The Lady from Arezzo

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by Alfred Brendel


  Tone painting undoubtedly exists, whereas the claim that the visual arts can strike us as ‘musical’ seems to be mere conjecture. ‘The air was pierced by fiery lightning’ has been set to music in Haydn’s Creation, where we can also listen to ‘the light flaky snow’ and ‘the effervescence of the turbulent sea’. ‘The waters are swelled by the swarming fish’, while the ground is burdened by the weight of animals – a weight musically portrayed by one sustained forte note of bassoon and contrabassoon. But Haydn was selective in what he entrusted to music: ‘And God created the big whales’ is left to a recitative.

  Bright, dark, light, shade, colour, timbre, near, far – such visual terms have been readily adopted in musical discourse. Since music doesn’t directly relate to the outside world, metaphor and analogy have to assist. Pianists are able to control, in their playing, simultaneously a number of musical distances and timbres, and the notion of foreground and background has become useful even to musical analysis. In the variation movement of Op. 111, subterranean and stratospheric sounds alternate. The word ‘composition’ belongs as much to music as to the fine arts. Let me also mention those special minds that hear various keys synaesthetically as clearly defined colours. The question is whether perceiving D major as orange or A flat minor as purple will greatly enhance the comprehension of the works.

  In comparison, the use of vocabulary from the musical sphere in the visual arts is sparse. Some canvases can strike us as noisy or blatant, in utter contrast to a painter such as Giorgio Morandi, whose works induce complete silence – still lifes in the strictest sense of the word. Where a painting is praised as a symphony of colour, kitsch may be looming around the corner.

  ‘Through night to light’ – this is another concept music is able to illuminate. (Beethoven’s Fidelio is a prime example.) It is grounded in the need to overcome chaos with the help of reason. But it also lives by the idea of good and evil. Light and darkness depend on one another. The darkness of lower registers can also suggest inwardness. Beethoven, in his ‘Waldstein’ Sonata, initially conceived an extensive Andante in F major as its middle movement. In its graceful charm, it barely moves away from the outside world: good reason to replace it by the profound Introduzione to the finale that is familiar to us today – a striking contrast to the extrovert nature of the outer movements. A glimpse into fathomless profundity is presented by variation 20 of the Diabelli set:

  Beethoven: Diabelli Variations, variation 20, opening bars

  At midpoint within the overall C major turbulence of the work, it discloses a primordial riddle that defies any solution.

  Schubert’s Winterreise

  Ian Bostridge: Schubert’s Winter Journey: Anatomy of an Obsession (Faber & Faber, 2015)

  Among musical compositions of the highest order connected with the figure 24, the songs of Winterreise occupy a special place. They do not relate to the complete set of 24 major and minor keys, as do Bach’s preludes and fugues of Das wohltemperierte Klavier or Chopin’s Préludes. Schubert’s Winterreise embraces twice a dozen songs that do not offer a kaleidoscope of diverse musical characters and conditions but maintain a continuous state of mind. They do not constitute a process, a narrative like their cyclical predecessor Die schöne Müllerin, but dwell in a kind of desperate stasis that horrified Schubert’s friends. The fact that Wilhelm Müller’s poems do not strive to be romantically enchanting earned them Heinrich Heine’s approval.

  When Schubert was born, Vienna was the musical capital of Europe. Of the three composers who earned the city its pre-eminence, Mozart was dead, Haydn had more or less retired, and only Beethoven was still active until very nearly the end of Schubert’s short life. Living in the same city but hardly, if at all, being in touch, both wrote their amazingly audacious final chamber music works virtually next door to one another, and independently of each other, within a period of little more than three years. In 1827, the year Beethoven died, Schubert had started composing Winterreise, his supreme song-cycle.

  After the deaths of Schubert’s favourite singers, Johann Michael Vogl and Karl Freiherr von Schönstein, there was hardly a Viennese Schubert tradition to speak of. With the exception of Brahms, who resided in Vienna, and the Hellmesberger Quartet, all other major musicians who championed Schubert’s music were passing visitors from abroad. Similarly, few of the renowned singers, conductors and pianists have been, or are, Austrian. In his enthralling book on Winterreise Ian Bostridge writes that Schubert’s music ‘was played by most of the great instrumentalists of the day’. There, for once, Bostridge is mistaken. Besides the Schuppanzigh Quartet, which premiered his String Quartet in A minor – and rejected Death and the Maiden telling Schubert to stick to composing songs in the future – I can think of only Karl Maria von Bocklet, whom Chopin called one of the best pianists in Vienna.

  In the years before the First World War, Schubert became popular as a kitsch figure, triggered by Rudolf Hans Bartsch’s novel Schwammerl and reinforced by the gruesome Lilac Time. Today mercifully forgotten, this operetta ruined Schubert’s image for decades, dragging the composer into an abyss of bad taste. In the film, Schubert was embodied by the famous tenor Richard Tauber, who had started off as an esteemed Mozart singer.

  After the Second World War, there followed a radical reaction: now Schubert had to be relentlessly depressive and, on top of that, homosexual. It helps to remember that Schubert (literally up to his death – Der Hirt auf dem Felsen is one of his very last compositions) was able to write happy and radiant music. As Bostridge aptly remarks, ‘It is undoubtedly true that there is no clear and prescriptive relationship between life and art or art and life. To put it at its most crass, Schubert wrote jolly music when he was gloomy, and gloomy music when he was jolly.’

  Who is the figure Winterreise very indistinctly presents? A pathological case? (Bostridge speaks of ‘the madness of the wanderer’.) A hysteric? A depressive? To me, he seems to be an alienated melancholic, Romantic–Biedermeierish in the wake of Byron and of Goethe’s Werther, and beset by post-Napoleonic political frustration. Not a madman but ‘teetering on the edge of unreason’ as Bostridge calls it in his comment on ‘Der Leiermann’.

  The absurd, the comical in Winterreise should, in Bostridge’s view, never be resisted. In ‘Der Greise Kopf’ he even finds a ‘laughing’ triplet figure. There is certainly irony in Müller’s poems. Wilhelm Müller was a poet whom Heine admired; he translated Marlowe into German, and died, little older than Schubert, in 1827. Reading his poems aloud there are passages where the irony is obvious, and can be spoken very differently from the way Schubert composed them. I can readily see Winterreise in connection with Beckettian absurdity. But is it in Schubert’s music? What I would dispute is that Winterreise is ever comical. It’s the only thing Schubert’s music is not. He belonged for a while to a Viennese club called the Unsinnsgesellschaft (Nonsense Society) but his compositions do not betray this at all.

  Schubert’s close connection with literature was supported by his friends and admirers: poets, composers, painters, amateurs and state officials who frequently met to recite Goethe and discuss the latest published poetry. The fusion of words and music that Schubert achieved was not merely a result of his unique melodic gifts. His interpretation of the poems extended to the piano part, a novel and comprehensive way of revealing atmosphere, psychology and the words’ poetic layers. On the piano, suddenly anything could be expressed. The introduction of each song presents the basic mood or even crystallises several strands of a poem. The prelude of ‘Im Dorfe’ famously compresses barking, rattling and snoring in one brief idea, while that of ‘Der Lindenbaum’ combines the murmur of the well, the rustling of the linden tree, and the sweetness of dreams. Since Schubert, it has become impossible to separate the singing line from the accompaniment. And since Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, who did more than anyone else to bring Schubert’s Lieder to international attention, the accompanist has mutated into a partner. In his thirty recorded performances of Winterreise several of h
is piano partners are soloists.

  With Schubert’s Winter Journey: Anatomy of an Obsession, Ian Bostridge proves to be one of the most compelling writers among musical performers, an author as erudite and vivid as he is entertaining. In his words: ‘Living a piece as complex and resonant as Winterreise means engaging with it in all sorts of ways: understanding what it might mean for us now, as a message in a bottle set afloat in the cultural ocean of 1828. How does it relate to our concerns? How does it connect with us, however unexpectedly?’ Bostridge provides answers rich in associations and fascinating digressions, and presents veritable little seminars on topics that often gain a surprising relevance to the understanding of text and score. There is an influx of various disciplines: history and natural history, physics, literature and psychology, to mention only a few, generate a wealth of detailed information communicated with a rare immediacy on the borderline between good speaking and good writing. What I miss in this multifaceted volume is an index.

  As a rule, each song is adorned with a specific essay. ‘Die Wetterfahne’ informs us about marriage contracts in Metternich’s time; ‘Der Lindenbaum’ brings in Thomas Mann’s Magic Mountain; ‘Auf dem Flusse’ provides an exploration of ice, and the political ice age of Metternich; ‘Rast’ muses about black and white, police and censorship and the relationship between art and form; ‘Einsamkeit’ connects, in one of the finest chapters, Byron, Caspar David Friedrich, Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Wilhelm Müller; ‘Der greise Kopf’ exploits ‘Beckettian resonances’; ‘Der Wegweiser’ informs us with admirable lucidity about Schubert’s failing health; ‘Das Wirtshaus’ deals with Schubert and religion; and ‘Die Nebensonnen’ surprises us with an explanation of phantom suns. On the way, in a piece on tears and crying, we learn that ‘the tears shed in emotion contain 20–25 per cent more protein than those produced when chopping onions’. For the final song, ‘Der Leiermann’, Bostridge invokes Bob Dylan: ‘It’s not a million miles from his jingle-jangle to Schubert’s hurdy-gurdy.’ Yes, but let’s settle for a few thousand. If this is a song that should be rather spoken than sung artists such as Lotte Lehmann and Peter Anders, who recorded Winterreise in the 1940s, could teach many a singer today how to speak.

  Bostridge’s Winter Journey is destined to reach a wider audience. It refrains from musicological jargon, explains technical terms and translates any foreign-language quote. To the musical and literary privilege comes Bostridge’s visual sense. The book is greatly enhanced by the discerning choice of its illustrations. Never has the juxtaposition of Schubert and Caspar David Friedrich seemed more pertinent. The inclusion of George de la Tour’s Hurdy-Gurdy Player is as inspired as, on the witty side, that of Dürer’s Six Studies of Pillows in connection with ‘Im Dorfe’ (where pillows are mentioned just once), as well as the depiction of the nine positions of waltzing that illuminates ‘Täuschung’ (‘a light dances in front of me’). We also savour the contemporary information that ‘ten to eleven thousand deaths occurred annually in Vienna. The cause of death for about one fourth of these is consumption which can be brought on by immoderate waltzing’ – a matter of ballroom dust damaging the lungs.

  There is, however, one matter about which I heartily disagree. In his chapter on ‘Wasserflut’, Bostridge’s focus is on the rhythm of this song, for once depriving the reader of fascinating ruminations on the psychological roots of fatigue or the physiological causes of limping. The bone of contention is triplet assimilation: should, in Schubert, the semiquaver following a dotted quaver be played simultaneously with the third triplet note as a ‘dotted triplet’? And should the printed page reproduce Schubert’s way of writing faithfully and place the semiquaver under or above the last triplet note, and not after it as printers conventionally do? In a song that is pervaded by such rhythms, and not only there, these are crucial questions. Bostridge pleads for polyrhythm, while I insist on assimilation. (I am most grateful for the utterly civilised way in which Bostridge conducts this argument.)

  As I see it, this issue is a matter not of opinion or taste but of fact. Both the autograph and the first print, which Schubert corrected, make it very clear that assimilation is called for. No composer in a sane mind would have written down the final semiquaver of the right hand in bars 3, 17 and 45 as Schubert did if polyrhythm was intended; he would have written the note after the chord. (In Bostridge’s book, regrettably, only the first bar of the autograph is reproduced.) Here is the first print, which follows the notation of the autograph:

  Schubert: Winterreise, ‘Wasserflut’, opening bars

  Why has this question resulted in so much confusion? Part of the blame lies with the printed editions. Max Friedländer’s creditable one, probably the most frequently used for a long time, prints the semiquaver after the triplet. Even the edition graced with Fischer-Dieskau’s name, while trying to be accurate and generally having semiquavers underneath the last triplet note, misplaces the last semiquaver of bar 3. And the new Bärenreiter edition perpetuates the misleading visual picture, though it rightly mentions in a footnote that, as the sources suggest, adjustment of the rhythm is advisable. Rhythm is also a visual matter: the notation should help the player to grasp it at once with his eyes.

  Gerald Moore, the celebrated accompanist, had stated categorically that the rhythm of ‘Wasserflut’ ‘should be played as it looks on the score’. The question is: on which score? If it is the manuscript and the first print that are consulted I am delighted to agree. Unfortunately these sources have for a long time hardly been considered. Among the performers of the past, Julius Patzak with Jörg Demus, Peter Schreier with Sviatoslav Richter, and Peter Pears with Benjamin Britten are the conscientious exceptions; on their recordings they render the rhythm properly, as did Fischer-Dieskau and Matthias Goerne in all the performances I shared with them.

  But there is, besides the philological evidence, a further reason for disagreement. The musical result of adjustment sounds to me much superior to the fanciful notion of the ‘dragging effect given verisimilitude to the picture of the tired wanderer half-blinded by tears’ (Gerald Moore). Here, as in several other instances of Schubert’s music, the simpler rhythmic solution is the natural, and Schubertian, one.

  ‘And what about Beethoven?’ some musicians will ask. Look at his so-called ‘Moonlight’ Sonata: surely, in its first movement, the upper voice should not be adjusted to the continuous triplet rhythm. No, indeed it shouldn’t. But then, Beethoven applied a modern and literal notation while Schubert, another pupil of Salieri, still clung to practices derived from the Baroque, and not just in his triplet notation, but also in countless suspended notes, so-called appoggiaturas, that thankfully had been unravelled in Friedländer’s edition. In his comments on the playing of Beethoven’s piano works, the composer’s pupil Czerny warns of adjustment in Op. 27 No. 2 – which suggests that it was still practised by many.

  Now there may be those who say that one could decide to go against the letter for the purported gain of a rhythmical structure that sounds more adventurous. Bostridge writes, ‘The score is of course more than a mere recipe, and it provides a necessary and containing discipline for performers, something to kick against.’ I prefer to score a few Schubertian goals.

  In defence of the unnamed critical listener who, during ‘Wasserflut’, irked Bostridge by turning to his neighbour, I should say that I, as a soloist, always avoided recognising fellow musicians in the audience. As a singer, I would probably have closed my eyes like Karajan, who conducted with eyes shut, and was famously asked by a member of the audience whether he needed a guide dog. However, I cannot but admire Bostridge’s acuity, while trying to move his listeners, in managing to make out not only three different musicians but also the precise location where they were sitting (rows H and I).

  It took a long time for cyclical works of music to be performed as an entity. Julius Stockhausen was the first to sing the whole of Winterreise in public in the 1850s, whereas Clara Schumann still left out pieces in Schumann’s cyclical piano work
s or performed selected numbers from the song-cycles. Busoni may have been the first to present Chopin’s Préludes and Études in their entirety. Today, we hear Winterreise complete and uninterrupted, unless singers such as Ian Bostridge decide to programme the first twelve songs only, a cycle in itself written and published before the dozen to follow.

  I have heard Winterreise presented straightforwardly or whimsically, tragically or laconically, calmly or in a frenzy, old or young (the miller’s apprentice in Die schöne Müllerin is definitely younger), poised or deranged, fast or very slow indeed (Richter with Schreier), sung by higher or lower voices male or female, offered in terms of cantabile singing or quasi-spoken. The fact is that Schubert, apart from a few rare dynamic indications, doesn’t grant any markings to the singer – they are all to be found in the piano part. Slurs are written down only when a syllable is sung on more than one note. That means that the singer has to make a lot of decisions, instinctive decisions mostly, about how to let the notes follow each other, where to sing quasi-legato, and where to connect two notes by portamento (sliding up or down), a practice that can sound utterly natural if applied in the right places with the right conviction. (Listen to Lotte Lehmann.) He or she will also decide, whether consciously or unconsciously, how to sing long notes, how to colour the words with vowels open or closed, dark or luminous, and which consonants to stress for expression and distinctiveness. There are the prerequisites: a captivating quality of voice; the mastery and beauty of singing; the feeling for musical connections – from note to note, harmony to harmony, phrase to phrase; the range of feeling; the unity of words and music (never at the expense of the words); the plasticity of diction.

  Among performers of Winterreise, the Austrian tenor Julius Patzak, who apparently never needed to have a singing lesson in his life, stands out in my memory not only because his was the first Winterreise I ever witnessed (in 1964, Patzak was sixty-six years old) but because he had an unforgettable way of giving colour to words such as ‘Schnee’: shining white. His ‘Lindenbaum’ was the most moving by being utterly simple.

 

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