CLASSICAL Archives

Moderated Classical Music List

CLASSICAL@COMMUNITY.LSOFT.COM

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Steve Schwartz <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Moderated Classical Music List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 21 Dec 2009 17:39:55 -0800
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (140 lines)
Lorraine Hunt Lieberson
Wigmore Hall Recital, 1999

*  Brahms: 8 Songs, op. 57
*  Schumann:
         - 4 Lieder from Goethe's Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre, op. 98a
         - Frauenliebe und -leben, op. 42
*  Debussy: Fetes galantes -- Fantoches
*  Handel: Theodora -- Angels, ever bright and fair

Lorraine Hunt Lieberson (mezzo)
Julius Drake (piano).
Wigmore Hall Live WHLive0024  TT: 69:31.

Summary for the Busy Executive: Wish I'd been there.

More recordings of the beloved singer, the late Lorraine Hunt Lieberson,
continue to dribble out -- necessarily live recordings, of course.  The
recital comes from London's Wigmore Hall, 1999.  I think it a bit unusual,
since I associate Lieberson with the Baroque, Mozart, and the contemporary.
This program concentrates on the hard-core German Romantic repertoire.

Lieberson's voice belongs to her alone.  She hasn't the disconcerting
wobble that afflicts so many mezzos.  Unlike, say, Janet Baker, she also
hasn't the Devonshire cream in her sound.  It's an extremely clear tone,
even bright, which in a lesser singer can be unforgiving if pitch isn't
absolutely dead on.  Lieberson approaches these songs on her own path
as well, I suspect because of her immersion in the Baroque early on.  In
general, her interpretations -- unlike, say, Schwarzkopf's or Ludwig's
-- are less "stagy," although no less dramatic.  It's the difference
between Olivier and Eastwood.  Lieberson pitches her readings lower,
more "naturally." She rarely underlines anything.  She speaks not from
the stage, but across the table.

Hard as it may be for some to credit, I find Brahms neglected as a
songwriter.  Compared to those of Schubert, Schumann, Strauss, and Mahler,
you don't often come across his songs on recitals, and when you do, they
are very often the same small set of songs.  Although trashy texts often
attracted him, that shouldn't pose much of a problem to monolingual
Anglophone audiences, and his music is good enough to make you forget
the poetic worth of the lyrics.  His op.  57 sets poems by Georg Friedrich
Daumer (used for the Liebeslieder Waltzes as well), also a philosopher
and translator of the Persian poet Hafiz.  Indeed, Daumer was known as
the German Hafiz (but only in Germany; Iranians probably have other
opinions).  Back in Brahms's day, people considered this hot stuff, and
several of Brahms's friends warned him off these poems.  In the age of
the Stones and Courtney Love, it's all rather tame, of course.  In terms
of Brahms's idiom, nevertheless, these songs insinuate themselves like
a cat between your feet -- very sensuous.  I find Lieberson a little too
understated.  I want somebody close to (but not over) the top, on the
grounds that the passionate tempests of the verse drew Brahms in the
first place.

On the other hand, Lieberson scores in both of the Schumanns.  The
composer Wilhelm Meister songs includes a total of, I believe, eight
or nine, and he also turned to the work for his large-scale Requiem fur
Mignon, op.  98b, from the same year.  These songs blur the distinction
between Lied and dramatic scena.  Lieberson sings those poems associated
with the character Mignon.  "Kennst du das Land" (do you know the land?)
comes closest to the traditional Lied, nearly strophic, with surprising
harmonic changes at the refrain.  "Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt" (only
he who knows longing) sets the Goethe poem straight once through and
then broken phrases from it here and there for dramatic effect.  Mignon,
a none-too-stable girl, essentially breaks down as she recalls her native
land, Italy, from which she was abducted.  The last two songs, "Heiss
mich nicht reden" (don't bid me speak) and "So lasst mich scheinen" (let
me appear), tighten an already-high string.  Lieberson in a sense has
had practice doing these kinds of songs in, for example, the "mad"
heroines of baroque opera -- Dejanira from Handel's Hercules, to name
one.  Compared to other singers I've heard, Lieberson foregoes scenery
chewing for something lower-key, subtler, and evoking several emotions
at once.  This is superior Lieder singing.

I've always harbored ambiguous feelings toward Schumann's Frauenliebe
und -leben cycle.  On the one hand, the poems, by Adelbert von Chamisso,
portraying a woman's love of her husband, reek of the Victorian "angel
in the house," an icon that, quite frankly, pretty much creeps me out.
The woman worships her husband with an extravagance that makes me suspect
she's secretly poisoning his brandy and cigars.  If my wife started
behaving that way toward me, I'd start looking for where she hid the
hatchet.  On the other hand, the music ranks among the most gorgeous
Schumann ever wrote.  It comes from his annus mirabilis of song-writing,
1840, the year he finally married Clara and during which he wrote an
amazing 130 really tremendous songs.  Frauenliebe und -leben (woman's
love and life) tells a little story of a courtship, marriage, children,
and death of a spouse.  Unlike Brahms or Schubert, Schumann, a prose
master as well as a composer, was extremely sensitive to the quality of
the texts he set, although I find him guilty of a major lapse here.
Indeed, he once wrote that a great song can't happen without a great
text, an axiom which fortunately these songs disprove.  As a songwriter,
Schumann builds on Schubert's innovations.  The movement of the poem
very largely determines the musical structure, often against the stanza
structure.  Schumann has very few strictly strophic songs.  Also the
piano acts more independently than in Schubert.  One can hear it taking
up vocal snatches in "Er, der Herrlichste von allen" (he the most
magnificent of all) and especially in "Helft mir, O Schwestern" (help
me, o sisters), with its Dvorak-like arpeggios.  The most famous instance
in this cycle occurs in the final song, "Nun hast du mir den ersten
Schmerz getan" (now you have done me your first injury), where the husband
has died and the woman decides to wait for her own death.  The piano
rises to the level of commentator as it recalls the music of the first
song, "Seit ich ihn gesehen" (since I saw him), where the heroine first
realizes she loves her future husband.  All of this makes for a more
complex psychology than the poems alone.  However, I confess that my
favorite song of the cycle is one of the simplest -- "Du Ring an meinem
Finger" (you ring on my finger), also the cycle's breakout single.

There have been several outstanding recordings of the cycle,
including Lotte Lehmann with Bruno Walter at the piano, Janet Baker and
Daniel Barenboim, Edith Mathis and Christoph Eschenbach, and Anne Sofie
von Otter accompanied by Bengt Forsberg.  I'm told of an "exquisite"
performance with Ferrier and Walter, but I haven't heard it.  I love
Janet Baker's performance, mainly because I love her voice, but I must
say that Lieberson outshines everybody I know in the way she puts these
songs across.  Somehow she manages to overcome the insidious treacle of
the verse, painting a believable (and desirable) picture of unbelievably
pure devotion.  In the final song, she gives the illusion of fading away
into old age and death.

For the encores of the Debussy and Handel, Lieberson finds herself on
more familiar ground.  I hope there's a recording somewhere of an entire
Fetes galantes.  Her Handel always had the virtue of humanity and acuity.
The composer was never merely a spinner of notes for her, as he has been
for so many other singers, but a creator of drama.

Julius Drake accompanies beautifully, although I miss that final bit of
telepathy that one can get between Stephen Varcoe and Penelope Thwaites,
Janet Baker and Martin Isepp, or Fischer-Dieskau and Gerald Moore --
that extra jolt that makes you believe singer and accompanist are one
and the same.  The sound is fine.  Audience noise is kept to a minimum.
You barely realize an audience is there until the applause.

Steve Schwartz

             ***********************************************
The CLASSICAL mailing list is powered by L-Soft's renowned LISTSERV(R)
list management software together with L-Soft's HDMail High Deliverability
Mailer for reliable, lightning fast mail delivery.  For more information,
go to:  http://www.lsoft.com/LISTSERV-powered.html

ATOM RSS1 RSS2