'You can ask me anything you want to - anything at all' was perhaps
not exactly the response I had been expecting from the baritone Simon
Keenlyside, well known for his distaste for journalistic hype
and, dare one say it, with something of a reputation for being other
than charming off the stage. Quite why it is that anyone should expect
singers to be delightful when they step down from the platform or take
off their make- up has always been a mystery to me, since singers are
no different to the rest of us in that some are naturally warm and open,
and others are naturally reserved, but Keenlyside proved very willing
to talk about his career and to enthuse about mutual interests such
as the wildlife around San Francisco and the poetry of John Clare. I
think it was Dietrich Fischer - Dieskau who said that 'there are only
two positions for a singer, on his feet or on his back,' which I take
to mean that when not singing they should be resting and not talking,
and there are indeed many who would do well to take his advice since
much of what they say veers towards the fatuous. It is a joy to encounter
someone like Keenlyside, who, in common with his contemporary John Mark
Ainsley, has a sharp intellect and interests beyond the promotion of
self.
I had originally wanted to interview Keenlyside and
Ainsley in connection with their singing of the roles of Don Giovanni
and Don Ottavio in the Royal Opera's new production, since their assumption
of those roles at this time provides an experience which as far as I
know is unique - that is, both the Giovanni, singing his first one in
this house, and the Ottavio, making his house debut, are both British
singers, which in this very 'internationally' orientated house is quite
remarkable. Critics were united in their praise for Keenlyside's Don,
some of them going so far as to prefer his singing and assumption of
the role to that of the 'first cast' Don, Bryn Terfel, with the 'Times'
and 'Independent' respectively commenting that he revealed '..a voice
on top form,' and that his acting was characterised by 'elegant understatement.'
I asked him about the role and the production; quite
apart from getting very hot in the final scenes, it seemed to me that
the staging presented quite a few challenges for Don Giovanni, but for
him these do not loom as large as one might think, since 'The main challenge
is always the role itself; it's aggressive, it has to be, and it's pretty
brutal on the voice; I remember the great Thomas Allen saying that the
challenge is really the balancing act you need to perform between putting
enough into the character but not so much that you wreck your voice.
Mozart's baritone roles are not consistently the vehicles for singing
that others are, although of course they all have lyric bits in them,
but the real demand is in driving the scenes forward - it needs a lot
of theatre, which is true of everything, really!'
Part of his excellence in the role must come from
his familiarity with Italian; he describes himself as having been 'enormously
privileged' to have lived in Italy for six years, and indeed his Giovanni
has more than satisfied even the Milan critics, Bottazzi even going
so far as to say of his La Scala performance under Abbado, that 'It
would be hard to imagine a better Giovanni.' He regards himself as 'a
servant of the text,' and with experience has come the understanding
that 'prima la voce' does not just mean standing and singing but conveying
the words; he despises what he calls 'vocalise' and praises above all
'the natural, nuanced, unforced speaking voice, the real feeling, and
it's just the same thing whether it's the 'Four Last Songs' or the poetry
of John Clare. If you immerse yourself in what's on the page you can't
go wrong.'
Keenlyside does not concern himself overmuch with
the vagaries of avant - garde opera production - he seemed hardly aware
of the furore caused by the last ENO 'Giovanni,' remarking that 'Mozart
will survive all our fumblings; I don't advocate daft productions, and
maybe nowadays the balance has shifted a bit too far. It's fair to say
that in, say, the fifties it was too weighted towards singers, but now
it's gone too far towards producers. But essentially, it really doesn't
matter; only the other day I was watching an old film of Corelli and
Bastianini singing in the silliest costumes and against the daftest
set, but they sang sublimely and it worked! '
Most critics commented favourably upon the way the
production had been re-worked between the first and second sets of performances,
something with which Keenlyside was intimately involved; 'The most vital
thing is that you are here, the audience is there and the voice has
to get from a to b, and you need more than just fortes; Bryn has the
most magnificent resources, he can do things thirty feet back behind
an orchestra which I simply cannot begin to achieve, so the director
had to be understanding in order to accommodate that - you have to use
some give and take, and if I had to do some things with which I could
have been happier, then I'm willing to live with that since Francesca
(Zambello) was so perceptive in the way she made those changes.'
Mozart, he says, '.isn't polite, he's revolutionary,
and everything is in the details, the nuances, that's where he hits
you, not so much the arias as the recitatives and the not-so-major moments.
There's that most wonderful part in 'Don Giovanni' where he invites
all the peasants back and they all sing 'Viva la Liberta,' which has
always struck me as pretty daring, just before the revolution; of course,
Mozart would have got round his patrons by making all that seem related
to the character being a libertine, but that's not it at all. In one
performance I found myself whistling the 'Marseillaise,' managed to
lose the tonality and came in on the wrong note, and I later realised
that that moment is not unique; Papageno's aria 'Ein Madchen oder Weibchen'
is so closely related to the 'Marseillaise' in musical terms, and it
can't be coincidental that that aria is about freedom, and is given
to the one character who wants nothing to do with the established order
as represented by the Freemasons - isn't that fascinating?'
Papageno is of course one of the roles for which he
is most widely respected, although he balked at calling it a favourite;
'I don't really care about roles, it's the pieces themselves that matter;
I do adore 'The Magic Flute' and come out of it feeling wonderful -
there are so many great moments, like the meeting of Tamino and Pamina
at 'O welch' ein Gluck,' after all the maelstrom of the plot before
then - that one sublime phrase, that calm in the storm, is part of what
makes it, for me..'
He acknowledges that while most of the great Mozart
roles are 'for life, since fortunately, for men, anyway, there are no
real age limits defining when you can or can't appear in them, but there
are so many other great roles such as Pelleas and Billy Budd which you
have to seize with both hands if you are offered them, since they need
doing whilst you are still fairly youthful! ' Keenlyside has been warmly
praised for his Pelleas, and he obviously has a special feeling for
Debussy's opera; 'It's all about shadows and nuance, and one has to
get these - it's the intimate nature of the commentary between orchestra
and voices, all those multi - faceted laminates of conversation and
implication, and if you don't get these, then you're lost since there
are no arias, as such. I would love to do it in a small room, because
it's so delicate a piece, it's like trying to hold a spider's web in
your hands. I can see why some people might not take to it, but that
doesn't bother me; I don't understand anything, really, myself, but
it's still one of the greatest of all works and will be around as long
as humanity is. What's it about? It's about people falling in love where
they shouldn't, and where the person they're married to does not love
them in the same way; it's not the subject matter that's problematic
but the music, since it's so completely new in style that one has nothing
against which to measure it. I think it's one of the most visceral,
unbearably passionate operas I know.'
Keenlyside's future operatic plans include Siegmund
and Posa, the former still just a possibility and the latter to be tried
out in a concert performance in the U.S. What attracts him to these
very different roles? 'I want to do Siegmund for the same reason that,
say, a lyric tenor wants to do Lensky - because it's fantastic music,
but I don't intend to make a habit of it, you know - it's just for fun!
I find the top very easy, and I'll probably do it in concert first of
all. Wagner is so spoilt by being sung only by huge voices; we know
exactly what kind of sound he wanted, he built Bayreuth with the orchestra
under the stage, so why can't we at least try to re -create the sound
world of the one theatre that we know he approved of? As for Posa, he
declares a love for what he calls 'just singing - old fashioned, bel
canto, Italianate music, and things like 'Don Carlos' are full of such
wonderful lyrical singing.'
I first encountered Keenlyside as a Lieder singer,
his 'Jaegers Abendlied' (Schubert) on one of the Hyperion recordings
making a strong impression on me with its warmth of tone, effortless
production and air of tender intimacy, and he is as sought after on
the recital platform as he is on the operatic stage. I have particularly
admired the planning of his recitals, an area of special interest to
me, but he was dismissive of any hint of a compliment ' No, they're
not beautifully structured - I do it, but I don't structure them beautifully!
How do you plan your life? It's chaos, isn't it?' I forbore to reply
that no, it isn't, in fact my life is, has to be, anything but chaotic,
but it's very clear that Keenlyside does not agonize over such things
as recitals in the way that some singers do, nor does he especially
concern himself with the reaction of the audience. One of his programmes
begins with Schubert's'An die Leier,' in which the poet rejects songs
of martial import in favour of 'Liebe im Erklingen,' but he says that
this is not an observation about the music to come so much as something
generally related to life.
He says that he 'adores' Hugo Wolf's songs, and those
lucky enough to be attending this year's Schubertiade will be able to
hear him in that composer's music along with songs by Schumann, Brahms
and Schubert, in a recital with the mezzo-soprano Angelika Kirchschlager
on August 31st; they will also open the Wigmore's 2002-3 season on September
6th. Visitors to Schwarzenberg will also have the opportunity to hear
him in two Schubert recitals, songs by Goethe and Shakespeare on June
21st and 'Winterreise' on September 3rd. It is the latter song cycle
which is foremost in his musical life at present, since he has been
touring with it in Italy and elsewhere, and on March 25th he will present
his interpretation of it at the Wigmore Hall for the first time. He
says that he 'kept putting it off, mainly because there's so much more
to do in the way of songs - every time I contemplated it I would start
to think, I can't live without these ones! I also got fed up with people
talking about singers who tackle it in their twenties in terms of 'Oh
but wait until he's achieved maturity in his forties...' I don't know
if I have achieved maturity or not, but one day I just thought, this
is daft, I haven't done 'Winterreise' yet - so I'm going to.'
His collaboration with the choreographer Trisha Brown
has led to his planned performances of 'Winterreise' in New York next
December; these will incorporate two dancers who will serve as 'extensions
of the voice' and what he describes as 'theme and variations.' He was
highly amused to hear that I had received a publicity notice describing
this as 'The premiere of Winterreise.' He agrees with Goerne that this
great work is one which deserves special respect, although he says that
he does not feel the weight of previous interpreters on his shoulders;
he declares that he does not find the Wigmore Hall a nerve-wracking
place to sing, and eschews the notion of having the music in front of
him, since 'I need that newsreel in my head and I lose it if I see the
lines in front of me.'
Keenlyside has come fairly late to what might be called
English Song, since for him, there is 'too much other wonderful stuff
- if it comes to a choice between the likes of Wolf and Britten, there's
no choice at all, to me, except for the Blake poems which I do love!
People ask me why I don't do much English song; they seem to think that
I somehow have to because I am English, but I can't see it like that.
I know there are singers who have an interest in it, but it's not something
I see as a priority.'
He is not a much - recorded singer, but this does
not worry him since he professes a distaste for the whole area of marketing
and hype that accompanies the business; he says that if a recording
comes along he's delighted and it's a privilege, otherwise, he'd rather
make his own recordings which would serve as a 'diary of my life' even
if they don't please him in musical terms. Nevertheless, he does confess
to feeling 'quite proud' of his recording of Schumann on Hyperion, and
so he should; he professes not to read any reviews, but the 'Gramophone'
critic compared his 'Kerner Lieder' to the recording by Matthias Goerne,
and it is certainly true that if one wanted a fine example of Keenlyside's
art, one could hardly do better than the final song of that cycle, 'Alte
Laute,' with its beautifully judged pianissimo; he says of this song
that he had at first regarded it as bleak, with its final lines 'Auf
dem traum, dem bangen / Weckt mich ein engel nur,' but later came to
the conclusion that the angel could represent Love.
Apart from the 'Winterreise' and other forthcoming
performances, his admirers can also look forward to a 'Barber of Seville'
Figaro at the Met in April, when the combination of Keenlyside and Juan
Diego Flores looks sure to produce some fireworks; he is also due to
sing Count Almaviva in Vienna and Papageno in Salzburg, and London audiences
will have the chance to hear him in that role at Covent Garden next
January, when this sought - after baritone looks certain to delight
London audiences once more with his beautiful singing and committed,
highly charged stage presence.
Melanie Eskenazi
Photo by Catherine Ashmore, Simon
Keenlyside as Don Giovanni at the Royal Opera.