The Nash Ensemble’s latest series
is ‘Those Blue Remembered Hills,’ featuring British Music from the first
half of the 20th century, so I’m not quite sure how this
concert celebrating Robin Holloway’s 60th birthday fits into
the plan, since all the works presented here were written either in
the first half of the 19th century or the second half of
the 20th. However, the series promises to be a fascinating
journey through some of the most unjustly neglected works of such composers
as Gurney, Warlock and Vaughan Williams, so one can forgive a little
fudging around the dates.
Robin Holloway, we’re assured
in the delightfully overblown introduction (not attributed – did he
write it himself, one wonders?) ‘loftily dispelled’ with works later
than his ‘Fantasy Pieces…’ of 1971, any accusations of conservatism
such works might have attracted, and his further explorations of romantic
terms of reference all flowed ‘in a mighty delta from the source of
his music of the 1970’s.’ We’re also told that he brings to each of
his pieces ‘an unparalleled range of aesthetic concerns’ (unparalleled
by whom, one asks) and, more informatively, that he sees the past as
something ‘almost tangibly to be desired, whether darkly, playfully
or passionately.’ Well, certainly: who can deny that they would love
to have written Schumann’s ‘Liederkreis’ Op. 24 to the point of passionate
longing for it, but of course most composers don’t go quite so far as
to frame their own pieces around it.
Holloway’s declared intention
was to ‘make an integral work out of a source that was itself a unity’
but to some ears you can’t improve upon perfection, and having the Schumann
‘inserted’ after Holloway’s ‘Praeludium’ and before the other four parts
of his work did not do much to illuminate either: in particular, the
wonderful little nachspiel after the singer has just breathed
those final words ‘Wehmut und Liebeshauch’ should surely be received
in quiet contemplation of the piano and not of the conductor’s back
as he arranges himself to direct the subsequent piece. Incidentally,
it was interesting to note that one of our most eminent critics clearly
is a man who can ‘do it in his sleep,’ since most of the Holloway found
him in a peaceful slumber; I await his review with even more than my
usual interest, as I do his views on the performance of the evening’s
final work, Schumann’s Piano Quintet, before which a whole gaggle of
critics made a swift exit.
Holloway’s work does not make
the Schumann his own, to paraphrase Stravinsky, but it weaves around
the melodies of the songs in such a way as to highlight the most romantic
of their sensibilities: what Horn player would not want the chance to
play ‘Oben Lust, im Busen Tücken,’ and Michael Thompson played
it beautifully - indeed the instrumental performance was very fine,
but the Schumann itself formed an uncomfortable quarter of an hour
for all concerned. Toby Spence, replacing the indisposed John Mark
Ainsley at very short notice, was not himself in his best voice, and
despite some lovely moments, notably a fine legato line in ‘Ich wandelte
unter den Bäumen’ and an ideally caressing tone at ‘Einst kommt
dies Buch in deine Hand,’ this was a tentative reading which gave little
opportunity to reveal the exciting edge which this voice certainly possesses
and the innate musicality with which Spence is clearly blessed. He was
not helped by Ian Brown’s accompanying: again, it can’t be easy to play
for someone with whom you hadn’t expected to be going on, but this was
playing which was very far from the sensitivity needed by the music:
the introduction to ‘Schöne Wiege meiner Leiden’ was perfunctory
rather than suggestive of a rocking cradle, and ‘Mit Myrten und Rosen’
did little to evoke the required sense of longing: it was hardly surprising
that the singer could not manage the closing diminuendo.
The second part of the concert
began with the premiere of Holloway’s ‘Spring Music for flute, harp
and strung quartet’ which was commissioned by the Nash Ensemble. Holloway
writes that each melody-instrument is given a solo in which just one
altered coloration is permitted, ‘influencing the harmonic/melodic flavour
like a squeeze of lime or lemon or a pinch of herb or paprika.’ Delicious!
There is some lovely writing here for the harp and the viola, and the
variation in the Chaconne is the most individual music I have heard
from this composer, but the overall flavour is somewhat vague and ephemeral
– which perhaps was the intention. The Nash Ensemble played it with
absolute commitment and unity of purpose, as they did the evening’s
final work, Schumann’s E flat major Piano Quintet. Dedicated to Clara,
who played the piano part in the first public performance in 1842, this
work forms an ideal ending to a concert which began with ‘Liederkreis.’
The piano is dominant throughout, and here Ian Brown was far more at
home, especially in the finale, where the tender violin melody was also
beautifully played and the Nash’s familiar collaborative excellence
made light of the powerful coda.
Despite some fine playing, this
was not one of the Nash’s great evenings, but there’s plenty more in
store for this series, including the next concert on November 15th
which will feature Mark Padmore in ‘On Wenlock Edge,’ and a tempting
curiosity on February 21st when Holst’s ‘Savitri’ will receive
a rare outing, preceded by Saeed Jaffrey reading from the ‘Mahabharata.’
As always, you can rely on the Nash Ensemble to come up with the enticing
and unusual.
Melanie Eskenazi