Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828)
Matthias Goerne Schubert Edition - Volume 7
Im Abendrot D.799 [4:15]
Der Wanderer D.493 [5:22]
Nachtviolen D.752 [3:34]
Im Walde D.834 [5:18]
Normanns Gesang D.846 [3:06]
Der Geistertanz D.116 [2:01]
Schatzgräbers Begehr D.761 [3:25]
An den Mond D.259 [3:15]
Erlkönig D. 328 [3:43]
Am See D.746 [2:21]
Alinde D.904 [5:10]
Widerschein D.949 [4:33]
Die Forelle D.550 [1:54]
Der Fluss D.693 [5:15]
Abendröte D.690 [3:51]
Klage D.415 [3:08]
Der Strom D.565 [1:29]
Fischerweise D.881 [2:57]
Auf der Bruck D.853 [3:05]
Matthias Goerne (baritone)
Andreas Haefliger (piano)
rec. January 2012, Teldex Studio Berlin
HARMONIA MUNDI HMC 902141 [67:54]
Matthias Goerne’s
selective - and brilliant - Schubert cycle continues with the present
volume. This time he joins forces with Andreas Haefliger and it’s
a partnership that really works. Goerne is one of the most distinguished
of all lieder baritones at work today. His voice has beauty and expression
in spades, with a tone and musical colour to cherish. He is perhaps
not as careful or as skilful a word-painter as, say, Christian Gerhaher,
but that doesn’t detract from his understanding of the
text. This informs his eminently musical approach to everything he sings.
The dreamy stillness of the opening song, Im Abendrot, exemplifies
the virtues of the whole disc: Goerne’s rich vocal colour makes
a sound of intense beauty, accompanied by sensitive intelligence from
Haefliger. There is a wonderful mood of unfulfilled and seemingly inexpressible
longing inhabited in so many of these songs, such as Der Wanderer.
Goerne and Haefliger bring out the best in these songs, and it is also
in these that they find the best in each other; a sense of give and
take informs their interpretation of both words and music. Importantly,
there’s also a sense that they are always listening to and responding
to each other. The sublime An den Mond, for example, sees them
breathing in tandem, the piano’s undulating line complementing
the singer as they evoke the song’s longing for nature and for
isolation. Goerne and Haefliger also bring out the quality of ephemeral
serenity in so much of this music. Songs such as Nachtviolen,
for example, seem to quiver on the membrane between joy and pain, between
reality and dream, between the earthly and the spiritual. Abendröte,
likewise, unfolds from within itself, expanding to encompass the “single
choir” that the whole universe becomes at the end of the song.
At the other extreme is the stormy petulance of Im Walde or Normans
Gesang, every bit as powerful in the opposite way. Even here there
is sensitivity: for example, I loved the way in which the last verse
of Normans Gesang modulates effortlessly from the turbulent minor
key into the optimistic major as the poet looks forward to - or at least
hopes for - his wedding day. Der Fluss unfolds in one long paragraph,
carried along with quiet inevitability by the unarguably purposeful
piano line. Der Strom, another depiction of a river, gives an
altogether more unsettling view, tumbling and furrowing as an echo of
the poet’s heart. Goerne darkens his voice so convincingly at
the start of this song that he is almost unrecognisable.
The narrative songs are perhaps the most convincing of all. Erlkönig
crackles with excitement: the thrill of the chase rumbles through the
piano while Goerne imbues the narrative with passion and intensity,
depicting the three characters with admirably individualistic sound
colours. Alinde, with its combination of nature painting and
longing for love, is delightful as it evokes the gathering night in
the grove as the poet waits all evening for Alinde, who appears at last
in the final lines. This song was my favourite discovery on the disc.
Die Forelle sparkles in the piano part, though the intensity
of Goerne’s voice is more suited to the darker final verse than
to the lighter first two.
For me, however, it’s the unstrained sunniness of the penultimate
song, Fischerweise, that exemplifies so much of what is wonderful
about Schubert. The poem is an idyllic depiction of the fisherman’s
ways. The bouncy piano line buoys up the cheerful optimism of the fisherman
as he goes about his daily business. A song like this may not have the
dramatic intensity of some of the other songs on this disc, let alone
something from one of the great cycles, but it’s a welcome reminder
that Schubert was one of the finest melodists of all time. It’s
a joy that Goerne and Haefliger have given us a recital that shows off
so many facets of his artistry in such an admirably skilful way.
Simon Thompson