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Glenn Gould - The Schwarzkopf Tapes
Richard STRAUSS (1864-1949)
Drei Lieder der Ophelia, Op. 67/1 [8:19]
Burleske in D minor for Piano and Orchestra (Glenn Gould “playing
and singing)* [15:23]
Burleske in D minor for Piano and Orchestra** [23:58]
Wer lieben will, muss leiden, Op. 49, No. 7 [2:45]
Morgen, Op. 27, no. 4 [3:37]
Winterweihe, Op. 48, No. 4 [2:38]
Elisabeth Schwarzkopf (soprano)
Glenn Gould (piano)
Toronto Symphony Orchestra/Vladimir Golschmann**
rec. 14-15 January, 1988; *c. 1955; **1-4 September 1967. Venues
not specified.
SONY CLASSICAL 88725441362 [56:37]
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This CD restores to circulation Glenn Gould’s recording
of the Strauss Burleske and also the Drei Lieder der
Ophelia, which he set down with Elisabeth Schwarzkopf in
1966. Issued for the first time are three more lieder
from those 1966 sessions and a private recording of Gould rehearsing
alone the Burleske.
As the title of the album makes clear, the prime interest lies
in the Gould/ Schwarzkopf recordings. Gould, who was an enthusiast
for the music of Richard Strauss, had long wanted to record
some of his lieder with Schwarzkopf and, though they
were contracted to different record companies, a chance finally
arose in January 1966 when she was in New York to sing in Don
Giovanni at the Met. In his fascinating notes Michael Stegemann
relates the story of these ill-starred sessions from which only
six songs were recorded. A third day of recordings was simply
cancelled. Though it appears from Schwarzkopf’s subsequent
reminiscence that there was no falling out with Gould - “we
parted amicably - we (Schwarzkopf and Walter Legge) simply left”
- I think the term “irreconcilable artistic differences”
probably applies.
Stegemann quotes the subsequent recollection of the producer
of the recordings, Paul Myers: “Schwarzkopf thought she
would have a very distinguished accompanist. Glenn Gould
thought he was going to have a very distinguished collaborator,
and that’s a slightly different thing.” Apparently,
Schwarzkopf was unsettled by Gould’s very free way with
the piano parts. Furthermore, she and Walter Legge, accustomed
to listening to play backs with hyper-sensitive attention to
detail, were unimpressed by Gould’s complete disinterest
in hearing play backs in the control room: he just stayed in
the studio and continued to play. The last straw, however, seems
to have been the heating in the studio, which Gould insisted
should be turned up fully, causing Schwarzkopf and Legge great
and genuine concern for her vocal health.
Around the time that this disc arrived for review I read a Letter
to the Editor in the December 2012 issue of International
Record Review. It was from Paul Myers, the producer of these
Gould/Schwarzkopf recordings. Mr Myers says he is now “the
only survivor of those unfortunate sessions with Elisabeth Schwarzkopf”
and his letter complements the story of the sessions as related
in the booklet note. Essentially, Myers corroborates Stegemann’s
note. However, it appears that Gould only asked for the heating
to be turned up full blast on the second day of sessions - the
Drei Lieder der Ophelia had been put safely in the can
the day before. A comment about Walter Legge fascinated me.
Myers says that on day one Legge sat in the control room and
offered some constructive suggestions - “His presence
was welcome”. However, Myers felt that Gould was somewhat
in awe of Legge and this became a factor on the second day when,
perhaps understandably, the situation over the studio temperature
and the potential adverse effect on his wife’s voice made
Legge somewhat tetchy. It’s hard not to feel some sympathy
with Legge and Schwarzkopf: after all she had a pre-existing
commitment to the Met to honour.
Myers also says in his letter that in 1979 he sought Elisabeth
Schwarzkopf’s permission for a first release of the Ophelia
songs as part of a Gould 25th anniversary album.
Once she’d heard a tape she gave her consent immediately,
but “insisting that nothing else from the sessions
should be issued.” It’s surprising, therefore, that
Sony Classical has now issued the other three songs, apparently
with the permission of Dame Elisabeth’s estate.
Turning from the background to the performances, the Drei
Lieder der Ophelia come off well. In the first one, ‘Wer
erkenn’ ich mein Treulieb vor andern nun?’, we hear
some crystalline pianism from Gould and Schwarzkopf’s
creamy legato. As ever with this singer, great care is taken
over the enunciation of the words. There’s apparent great
care for the music from both artists in the final song, ‘Sie
trugen ihn auf der Bahre bloß’ where again Dame
Elisabeth’s delivery is completely characteristic.
As I listened to the other three songs I tried to spot reasons
why Schwarzkopf - and Legge - might have been wary of publication.
I have to confess that I couldn’t readily discern anything
but, then, what do I know about the human voice - and abut that
voice in particular - compared to those two fastidious judges?
I was mindful too of the comment about Gould, in their view,
taking liberties with the piano part. When listening to Morgen
I noted that in the piano introduction Gould doesn’t linger
over the rising phrases as some pianists do; his delivery is
pretty direct and straightforward, almost plain; might that
be a cause for objection? Then, however, since I couldn’t
lay my hand on a Schwarzkopf version of the song with piano
accompaniment I turned instead to her celebrated recording of
the orchestral version with George Szell and there the approach
is pretty much the same. I did wonder if Schwarzkopf sounded
a little hurried in some of the phrases on this Gould recording,
but I can’t be sure - and this is emphatically not the
case with the last couple of phrases and the piano postlude,
which are lovingly drawn out. Winterweihe was the only
one of the three which I could follow from a copy and, to be
honest, I couldn’t detect any liberties on Gould’s
part. However, Schwarzkopf doesn’t nail securely the change
from top G to F sharp on the word “sel’gen”
in the last phrase and elsewhere she doesn’t always sound
completely at ease, by her immaculate standards, when the line
ventures to top F or beyond. I don’t think anyone listening
to these three songs is going to be disappointed in any way
but perhaps Sony should have respected the wishes of the artist?
They should most certainly have left in the archives the private
recording of Gould running through a large chunk of the Burleske.
It’s thought this was made at his parent’s home
in Canada prior to his first performance of the work. Not only
is the piano hideously out of tune and clangy in tone but also
Gould vocalises the orchestral part. The results are hideous
to my ears and I can’t see that this issue does the artist
any service at all. If you want to hear him in the piece - which
isn’t one of Strauss’s finest anyway - then at least
Sony provide a studio recording of the complete score with the
proper accompaniment. The orchestra, as recorded, sounds bright
and forward and the recording isn’t flattering to them.
Gould plays with no little brilliance.
As I’ve said, the booklet note is good. Reprehensibly
Sony provide neither texts nor translations for the songs. It’s
asking a lot to buy this disc for the sake of six songs which
total some 17 minutes of playing time. I think this issue is
strictly for Gould completists.
John Quinn
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