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SEEN
AND HEARD CONCERT REVIEW
‘Night Music’
– Stravinsky, Birtwistle, Britten, Handel, and Woolrich:
Mark
Padmore (tenor/director for Nocturne), Maxim Rysanov (viola),
Jacqueline Shave (leader/director), Britten Sinfonia. West Road
Concert Hall, Cambridge, 23.10.2008 (MB)
Stravinsky – Fanfare for a new theatre (1964)
Birtwistle – Prologue (1971)
Britten – Lachrymae: reflections on a song of John Dowland,
op.48a (1950/1976)
Handel – Samson: ‘Total eclipse’ and ‘Thus when the sun’
(1743)
Woolrich – Ulysses awakes (1989)
Britten – Nocturne, op.60 (1958)
This was an excellent concert, constructed around Mark Padmore’s
choice of Britten’s Nocturne as a work with which to
inaugurate a new collaboration with the Britten Sinfonia. The
connections between the works were genuine and interesting but never
merely didactic. It seemed generous of Padmore to share the
limelight with violist Maxim Rysanov, soloist in two of the works
presented, but that generosity was repaid with fine performances
indeed.
Stravinsky’s brief fanfare – almost beating Webern at his own game –
made for a splendid opening gambit. Two trumpeters, Paul Archibald
and Tom Rainer, brought precision and tonal warmth, the echoes of
the Toccata to Orfeo setting down a marker for John
Woolrich’s Monteverdi explorations, as well as leading almost
seamlessly into the world of Birtwistle’s Prologue. The
baleful quality of Birtwistle’s writing was captured by Padmore and
members of the Sinfonia, the reappearance of the trumpet underlining
the connection between the two pieces. Padmore’s diction was not
always beyond reproach but it was interesting to hear a somewhat
Brittenesque tonal quality applied to Birtwistle; I thought it
worked rather well.
This led us to Britten himself: his final work, Lachrymae, in
the version for viola and orchestra. Rysanov sported a strange,
somewhat vampirish outfit. There could be no doubts, however,
concerning his performance, nor as to his direction of the other
players. The first bars were played vibrato-less, allowing the music
then to blossom, as if bringing distant music from Dowland’s time
more sharply into focus in our own. I liked the occasional hint of
contrast between Rysanov’s ‘Russian’ string sound and the more
‘English’ quality of his colleagues. This was not overdone and was
far from ever-present, but it put me in mind of Britten’s
friendships with Rostropovich and Shostakovich. I liked even more
the occasional hints of Berg, stronger as time went on, the
appearance of Dowland’s music reminiscent of – though it could
hardly be expected quite to match – the appearance of the Bach
chorale in the Berg Violin Concerto. The young Britten, it may be
recalled, had greatly desired to study with Berg in Vienna, a desire
frustrated by the parochialism of his teachers at the Royal College
of Music. Rysanov brought the music to considerable heights of
passion, underpinned by a finely judged balance between rhythmic
freedom and security. Britten’s musical transformations were lain
bare, but never clinically so; there was a true sense of the
cumulative power of musico-dramatic progression.
Two arias from Samson followed. I was rather surprised, given
Padmore’s lengthy association with ‘authenticke’ conductors, at the
wideness of his vibrato here. Indeed, it seemed excessive and was
toned down considerably upon the return to Britten. I also wondered
whether less might have been more when it came to employment of the
head voice. Diction was much better in the first aria, ‘Total
eclipse’, Samson’s lament for his lost sight, though it was more
variable in ‘Thus when the sun’. Padmore’s melismata here were
perfectly handled: each note crystal clear, yet never at the expense
of phrasing. I was much taken with the reassuringly old-fashioned
sturdiness – though never heaviness – to the playing of the Britten
Sinfonia. Handel, who nowadays suffers some truly appalling
perversities in the name of ‘authenticity’, had his dignity restored
at last.
The second half opened with Woolrich’s Ulysses awakes, for me
perhaps the highlight of the programme. The opening double-bass line
led perfectly into Rysanov’s viola line, permitting Monteverdi’s
music truly to blossom in its new surroundings. This was a
passionately ‘inauthentic’ treatment, though it never succumbed to
all-purpose Romanticism. Almost Purcellian in its melancholy, the
reminder of the English Orpheus presented a bridge not only between
Woolrich and Monteverdi but also between Woolrich, Britten, and
Monteverdi. I could not help but think of Britten’s superlative
recorded account of Purcell’s great Chacony in G minor. Harmonic
horizons broadened yet Woolrich always remained faithful to the
spirit of Monteverdi. A modernist halo was provided by the players
of the Britten Sinfonia, a powerful reimagining – and here I thought
of Henze’s realisation of Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria – of
Monteverdi’s continuo ensemble. I wondered whether one or two vocal
phrase-endings were ever so slightly tossed away but, in the face of
such a magnificent performance from Rysanov, this must be the most
minor of criticisms. Far more to the point was the apt vocal
flexibility to his reading, heightened by the faultless interplay
between soloist – first among equals – and ensemble. This
performance was, quite simply, outstanding.
We came finally to Britten’s Nocturne. Once again, the
ever-flexible Britten Sinfonia was on excellent form, both as an
ensemble and as soloists. There were certainly many opportunities
for soloists to shine, all of them well taken: bassoon, harp, horn,
timpani, oboe, flute, clarinet, and strings. The interludes between
songs were all extremely fine. Britten’s sound-world announced
itself from the very first bar, the strings’ sense of uneasy
undulation during the setting of Shelley’s Prometheus unbound
unerringly caught. Padmore had mastered the trickiness of the Peter
Pears-inspired vocal writing, accomplishing what Pears himself
defined as the role of technique: the liberation of the
imagination. There was a real sense of the magic and menace of
Coleridge’s moonlight in The wanderings of Cain, not least
thanks to the opening harp sounds and the gradual darkening of
Padmore’s voice. Word-painting was attentive, for instance in the
setting from Thomas Middleton’s Blurt, Master Constable. Here
Padmore led us through the hopping of the cricket to the ‘peep,
peep, peep, peep,’ of the goat, the latter with the able
collaboration of Stephen Bell on French horn. Oboe and pizzicato
strings made their mark in Owen’s The kind ghosts, followed
by wonderfully flighty flute and clarinet in Keats’s Sleep and
poetry. The scherzando quality those instruments imparted
contrasted powerfully with the English stillness of the strings,
Padmore not only connecting the two moods but leading and adapting
to them. I thought, however, that his tone sounded bleached, even
threadbare by the end of this movement: a pity, especially given the
words: ‘... all the cheerful eyes that glance so brightly at the new
sun-rise’. But there was compensation in the final Shakespeare
sonnet (no.43) from the warm, ardent strings, and the sense of
return at the end was impressively caught by all musicians.
It is worth saying a few words on presentation. Katie Mitchell and
Lyndsey Turner were credited as ‘staging consultants’. There was,
however, no ‘staging’ as would commonly be understood, save for the
unavoidable fact of the performances taking place on a stage. It is
not clear to me what can have been involved other than deciding
where the musicians would be placed on stage and whether they stood
or were seated. Such a task hardly seems to require two consultants
but there was nothing objectionable to whatever it was they had
done. To start with, I wondered whether having the musicians stand
for Lachrymae was a deliberate evocation of the practice of
earlier ‘players’ – as opposed to a modern orchestra – but in that
case, it was far from clear why this should not have been applied to
Ulysses awakes. No harm was done; perhaps I was missing
something. On the other hand, the programme notes, were
excellent: both the commentary to all but one of the pieces by Jo
Kirkbride and the short essays from Padmore and Kate Kennedy.
Woolrich wrote his own note, which deserves to be quoted in full,
should that be the right phrase:
There are two great arias at the beginning of Monteverdi’s opera Il ritorno d’Ulisse in Patria: one for Penelope, and this one for Ulysses, waking on the shore of his homeland. In this retelling, the viola sings Ulysses.
Talk about
letting the music speak for itself! Intentionally or otherwise, this
seemed to me a clever strategy: without any more of a guide, one had
to listen all the more closely. Perhaps, after the manner of Debussy
giving titles to his piano Préludes at the end rather than
the beginning, we could be treated to additional commentary
following the performance.
Mark Berry
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