Johannes BRAHMS (1833-1897)
The Songs of Johannes Brahms - 3
Wach auf, mein Herzensschöne Wo033/16 [2:08]
Erlaube mir, feins Mädchen
Wo033/2 [1:22]
Mein Mädel hat einen Rosenmund Wo033/25 [2:01]
Ein Sonett
op.14/4 [1:54]
Ständchen op.14/7 [3:18]
Der Kuss op.19/1 [1:51]
An eine
Äolsharfe op.19/5 [4:03]
Magyarisch op.46/2 [2:54]
Die Schale der Vergessenheit
op.46/3 [1:43]
Fünf Lieder op.49 [12:37]
Mein wundes Herz verlangt op.59/7
[1:54]
Im Garten am Seegestade op.70/1 [2:23]
Lerchengesang op.70/2 [2:51]
Serenade op.70/3 [1:21]
An den Mond op.71/2 [3:17]
In Waldeseinsamkeit op.85/6
[2:35]
Auf dem Schiffe op.97/2 [1:07]
Es hing der Reif op.106/3 [2:52]
Ein
Wanderer op.106/5 [3:02]
Die Sonne scheint nicht mehr Wo033/5, Wo gehst du
hin, du Stolze? Wo033/22 [1:18]
Es steht ein Lind Wo033/41 [2:45]
Simon Bode (tenor), Graham Johnson (piano)
rec. 23-25 November 2009, All Saints’, Durham Road, East Finchley, London
Original texts included with English translations
HYPERION CDJ33123 [60:51]
This is the third volume of the Brahms song edition masterminded by Graham Johnson.
He explains in some detail, and even a little defiantly, his reasons for not
arranging the project chronologically or by opus number. Here is just one significant
passage:
There is a modern tendency to see a famous cycle like Winterreise as
the nineteenth-century norm to which all other groups of songs should be made
to conform, and this ‘search for cycles’ has become something of
an obsession in present-day musicology, a means of using the popularity of Schubert’s
and Schumann’s genuine cycles as an excuse to pretend that there are similarly
cohesive works in the repertoire waiting to be rescued, or restored to the unified
shape the composer had intended for them all along. It is perhaps a symptom
of our ‘bigger is better’ society that solitary songs, exquisite
miniatures, are thought to be more significant if they form part of something
bigger. If this is true, it represents an ongoing challenge to the planners
of programmes whose efforts can yield far better and more imaginative results
when allowed to range over a broader canvas than that of a single opus where
all sorts of practical considerations, including commercial ones, had restricted
the composer’s choices.
This is all music to my ears, since I have always been inclined to think that
the modern tendency of doing things rigorously by the opus-full, or chronologically,
is in a way an abdication of the responsibility earlier performers felt they
had towards their audiences. You have to be careful if you’re not Graham
Johnson. The planning of this Brahms series will doubtless be universally acclaimed
- not least by me - as yet more proof of Johnson’s brilliant and masterly
approach to programme-planning. I’ve found, to my cost, that if I spend
sleepless nights devising what I hope is a listener-friendly sequence of a selection
from an area of a composer’s work, rather than sticking to opus-number
sequence and numerical order within the opuses, I just get accused of making
a random selection. I admit, though, that in a complete edition it is easier
to find a particular song if it’s all laid out encyclopaedically. If you
want your Brahms done that way, it’s already there on CPO, with such fine
singers as Andreas Schmidt and Juliane Banse accompanied by Helmut Deutsch,
maybe a less probing artist than Johnson but a splendid purveyor of received-opinion
Brahms.
Received-opinion Brahms isn’t quite what you get here, but since I realized
this gradually, let me come to it gradually. Johnson lays stress on the importance
of folksong arrangements in Brahms’s output. He points out that, while
Brahms came too early for what we now know as ethno-musicology and happily took
on board tunes that sounded like folksongs but weren’t, he was nevertheless
the only one of the great Lieder composers to dedicate substantial time and
passion to arrangements of this kind. The largest collection, the 49 Deutsche
Volkslieder, will be spread across the entire project. Here we have three at
the beginning and three at the end. One can only delight in the transparency
of the piano textures and the simplicity, yet high art, of the singer’s
response. It cannot be easy to sing “Du la la la la la!” differently
every time it comes, and without mannerism, but here it is achieved.
As the original songs begin, there is the same clarity of texture, the same
refinement of the vocal line. Gone, for the better I thought at first, was the
thick-textured Brahms we used to know. Johnson’s analysis of the vocal
problems Brahms creates in “Der Kuss” - as ever, he provides a minutely
detailed commentary on each song - almost seems designed to induce the reaction
that it sounds easy enough as sung here.
I’m not quite sure just at what point I began to wonder if I was getting
the full story. Maybe “Die Schale der Vergeissenheit” was the moment,
for the climax is placed fairly high in the voice, and forte. Something in sheer
fullness seemed to be missing from both artists.
Having begun to think that way, the thought came more and more often. Simon
Bode has an unquestionably beautiful voice, his line is exquisitely controlled
and his care over words and meaning were already evident in the folksong settings.
One of his specialities seems to be high notes that are gently floated, honeyed,
with the help of a generous dose of falsetto. When forte high notes come, it
has to be said that the voice is inherently a little small. He resolves the
situation by maintaining the same refinement, still with a spot of falsetto.
Better this, clearly, than strident, forced tones. Given the resources he has,
his husbanding of them is admirable. In most Schubert and a lot of Schumann,
maybe the point wouldn’t have crossed my mind. I daresay I’ve been
living in Italy too long, but in the fullness of a Brahmsian climax I longed
for more sheer, even brainless, singing.
Did Johnson choose Bode as the ideal singer to give him the Brahms he wanted?
In the piano parts, too, I began to suspect an excess of refinement. Take “Sehnsucht”.
The bass crotchets are marked staccato, but are also grouped in threes with
a legato line. The triplet quavers, harmonic rather than melodic, are also marked
with slurs. Did Brahms literally want a dry, unpedalled staccato, or are the
staccatos intended as touched, to be taken in conjunction with a careful
pedalling to give warmth to the harmonies outlined by the triplets. Alexander
Schmalcz, accompanying Stephan Loges (Athene 23202) thinks the latter. This
is Brahms as we traditionally understand him, warm and not at all muddled. Johnson
thinks the former. The bleakness seems closer to Hindemith than to Brahms.
Then, in the same op.49 group, should not the repeated bass-notes of “Abenddämmerung”
resonate with a funereal quality, something like the beginning of the “Deutsches
Requiem”? What to think of “Im Garten am Seegestade”, where
the staccato - but also slurred - quavers are taken as an invitation to seek
a two-part invention in what is surely meant as an evocation of the waves lapping
on the shore. Don’t get the idea that this is all dry and unpedalled,
there are many occasions, such as a little later in this same song, where Johnson
uses tiny little dashes of pedal to create textures of almost impressionist
refinement. Brahms isn’t Ravel and in the moments I have described this
seems to me not so much Brahms as anti-Brahms. Does not Brahms call for a broader
brush? Even the detailed commentaries, full of perception as they are, sometimes
read like an insistence on little points that, while true, should be just “there”.
One thing Brahms won’t take is fussiness, and in certain moments Johnson
seems to fuss over his Brahms like an old woman at her embroidery.
There are marvellous things, such as a wondrously sustained “Es hing der
Reif”. Indeed, according to their own lights, all the performances
are marvellous. Put it another way. Every Brahmsian quality you could want is
here except fullness of heart, free-flowing generosity of spirit. If these are
the qualities you most value in Brahms, you might have some problems. If, on
the other hand, you’ve never taken to the blue-eyed old sentimentalist,
with his swings between schmaltz and grumpiness, you may be in for a revelation.
Christopher Howell
Anti-Brahms or a revelation?