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Alfred Brendel
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Matthias Goerne
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‘Only that is convincing which is truly felt,’
wrote Lotte Lehmann of interpreting Winterreise, and this towering
performance convinced not only through its deeply felt emotions but
its dramatic variety, complexity, vitality and colour: this was a Winterreise
entirely devoid of superfluity of any kind, whether in musical or
physical gesture, and came from a wholly different world to that of
the majority of performances of these songs. These are men who have
lived with and loved this incomparable music for a collective total
of some eighty years, yet their reading is as fresh and startling as
any offered by yet another voiceless wannabe: Goerne’s interpretation
has evolved so far beyond that of his early recording (with Graham Johnson
on Hyperion) and even that of his performances of two years ago with
Eric Schneider, that one feels that one is hearing the songs anew, not
in any way distorted but simply refracted through the love of two great
musicians.
I used the word ‘love’ advisedly,
since it is more than anything else a deep love for the songs which
characterizes this reading, evident not only in the depth of the interpretation
but the shaping of the phrases themselves and in the subtlety and complexity
of the understanding of the poems. It’s true that Goerne has one of
the most purely beautiful voices around, but that beauty is here used
in the service of the music rather than being served by it, and Brendel’s
equally devoted, yet far more austere sensibility formed the perfect
foil. I had not previously seen them as ideal partners: unequalled in
their own fields, of course, but it seemed to me that Goerne’s musical
spirit is of a different kind to Brendel’s – where the older man is
cerebral, cultivated, exact, the younger is emotional, unhewn, fluid:
yet here, all of their individual qualities seemed to merge into one
balanced whole.
Brendel adopted a surprisingly
brisk pace at the start of ‘Gute Nacht,’ and Goerne’s effortless long-spun
legato in the opening lines was deceptively equable: was this to be
the long-awaited ‘gemütlich’ version of ‘Winterreise?’ Thankfully,
no – and the ensuing development of the protagonist’s state of mind
through rejection, despondency, forlorn hope, bravado and eventual subsuming
of himself into the despair of Everyman, was only one of the fascinating
aspects of this performance. The anguish expressed in ‘Was soll ich
länger weilen, / Daß man mich trieb hinaus?’ seemed to break
forth from the singer as though he already saw the hard road ahead,
and after this the tenderness of ‘Fein Liebchen, gute Nacht!’ was all
the more moving. Goerne’s singing here was remarkable above all for
its use of light and shade, the contrasts so exactly judged yet without
appearing calculated, and his hushed mezza-voce in the final stanza
was heartbreaking: those of less than stern disposition knew then that
this would not be an easy Winterreise.
The immense power of Goerne’s
baritone was heard at its most startlingly full at ‘Ihr Kind ist eine
reiche Braut’ at the end of ‘Die Wetterfahne’ and almost immediately
contrasted with the subdued, hushed anguish of his tone in ‘Gefrorne
Tränen.’ Brendel played the staccato chords of the vorspiel with
as heavy a hand as was needed to evoke the rejected lover’s weary tread,
and every phrase was given new life by Goerne’s singing – ‘Daß
ich geweinet hab'?’ seemed to twist the knife even more sharply, ‘kühler
Morgentau’ gave a breath of freshness, ‘zerschmelzen’ was searing, and
the forte at ‘Eis’ simply shattering – yet it must be said that none
of these effects were contrived or overblown, all seeming naturally
to arise from the inner force of the music and poetry and the core of
the singer’s being.
‘Erstarrung’ seemed to show a
more divergent approach, with the piano still sturdily plodding on against
the singer’s increasing anguish, but ‘Der Lindenbaum’ was a perfect
unity. The first stanza, sung, as Lehmann advised, ‘with the greatest
simplicity, with warmth, very legato’ was deeply moving, and made even
more so by the darkness of the timbre in ‘Ich mußt' auch heute
wandern’ and the grim determination at ‘Ich wendete mich nicht.’ The
final stanza was, as it should be, one of the great moments of the recital:
seduced by the memories of security and peace, the traveller is tempted
by the rustling of the leaves, and the colour of the voice at
‘Du fändest Ruhe dort!’ conveyed both
the sweetness of the memory and the bitterness at the reflection of
how far he has journeyed.
In ‘Rückblick’ Brendel scrupulously
obeyed Schubert’s instruction ‘nicht zu geschwind’ whilst still suggesting
the ground blazing beneath the singer’s feet, and Goerne’s recollection
of how things once had been was not only achingly beautiful at ‘Die
runden Lindenbäume blühten’ but also lightly humorous at ‘Da
war's gescheh'n um dich, Gesell!’ At the end of this song, Goerne achieved
something I have never heard before: the lover says he would like to
stumble back once more and stand before her house – in the line ‘Vor
ihrem Hause stille steh'n’ Goerne conveyed a kind of disbelief that
such a thing might be possible, and that he could countenance such an
event – extraordinary singing, which left me awed.
‘Irrlicht’ was a masterly exercise
in light and shade – ‘Liegt nicht schwer mir in dem Sinn’ was insouciant
in its tone, whereas the last two lines were not only subtle in the
use of contrast in the repetition (the first confident to the point
of triumph, the second allowing vulnerable doubt to creep in) but also
tremendous in their power. This is not monochrome singing, nor does
it merely display its loveliness: the words ‘mean’ something to the
singer, and because they are presented with the highest musical values
they have equal validity for us. In the same way the final stanza of
‘Rast’ unleashes the huge power of the voice at ‘Mit heißem Stich
sich regen!’ in such a way that the singer seems like a man possessed.
‘Frühlingstraum’ began rather
choppily in the piano but developed into the finest performance I have
heard of this song. Without any undue exaggeration singer and pianist
conveyed the true Schubertian contrast between present misery bitterly
tasted and exquisite joy fleetingly recalled: as the piano traced the
leaves on the window the voice indulged for a moment in ‘Wonne und Seligkeit’
lulling us to such an extent that the subsequent awakening was a moment
of the highest drama: the anguish of ‘alleine’ and the bitterness of
‘und denke dem Traume nach’ were both absolutely searing, and the subsequent
lines heartbreaking in their desolation, made all the more so by the
honeyed warmth of ‘Die Augen schliess ich wieder’ with its aching pressure
on that final word. Stunning – very nearly in a literal sense.
‘Der greise Kopf’ was given an
extremely moving performance – the joy in ‘Und hab' mich sehr gefreuet’
utterly poignant, and the agony at ‘Auf dieser ganzen Reise!’ painfully
bleak. ‘Das Wirtshaus’ eloquently described by Graham Johnson as ‘the
grandest vocal hymn that Schubert ever wrote’ has a slowest marking
of any song in the cycle, and gave ample evidence of Brendel’s remark
that Goerne has the ‘longest breath’ of any singer he accompanied. Technical
difficulties were made light of with singing of nobility, power and
heart rending directness: the sentiments expressed at the end of the
poem may suggest a determination to carry on, but singing such as this
is also able to convey the utter desperation at the thought that even
a graveyard will not welcome him – Goerne looked near to collapse at
the end of this song, and the audience certainly felt by this time that
they had embarked upon a most physically draining journey.
‘Die Nebensonnen’ found Brendel
preserving the lilt in the music which Schubert desired (‘Nicht zu langsam’)
and Goerne conveying the obsessive nature of the poem with the most
melancholy grandeur. The huge range of dynamics in this song was achieved
without exaggeration and words such as ‘auch’ on that exposed F natural
were given their true significance. The final two lines were given with
the kind of rapt, mesmerizing grace which is so much Goerne’s hallmark,
and they set the scene for a ‘Leiermann’ of the most blazing intensity.
Brendel’s evocation of the hurdy-gurdy was masterly in its direct, almost
rough sensibility, and his final notes reverberated with the unanswered
questions of the music – this is the modern world, Schubert seems to
say; there is no picturesque floating death, no grandiose conclusion
involving blazes of glory, just that question, put with such utterly
captivating humility – ‘Wunderlicher Alter, Soll ich mit dir geh’n?’
Keats, at the end of his life,
wrote to a friend ‘I have coals of fire in my breast. It surprises me
that the human heart is capable of containing and bearing so much misery’
- and it is precisely that sense of ‘having coals of fire in the breast’
and containing a whole world of sorrow, that this Winterreise most
vividly conveys. If I have a complaint it is that Brendel brought the
ensuing silence to an end a little too soon: no matter, the performance
will be repeated on Friday and recorded on ‘SACD’, thereby not only
preserving one of the great musical partnerships, and one which it is
reasonable to assume will not be thus preserved too many times in the
future, but allowing us to experience again what can only be called
the Winterreise of our time.
Melanie Eskenazi