Royal Academy of Music Soloists Ensemble & Trevor Pinnock - Mahler: Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen - MusicWeb International
In the years after the First World War
Schoenberg and his friends set up a Society for Private Musical Performances.
Contemporary works were carefully prepared and performed to audiences who were
not allowed to applaud or the reverse, and critics were forbidden. A wide
variety of works was given, including many whose idiom was very far from that
of Schoenberg and his circle: works by Debussy, Bartók, Stravinsky and Milhaud
for example. They could not afford large orchestras so various members made
chamber arrangements of large works. This was when recording was in its
infancy. And they weren't always serious: all the members of the Second
Viennese School made versions of Strauss waltzes for these concerts.
The Royal Academy of Music has had the idea of
recreating this tradition through recordings, performing both some of the works
in the versions which survive from that time and also commissioning new ones.
This disc is the third in their series. Zemlinsky was Schoenberg's teacher and
later brother-in-law and Busoni was Schoenberg's predecessor as a professor in
Berlin. The two of them displayed a wary respect for each other.
Schoenberg himself made the version of Mahler's Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen we hear, and Mark Seow's sleeve-note
informs us that Schoenberg had been rather ambivalent about Mahler, though he
honoured him and Mahler reciprocated by giving him patronage. This version
works very well, as one might expect from such a master orchestral writer, and
the singer benefits from not having large orchestral forces to contend with.
Gareth Brynmor John sings fluently with a good lyrical line and clear German.
We should not complain if he does not yet dig into the words as deeply as, say,
Christian Gerhaher in a fine recent issue of the normal orchestral version; in
its own terms this is a good performance.
Busoni developed an idiom which, one you have
caught it, is unmistakable: partly through wavering between major and minor and
partly through strange harmonic and contrapuntal combinations he evokes an
atmosphere which is eerie and haunting, impossible to forget and addictive once
you are used to it. (Declaration: I am an addict.) He originally wrote his Berceuse élégiaque as a piano piece in memory of his
mother who had recently died. He later orchestrated it, and we have here a
chamber version which is, as it were, half way between the composer's own two
versions, by Erwin Stein, a Schoenberg pupil.
He captures much of the mystery and magic of the original but a little is
lacking because he misses some of the instruments Busoni asked for in his by no
means large ensemble, and which you can hear in Järvi's version.
Zemlinsky's
songs to
words by Maeterlinck have become tolerably well known in recent years. Four of
them are written in the Jugendstil idiom which is also that of Schoenberg's
early tonal works, both rich and delicate - I want to say feathery. They are
played here in a new orchestration by Christopher Austin, who contributes an
interesting account of it in the sleeve-note. He included two instruments which
Zemlinsky had not: an accordion and a vibraphone, the latter to give ‘a tiny
glimpse of the world of Alban Berg's Lulu'. This
is intriguing, but I have to point out that Zemlinsky is not Berg - though they
were on friendly terms - that when Zemlinsky wrote these songs Lulu was some
twenty years in the future, and that if some of the songs suggest a later idiom
it is, surprisingly, not that of Berg but of Kurt Weill. The last two of the
songs - in the numbered order, which is not the order of composition - seem to
me to anticipate in a much gentler idiom, respectively, the last and first of
the numbers in Weill's Seven Deadly Sins.
Be that as it may, Katie Bray sings them well,
with a lovely tone and again good German. However, she is occasionally unsteady
and she has a tendency to linger in the lusher passages, which her conductor,
Trevor Pinnock indulges rather than reins in. He is best known as a baroque
specialist and is here very far from his comfort zone.
We end with the Siegfried Idyll, and of course all these composers revered Wagner. This
could be counted as an arrangement as well, though it is really a reversion to
Wagner's original, which was for solo rather than orchestral strings. There are
more recordings of the larger version than you can shake a stick at; of that
with solo strings there is a classic one by Solti with soloists of the Vienna
Philharmonic, made in between recording sessions for Die Walküre. The
excellent Royal Academy Soloists do not quite equal that but they give a good
and sensitive performance which rounds off an enterprising disc. I heard it in
two-channel stereo; the sound has the atmosphere of a small concert hall, which
is right. The sleeve-note is in English only but includes original texts and
translations of the vocal works.