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SEEN
AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL CONCERT REVIEW
Pauline Viardot and Friends:
Melody
Moore, soprano; Fredericka von Stade, mezzo soprano;
Vladimir Chernov, baritone; Peter Grunberg, piano;
Marilyn Horne, host and narrator; a salon presented by
San Francisco Performances at Herbst Hall, San
Francisco, 22.3.2008 (HS)
Though discerning vocal recitalists occasionally slip
one or two of her songs into their programs, it's safe
to say that Pauline Viardot and her music were new to
most of the audience for "Pauline Viardot and
Friends." After the 2 1/2-hour "salon," which made as
much of the 19th century singer and composer's
relationships with famous figures of her day as it did
of her beautifully crafted music, they may well have
fallen in love with her.
The Romantic Russian writer Ivan Turgenev certainly
tumbled for her, and spent much of his life as the "trois"
in a sort of ménage-a-trois that included her much
older husband. As described in the script, written by
Georgia Smith, this was perfectly understandable.
Pauline was quite a gal. She was fluent in four
languages by the time she was 4, she dazzled Liszt
with her piano virtuosity at 10 (he taught her for a
while), became a singer at 16 and the toast of Europe
by 22.
And she wrote music, mostly songs and, after her
retirement as a singer, operettas. The evening
generously presented 16 of hers, including one vocal
arrangement of a Chopin mazurka (which, the narration
tells us, Chopin performed with her), and two by other
composers to provide a glimpse of the music she
performed.
As staged by Lotfi Mansouri (once general director of
San Francisco Opera), Marilyn Horne settled into an
easy chair to act as host and narrator, introducing
the music and telling Viardot's story. And what a
story, peopled by one famous name after another. It
begins with her father, Manuel Garcia, the most famous
tenor of his day, now chiefly remembered for a vocal
teaching method still employed by some of the world's
leading singers (including Horne), and her sister, the
soprano Maria Malibran. The story then embraces a
circle of friends that included Chopin, Liszt, Gounod,
Meyerbeer, Saint-Saëns, Schumann, Brahms and Fauré
(all of whom dedicated works to her).
Already married, she met Turgenev at 22 while singing
in Russia. They got close fast. He taught her Russian.
Over the years she wrote a brace of songs in Russian,
sung here by the dashing Russian baritone Vladimir
Chernov. She wrote mostly in French (she grew up in
Paris and made her home there most of her life). Mezzo
soprano Fredericka von Stade and soprano Melody Moore
sang those.
Strikingly, her music seems to adapt itself to the
culture of the language. If you tuned into the radio
in the middle, you might think the Russian songs were
by Tchaikovsky, the French songs by Fauré or Bizet,
others by Schubert, but not exactly. Her music may not
equal their best, but we hear plenty of songs by those
composers that aren't nearly as good.
The singers lavished much personality and impressive
technique on the proceedings, ably supported by
pianist Peter Grunberg, who was an equal partner in
the music making. Von Stade took the lighter French
fare, creating some gorgeously delicate moments with "l'Absence"
and capturing the coquettish humor of "Indécision."
Chernov delivered the Russian songs with plenty of
slavic angst and, in songs such as "The titmouse,"
appealing delicacy. Moore, most recently an Adler
Fellow in the San Francisco Opera's Merola young
artists program, held her own with these
long-established singers, taking on the heavy lifting
with songs that demanded tremendous coloratura and
drama, such as the declamation of "Scène d'Hermione
from Andromache," Gluck's "Divinités du Styx" and
Viardot's distinctly Schubertian dramatic song, "The
Oak and the Reed."
Horne, resplendent in a voluminous red gown and
matching red coat, created a warm bond with the
audience and the singers. Her personal contact with
the music, having performed and recorded several of
the songs, and fascination with the historical figure
(she has a collection of Viardot memorabilia) made her
the perfect storyteller.
She even sang a few lines, first at the behest of
Chernov after he sang one of the songs in Russian that
Horne had performed in German, later as part of a
quartet arrangement of Viardot's "Havanaise,"
performed as an encore. The voice is still rich, warm
and pinpoint accurate, at least for a few happy
measures.
In a somewhat shorter version, "Pauline Viardot and
Friends" debuted in February 2006 at London's Wigmore
Hall, with a reprise at Paris' Châtelet. The French
actress Fanny Ardant was host then, with von Stade and
Chernov singing. Anna Caterina Antonacci was the
soprano for that. A recording was released on Opera
Rara.
Live on stage, Horne, Moore, von Stade and Chernov
exuded personality and rapport, injecting ad libs that
made the sometimes clunky script come to life. But in
the end, it was the music that won over the audience.
Harvey Steiman