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Seen and Heard Festival Review
Edinburgh
Festival (3) Christine Brewer and Roger
Vignoles:
Queen's Hall,
Edinburgh
28 .8.2007 (MB)
Strauss:
Ich
liebe
dich,
Op.37 no.2
Strauss:
Breit
über
mein
Haupt,
Op.19 no.2
Strauss:
Die Georgine, Op.10 no.4
Strauss:
Die
heiligen
drei
Könige
aus
Morgenland,
Op.56 no.6
Strauss:
Befreit,
Op.39 no.4
Wolf:
Vier
Mignon Lieder
Britten:
Cabaret Songs
John Carter:
Cantata
Christine Brewer (soprano)
Roger
Vignoles
(piano)
Christine Brewer is celebrated for her Strauss,
and not only in the opera house. Her recent disc
with Roger
Vignoles
for Hyperion has gathered many plaudits. The
opening group of songs gave an opportunity to
consider further this growing reputation. Her
apparently endless reserves of breath ensured that
maintaining and shaping long phrases was never a
problem and her diction was excellent. Moments of
intimacy, however, were fewer than one might have
expected; I rather had the impression that Brewer
would have been better matched by an orchestra.
Moreover, whilst
Vignoles
accompanied provided adept accompaniment, the
piano part also lacked the sense of insights won
from a seasoned partnership. This seemed to be
almost the stereotypical
Lieder-recital -by-an-'opera-singer',
albeit one with great command over her awesome
vocal reserves. Indeed, I missed the orchestra in
'Die
heiligen
drei
Könige',
in which the lengthy postlude sounded rather
matter of fact on the piano.
Vignoles
doubtless had his reasons for not lingering, but
the piano part did sound a little too much like
the transcription that it is. The violin trills
that depict, with such knowing
naďveté,
the infant Christ's crying either do not transfer
very well to the piano or did not do so on this
occasion.
But maybe nerves had been at play, for matters
improved with Wolf's great
Mignon Lieder.
All four songs are so beautifully proportioned,
for which we must thank both Wolf and Goethe, and
these proportions were well served by readings
attentive to formal as well as verbal concerns.
Brewer seemed to respond more readily to the
narrative context of
Wilhelm
Meisters
Lehrjahre,
enabling
Vignoles
to follow suit with less generalised
accompaniment. Whilst the tendencies present in
the Strauss songs had not disappeared completely,
a greater readiness to respond to the shifts and
turns in Wolf's
alchemic
blend of words and music exhibited itself as the
group progressed, rendering the delectable 'Kennst
du
das
Land' most moving. When Brewer asked, at the
opening of the second stanza, 'Kennst
du
das
Haus?'
her hushed tone conveyed just the right sense of
confiding consolation. Her full vocal strength
would then be employed for a well-judged and
never-strained climax at the third 'Dahin!
Dahin!',
before subsiding for the final line, both drawing
back and urging Mignon's father on: 'Geht
unser
Weg! o
Vater,
lass
uns
ziehn!'
I felt nevertheless - perhaps surprisingly for a
singer so steeped in the vocal works of German
Romanticism - that Brewer was much more at ease in
the English-language items of the second half.
There was no longer any communicative barrier
between singer and audience, which may partly have
been a product of the audience's comprehension of
the texts. She proved a witty, winning 'hostess'
in the Britten-Auden
Cabaret Songs,
which might easily have seemed merely 'clever'.
There was not only an impressive dynamic range but
a quicksilver flexibility largely absent from the
Strauss songs and only intermittently present in
the Wolf items. Once again, this seemed also to
apply to
Vignoles,
who must, I imagine, have been taking his cues
from the singer.
John Carter's
Cantata
is a shaping of four Negro spirituals into the
shape of a pseudo-Baroque cantata: Prelude/Rondo
('Peter go ring
dem
bells'), Recitative ('Sometimes I feel like a
motherless child'), Air ('Let us break bread
together'), and Toccata ('Ride on King Jesus'),
although the designations seem somewhat arbitrary.
The composer added a busy and ever-so-mildly
'wrong-note' piano part. Brewer, in her brief
introduction, admitted to a longstanding devotion
to these songs in their original form, having sung
them so often at home as a child. She certainly
seemed to sing from the heart, and once again
communicated vividly, rising to a splendid climax
on the held-note at the end of the final
'Toccata'.
Vignoles
shaped his part considerately yet with requisite
vigour when required. It would be difficult to
remain unmoved by the circumstances of the piece:
Carter is believed dead, perhaps on account of
suicide, but nobody knows where the sometime
composer-in-residence of the National Symphony
Orchestra may be. Nevertheless, my reaction was
along the lines of: if you like this sort of
thing, this is the sort of thing you will like.
Mark Berry
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