photograph © Melanie Eskenazi.
Matthias Goerne is an artist whose profound commitment to the music
he sings makes the most seemingly well-known works appear in a totally
new light, not only on the concert platform but also on the operatic
stage, and the challenges he sets himself and his audiences might tend
to delineate him as a somewhat daunting figure. When other singers present
virtually the same programme many times over, Goerne embarks upon feats
such as his recitals for the week of November 12th-18th:
on the 12th he will give a Brahms recital in Madrid; on the
14th, he will sing Beethoven’s ‘An die ferne Geliebte’ and
Schubert’s ‘Schwanengesang’ at the Bath Mozartfest; on the 16th
he will perform Bach Cantatas at the Wigmore Hall, and finally on the
18th he will present a most unusual programme at the same
venue, Beethoven’s ‘Gellert Lieder’ and Schubert’s ‘Leichenfantasie’
followed by Wotan’s Farewell from ‘Die Walküre.’ This kind of individuality
is exemplified in a different way in his operatic career, with his intentionally
restricted repertoire: here is a man who could have any part he wanted,
but he chooses to concentrate on a select few roles which he presents
with the most searing intensity. Berg’s Wozzeck is, of course, the part
which he is often said to have been ‘born to play,’ and his very recent
Covent Garden debut in that role had critics reaching for the superlatives.
I spoke to him about this and other matters during
a rare break from his work at the Royal Opera and elsewhere. Why is
‘Wozzeck’ so special a role for him? ‘This is really complicated to
answer, but for me, the centre of the piece is the same as the centre
of all Arts, whether it be Painting or Theatre or Fine Arts, in that
it is bound up with relationships between human beings, and that means
we are talking about Love! This is the most honest, central thing we
have to talk about, because it is so very strong in this piece and this
character: in ‘Wozzeck’ we see everyone lacking love, and the compensation
for that is in money, and this reflects a worldwide problem, not just
for Berg’s time but our own, eighty years later. The human conflict
is really focussed in this production, so much so that it is not really
what you might call an intellectual way to project the piece to the
audience, but I like that: when I sang the part in Zurich it was a fantastic
production but so much more intellectual in style, but this one is so
much closer to my own feelings about the work and how it should be staged.’
Matthias
Goerne as Wozzeck at Covent Garden - photo copyright Bill Cooper
The character of Wozzeck is, of course one of the most
difficult for a singer to project, and Goerne’s feelings for him are
not idealized ones; ‘He is often seen as a victim, and yes, I do present
him as sympathetic for the most part, but in the end he is not a victim,
he is a murderer – he did the worst thing you can do, killed her because
he was jealous. There is so much to help us to understand his being,
but also so many reasons why one can’t accept it, and that’s what makes
this work so phenomenal. After Wozzeck it’s very hard to find another
role at the same level of fascination for me.’
This production seemed to be the result of exceptional
unanimity between singers, musical direction and production, something
which Goerne clearly values; ‘This has so much to do with the relationships
not only between those on stage but the house itself, the whole atmosphere
is so positive, and Pappano is a true opera conductor – he not only
attended every rehearsal but he conducted every day, and that is so
unusual. It also helps that the conditions in this house are so fantastic
for all of us – I really feel that under Pappano, things are changing
here. One should also say that in order to do such a piece as ‘Wozzeck,’
you have to have exceptionally committed singers, and maybe there are
not that many who actually want to perform it, because it is not exactly
easy – there is a lot to take on. I think the whole cast works so well
together, even those small parts like the Fool, where Francis (Egerton)
does such amazing things with just a few words. Ensemble opera like
this is so rare – it’s much more common to have one singer from Italy,
one from Japan, they all come a few days before, get a ‘touch-up’ on
stage and then you see this s***, you know.’
Post-performance chat after both the evenings I attended
focused very much on the striking image of Wozzeck dying in a small
glass water tank, where Goerne had to remain submerged and in full view
for ten minutes – most people said ‘How on earth did they persuade him
to do that?’ but in fact, it was his own idea: ‘When we discussed the
piece at the beginning, I kept asking how I was going to die, and I
was told well, we have this fantastic mirror, and a blue curtain, and
you can swim, you know…well, the mirror was fantastic, but the moment
I saw the tank, I decided immediately that I would die in that! I told
Keith (Warner), you have this one line of horrible things, and the last
one is the empty tank of pure water, so you must use it! He was shocked
when I said that because that had been what he originally wanted when
he first approached the opera years ago, but he said he had given up
the idea immediately because he didn’t think he would find a singer
who was willing to do it! Yes, I have to be underwater for ten minutes,
and there are technical challenges to be overcome with that, but it
is worth it – it is such a shocking image.’
The huge success of his ROH debut might lead one to
expect many future performances, but this is not to be, at least at
present, since he turned down their offer of Papageno in the new production
of ‘Die Zauberflöte,’ feeling that he has done that role so many
times that just one more will be enough, and that will be at the Met,
under James Levine. Interestingly, he professes a strong desire to take
the part of the Speaker in the same opera, since ‘The whole of the Wagnerian
idea is based on this idea of Music Theatre, with its blending of aria
and recitative combined with dialogue. I would really love to do it!’
This seems so typical of him; where so many singers are content to churn
out their Papageno, he wants to call a halt at only 35, and expresses
interest in a role generally regarded as fairly insignificant, although
one can imagine that in his hands it would cease to be so.
I have previously said that I consider him perfect
for the great Strauss baritone roles, and he is still contemplating
taking on Mandryka at Covent Garden, although the face he made when
I suggested that Barak would also suit him is not translatable to print.
Despite having the ideal voice and certainly the temperament for Mandryka,
he is otherwise ‘not really interested in the Strauss repertoire. I
have been through all the Songs, and there are really only a few which
speak to me, but this repertoire is not to my taste, it is not deep
enough – the music is brilliant, but that is not enough; for me, it
is not really connected to anything. The same is true of Brahms; I have
just about twenty pieces which I like very much, the rest I can take
or leave.’ No one who heard his searing account of the ‘Vier Ernste
Gesänge’ at the Wigmore Hall last season could doubt that his recorded
interpretation of this work would be a landmark, and he is very keen
to commit it to disc despite the proliferation of other versions: ‘I
very much like Fischer – Dieskau’s account of it, since his balance
between the intellectual and the emotional is so exact, but there are
not that many singers who present the work in the way I think it should
be done; it’s not enough just to be loud and strong in this music, the
singer needs to be sensitive, too – I want to be touched when I hear
it, and very often I am not really touched.’
Goerne’s most recent recording is of course another
work much associated with his former teacher, Schubert’s ‘Die Schöne
Müllerin,’ which forms the first part of his odyssey through the
great Schubert cycles; he will record both ‘Winterreise’ and ‘Schwanengesang’
with Brendel during live performances at the Wigmore Hall next Autumn.
As a student, he says, he did not like the first cycle so much, and
felt that Fischer-Dieskau’s way with it was so strongly influential
that it was difficult for others to get around such a landmark, but
now he has found his own way; ‘For me, this piece is not ‘gemütlich,’
it has nothing to do with that sort of Biedermayer charm which some
critics seem to want to hear in it. All this naiveté – the boy
walking through the trees, seeing the Mill, finding love and all that,
is not what the work is about; it is much, much more involved with what
might be called ‘Sturm und Drang,’ and with ‘Pause,’ the central song,
you have the moment when he is really reflecting, and from then on it’s
a descending spiral for which the only culmination is his death by suicide.
People always think of ‘Winterreise’ as being dark, gloomy, but you
know, the man does not die at the end of that cycle, he goes on, unlike
the youth in the earlier work. ‘Winterreise’ is grey, I think, but ‘Die
Schöne Müllerin’ is really much darker than that, it really
is ‘leidenschaftlich.’
The critical reception given to his recording was extremely
polarized; some, such as the present writer and the critic of the ‘International
Record Review’ were galvanized not only by his incredibly beautiful
singing but also by the highly individual interpretation, but others
found it wanting in the charm which they sought, in his view, mistakenly:
‘I cannot understand this sort of thing! A critic should be open to
different interpretations, not simply expecting each recording to confirm
what every other one has done! One should be free and open enough to
receive interpretations which do not follow the tradition, so I was
very glad that some writers did hear and understand what we were doing.’
He confidently expects at least a couple of ‘terrible’
reviews for one of his forthcoming Wigmore Hall recitals, when he will
sing Schubert’s very early ‘Leichenfantasie’ with Beethoven’s Gellert
settings and the farewell scene of Wotan from the close of Wagner’s
‘Walkure.’ His other recital there, of Bach Cantatas, is also a very
unusual choice for that venue, but it was quite deliberate; ‘It is a
kind of chamber music, really, and the problem is that one usually has
to sing it in church, and no matter how many rehearsals one has, the
sound is still not ideal – similarly, a ‘normal’ concert hall is not
quite right, but the Wigmore is perfect. Doing this programme also gives
me the chance to introduce Ofelia Sala, a marvellous soprano, and of
course the audience will also be able to hear Albrecht Mayer, who I
think is simply the best oboist in the world. I know people will really
like this programme, since the music is so rich; I am not a religious
man but I do have beliefs, and this music is so much a part of me that
I have to sing it, and in this hall.
With the other programme, I know some people will find
it too sombre, but I think they go well together; as far as I know,
the ‘Leichenfantasie’ has never been performed at the Wigmore, and it’s
not hard to understand why! When he wrote it, Schubert’s understanding
of singing was not yet mature, and the work does not always lie gracefully
for anyone’s voice, but there is some fantastic music in it, and I like
the idea of combining it with the Gellert songs, which are so strong,
so powerful and concentrated. As for ‘Wotan’s Abschied,’ I will never
sing it on stage but I still want to perform it, and I think it works
well with the Schubert since they are very similar in atmosphere.’
One Wagnerian role which he does intend to sing is
that of Wolfram in ‘Tannhäuser,’ which he will perform in Dresden,
but not, surprisingly, at Covent Garden – ‘I would love to do it here,
but they haven’t asked me!’ His other opera plans include a new work
by Hans Werner Henze, written especially for him: ‘I am very excited
about this; ‘L’Upupa’ is based on a tale from the 1,001 nights, and
is a kind of philosophical love story, very, very poetic, mainly concerned
with the relationship between a son and his father.’ The work will have
its premiere on August 12th 2003 in Salzburg, and the cast
also includes Ian Bostridge singing a role which Goerne intriguingly
called ‘The Daemon,’ as well as Juliane Banse in the soprano part: it
is to be conducted by Christian Thielemann with the Vienna Philharmonic.
His other plans include a new ‘Wozzeck’ in Japan, recitals
all over the world including the Schubertiade both in 2003 and 2004,
as well as many recordings, and of course his continuing commitment
to the Robert-Schumann Hochschule, where he holds a Professorship, and
has assumed responsibility for the tuition of a group of students whom
he describes as ‘very talented;’ he clearly loves teaching - ‘I find
it quite easy, I have good feelings about it since I have a good ear
for understanding what might be needed to help a particular voice to
get a better result.’
Mahlerians will be glad to hear that he is soon to
record the three shorter Mahler vocal pieces (‘Lieder eines Fahrenden
Gesellen,’ ‘Kindertotenlieder’ and the ‘Rückert’ Lieder) all on
one CD, with the Concertgebouw under Riccardo Chailly. At some point
in the future they will also record ‘Das Lied von der Erde,’ an inviting
prospect for those of us who love this music; Chailly recently said
in an interview that in general he preferred a Mezzo – soprano for this
work, but that just for Goerne, he was willing to set his usual preference
aside in order to record it with him, a statement which obviously delighted
the singer but which is by no means unusual, since it seems to be the
wish of so many eminent musicians to work with this unique man, so young
and yet already so full of what can only be called true greatness.
Melanie Eskenazi