskau (baritone) (in 2005-04)
orchestra:
Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks (Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra)
conductor:
Rafael Kubelík (conductor)
partial recording of:
Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen: III. "Ich hab' ein glühend Messer"
lyricist and composer:
Gustav Mahler (composer)
part of:
Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen (Songs of a Wayfarer)
7:46
7Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau Talks About His Career and His Repetoire (Interview 2005): Epilogue “For me to follow just what the composer has written has always been the most important part of my work”
recorded in:
Berlin, Germany (in 2005-04)
producer:
Rupert Wagg
spoken vocals:
Dietrich Fischer‐Dieskau (baritone) (in 2005-04)
1:55
107CD: Interview II

Credits

Release

photography:Clive Barda (photographer)
Susesch Bayat (photographer)
Felix Broede
George Diaz
Dieter Warneck (producer)
Carl Ellinger
Mat Hennek
Max Jacoby (photographer)
Siegfried Lauterwasser
Carola Seifert
miscellaneous support:Lars Hoffman (creative production manager) (task: creative production manager)
Markus Kettner (task: product manager)
compiler:Alan Newcombe (Producer, coordinator, researcher, and liner notes translator)
design:Mareike Walter (designer)
booklet editor:Annette Nubbemeyer
Eva Reisinger
discography entry:https://www.deutschegrammophon.com/en/artists/dietrichfischerdieskau/dietrich-fischer-dieskau-complete-lieder-recordings-on-deutsche-grammophon-2322 [info]
Allmusic:https://www.allmusic.com/album/release/mr0005796221 [info]