As a historian, I found myself filled with admiration for the archivists and technicians responsible for unearthing and restoring the tracks on these recordings... and also curious about the circumstances of their creation. The mingling of songs about Heimat, songs about Italy, and one song about the French Riviera ("Narzissen aus Montreux") made me feel suddenly ignorant about internationalism in European popular song of the '50s and '60s. The booklet's essays (in German and in English translations preserving German syntax) are focused on Wunderlich's biography and on the remastering of the songs, leaving these questions unresolved. But the collection, while very much of its time, is rich in what it allows Wunderlich to do. His execution is dazzling throughout, making even negligible songs worth listening to for what he does with vowels, with phrasing. I confess to sometimes skipping through the second disc's schmaltzy odes to motherhood and Bavaria (sic, though separately.) It also includes, though, a charming song about being allowed to say "Du" to one's beloved ("Man sagt sich du"), and several waltzes which I'm sure I've sung arrangements of with German or German-American choirs, as well as a '65 recording of "Granada" that is nothing less than thrilling.
In many of the recordings in this collection, there are conspicuous parallels in tone and construction to opera and operetta arias for lovelorn tenors. Love is unspoken, love is spurned, the return of love is entreated. Love is sought, love is lost, love is found and exulted in. The first disc begins with Wunderlich singing "Wenn der Mond steigt, und die Welt schweigt, dann spricht das Herz." The lyrics and music are predictable enough that I could sing along to unfamiliar songs and usually get the rhymes right. But what Wunderlich makes of them always feels spontaneous. For the sake of his passionate sincerity, and for the sheer beauty of voice and phrasing, this is a collection I've already listened to more than I expected to. If you know anyone who's an aficionado of Schlager, of Fritz Wunderlich, or (like my father) of both, it would make a great present (available here.)