Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)
Violin Concerto No.
5 in A Major, K. 219 [28:51]
Hans Werner HENZE (1926-2012)
Violin Concerto No. 1
[24:45]
Frank MARTIN (1890-1974)
Magnificat (1968 version) [11:26]
Wolfgang Schneiderhan (violin)
Irmgard Seefried (soprano)
Swiss Festival Orchestra/Paul Hindemith (Mozart), Ferdinand Leitner
(Henze), Bernard Haitink (Martin)
rec. live, Kunsthaus, Lucerne, 13 August 1952 (Mozart); 26 August 1964
(Henze); 14 August 1968 (Martin)
AUDITE 95.644 [65:07]
In the spotlight of this latest volume in Audite's Lucerne Festival
edition is the Austrian violinist Wolfgang Schneiderhan (1915-2002). He was
one of several artists who made an outstanding contribution to the Festival
over the years since its inauguration in 1938. He first appeared there in
1949, and went on to make annual visits most years until 1985. His trio, in
which he was joined by the pianist Edwin Fischer and the cellist Enrico
Mainardi, appeared there several times. Schneiderhan also gave
master-classes at Lucerne. The attraction of the present release is that it
features three recordings revealing the diversity of the violinist's
work at the Festival. All are broadcast performances, culled from the
archives of Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen (SRF).
Schneiderhan studied with Otakar Ševčík in Pisek and later with Julius
Winkler in Vienna. He fulfilled the role of first Concertmaster of the
Vienna Symphony Orchestra from 1933 to 1937, and then went on to lead the
illustrious Vienna Philharmonic from 1937 to 1951. He later pursued a solo
career, becoming one of the mainstays at Deutsche Grammophon. His repertoire
focused on the Viennese classics, but he later developed an interest in
contemporary music, and made commercial inscriptions of works by Martin,
Henze and Stravinsky.
The Mozart A major Concerto is the earliest surviving example of
Schneiderhan at Lucerne, dating from August 1952. At the helm of the Swiss
Festival Orchestra is none other than Paul Hindemith, who had stepped in at
short notice for an indisposed Wilhelm Furtwängler. I've long been familiar
with Schneiderhan's DG recording of this work from February 1967, where he
directs his own performance with the Berlin Philharmonic. In fact, on that
occasion, he set down all five concertos, the Adagio in E and the two
Rondos. The same poise, refinement and elegance informs this earlier live
airing. Tempi feel comfortable, and phrasing natural and unforced. The slow
movement is beautifully realized, with Schneiderhan eloquently shaping the
phrases, and Hindemith providing sensitive support.
Hans Werner Henze wrote three violin concertos, and the first dates from
1947 when he was twenty-one. This live performance was taped in August 1964.
The violinist later went on to record it for DG in May 1968 with the
composer, himself, conducting. The work, with its echoes of Hindemith,
Bartók and Stravinsky, is set in four movements, and covers a wide emotional
range. It makes formidable technical demands on the soloist. Schneiderhan
delivers a confident and assured performance. The opening movement is deftly
scored with some colourful orchestration, which Ferdinand Leitner points up
effectively. Schneiderhan brings energy and panache to the scherzo-like
second movement. The slow movement which follows has a dream-like quality,
and reminded me very much of the second movement of the Berg Concerto. The
finale has a neo-classical flavour, and is here performed with verve and
vigour. The success of the performance is confirmed by the enthusiastic
applause at the end.
The live performance of Frank Martin's Magnificat for soprano and
solo violin from 1968 happens to be the premiere. The vocalist is the
distinguished German soprano Irmgard Seefried (1919-1988). Seefried was
married to Schneiderhan and the work was written for and dedicated to the
couple. The conductor on this occasion is Bernard Haitink. Schneiderhan had
already performed the composer's Violin Concerto with Haitink at the
Festival two years earlier. Martin originally set out to write a Stabat
Mater, but changed course. Seefried adopts a declamatory tone in the opening
pages, with the violin very much consigned to the background. Four minutes
in, the mood becomes more settled, with the violin emerging from the
shadows. After a while the music becomes more rhythmically charged and
strident. I was surprised how well the violin and singer blend in the mix.
Martin's orchestration is brilliantly scored and colourful. The work
ends in an atmosphere of serenity and peace. It's regrettable that no text
is provided.
Transferred from the original master tapes, the performances sound very
fine. Audite are to be commended for restoring these archival treasures.
Stephen Greenbank