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SEEN
AND HEARD CONCERT REVIEW
Strauss,
Gurney and Bridge:
Rebecca Bottone (soprano) Nathan Vale (tenor) Paul Plummer (piano)
Wigmore Hall, 6.1. 2008 (MB)
Strauss: Ständchen; Seitdem dein Aug’; Nur
mut!; Das Geheimnis; Sehnsucht; Liebeshymnus;
O süsser Mai; Himmelsboten
Ivor Gurney: On Wenlock Edge; Ha’nacker Mill;
The Salley Gardens; Snow; Hawk and Buckle
Strauss: Freundliche Vision; Ich schwebe;
Kling!
Strauss: Amor; Einkehr; Mit deinen
blauen Augen; Ein Obdach gegen Sturm; Rote Rosen;
Die erwachter Rose; Die heiligen drei Könige
Frank Bridge: Adoration; Go not, happy day;
Berceuse; Come to me in my dreams; O that it were
so!
Strauss: Mein Herz ist stumm; Wozu noch,
Mädchen; Wie sollten wir geheim sie halten
This was the last of three Wigmore Hall concerts devoted to
the Lieder of Richard Strauss. Common to all was the
pianist and deviser of the programmes, Paul Plummer. Each
programme had included songs by other composers: from
France in
the first, Russia in the second, and England in the third. I
assume that these works were chosen with the evening’s singers in
mind, since there did not seem to be an obvious connection between
Ivor Gurney and Frank Bridge on the one hand, and Strauss on the
other. No matter: if there were no especial connection, nor did
the combination jar unduly, and the English songs certainly showed
off the vocal soloists to advantage.
Paul
Plummer’s contribution as pianist merits enthusiastic praise.
Strauss’s piano parts can be treacherous indeed, though one would
hardly have known it, such was Plummer’s finely-judged virtuosity:
never drawing attention to itself for attention’s sake, but never
unduly reticent either. The young singers could hardly have wished
for a better guide. The pearly tones required in the opening
Ständchen set a standard which Plummer continued to meet. The
piano bells in Liebeshymnus were set in beautiful
counterpoint with the underlying chords; this is not at all easy
to accomplish. Sehnsucht’s almost Lisztian interlude
between the third and fourth stanza resolved perfectly into the
Tristan-esque harmony that opens the fourth. Strauss’s musical
antecedents were pointed up without scoring points; the composer
was situated in a tradition that goes beyond what is
conventionally considered to be at the heart of Lieder-writing.
I greatly appreciated this, since there can occasionally be a
tendency from Lieder enthusiasts to cordon off their
province from other musical realms, not least from that of opera.
Song and opera are different of course, rather as chamber and
orchestral music are different, but there is a great deal of
interplay, and a songwriter such as Strauss can have more in
common with Wagner than might necessarily be the case with another
songwriter. And Plummer passed an especially stern test when it
came to that wonderful Heine setting, Die heiligen drei Könige.
The piano part is actually a transcription, the orchestral song
being the original. When I heard Roger Vignoles at
Edinburgh in
August [link to my review?
http://www.musicweb-international.com/SandH/2007/Jul-Dec07/eif3.htm],
even he seemed unable to rid one of the impression of loss. With
Plummer, the music was taken more soberly, less overtly
pictorially: one would never have guessed its orchestral origin.
The horns of Mein Herz ist stumm’s ‘Hörnerklang’ were
beautifully characterised, again without being overdone and making
one wish there were a real orchestra present.
Rebecca Bottone’s contribution was more problematical. One does
not have to be Jessye Norman to sing Strauss – although it
certainly helps. However, I am not at all convinced that Bottone’s
voice was appropriate. It reminded me immediately of Reri Grist;
my next thought was that this sounded very much the sort of
chirpy, rather shrill voice conductors seem fond of allotting to
roles such as Mozart’s Blonde. (I am not quite sure why, but that
is a different matter.) When I consulted Bottone’s biography, sure
and enough Blonde was given pride of place. The voice, in any
case, lacked richness of tone and adequate differentiation of
colours. Her bearing, visual as well as vocal, could be
excessively winsome, especially in Amor, Strauss’s Cupid
song. That said, she coped very well in that setting with Strauss’
cruel demands in terms of coloratura. There were some distinctly
odd German vowel sounds, and she rarely sounded as if she were
singing from ‘within’ the language. Tuning, moreover, was not
always as precise as it might have been. On the other hand,
Bottone sounded far more at home with the Bridge settings, both
vocally and linguistically. Rather surprisingly, her voice
appeared to acquire greater colour than it had in Strauss. There
was a lovely ending to the Tennyson setting, Go not, happy day:
spot on in intonation and with an apt smile in the voice to
complement ‘Roses are her cheeks,/And a rose her mouth.’ If some
of Bridge’s music, especially the piano part, reminded one
a little too much of the salon, or the
Palm Court,
that is hardly the singer’s fault. Following the Bridge settings,
her remaining Strauss song, Wie sollten wir geheim sie halten,
appeared to benefit. There was more colour, although it still did
not really seem her thing.
Nathan Vale was a considerable improvement. I am not entirely sure
that his was the most suitable voice for Strauss either, but there
was certainly less of a mismatch. His voice is rather an ‘English’
tenor, albeit without the mannerisms that so often infect that
vocal type. There were times when Strauss’s writing appeared to
sit uncomfortably high, but then Strauss’s tenor writing is
notorious, and the odd faltering aside, Vale put up a good fight.
He was good at posing questions, for instance ‘Du fragst
mich,
Mädchen, was flüsternd der West/Vertraue den Blütenglocken?’ (Das
Geheimnis). He imparted an aptly Schubertian chill to the
openings of Sehnsucht and Mein Herz ist stumm. When
the opening line of the latter song return at the end, there was
truly something of the sepulchre or Winterreise to the
revisiting. Die erwachter Rose brought a real sense of
erwachen (awakening) as Friedrich von Sallet’s verse told of
the nightingale’s sweet song and the bud blossoming into a rose.
At times, I thought Vale could have sung out more freely. When he
did, as in Die heiligen drei Könige, the results impressed.
However, if the disparity were less great, he too sounded more at
home in the English settings, in his case those by Gurney. Indeed,
here he sang as if to the manor born. (It transpires that he and
Plummer have recently recorded a disc of English song.) The
poignancy of fading away in Edward Thomas setting, Snow,
was rather special. And there was plenty of vigour to Robert
Graves’s Hawk and Buckle. Indeed, this combination of
youthful vigour and imploring, though never mawkish vulnerability
seemed just right for the music of one whose career was so cruelly
cut short by the First World War.
So if
not always an ideal appreciation of Strauss, there was much to
enjoy here. Many of these songs are not often encountered, which
gave the recital extra value. Vale’s voice is still very young,
and will doubtless open out more, but he was far from unequal to
many of Strauss’s demands. Plummer was excellent, though I am not
convinced that his programming matches his pianism. The encores, a
group of five ‘very small’ (mercifully) songs by Sterndale Bennett
were ‘humorous’ though not – at least to this listener – amusing.
They seemed an odd conclusion to this recital, but would surely
have seemed odder still had one attended the series of three
Strauss recitals.
Mark Berry