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Güra/Vignoles

@ Wigmore Hall, London, 31 January 2012
4 stars
by Melanie Eskenazi
Güra/Vignoles
Werner Güra
(photo: Monika Ritterhaus)
You could not ask for a more appropriate singer than Werner Güra to commemorate Schubert’s birthday; he even looks like the composer, or at least as Schubert might have looked had he lived long enough to acquire a genuine ‘greise kopf.’ Richard Capell said of Schubert’s music that it had “the variety and unsurprising naturalness of moving water and springing herb,” and although one might ask for a bit more variety in vocal colour, Güra’s special quality is his unforced naturalness. This was especially evident in ‘Der Wanderer an den Mond,’ one of those ‘walking’ songs where voice and piano create the steady motion of a lone wanderer; Güra sang it with beguiling ease, yet evoked the melancholy of the poet’s lot.

Roger Vignoles is always a supportive accompanist, but there were times during the first half of this recital where he seemed to want to run ahead of the singer, especially in ‘Im Frühling’ and ‘Bei dir allein!’ although he produced wonderfully fluent playing in ‘Sehnsucht.’ The last is a challenge for any singer, and Güra met its demands with expressive skill. This is what you might call an old-fashioned voice – that is, reliant more on lovely tone and a sense of bonhomie rather than the more daring and angular interpretations of many other current singers.

The second part of the recital commenced with ‘Der Wanderer,’ an appropriate pairing to the first song of the evening; this was probably the best singing of the night, ‘Wo bist du, mein geliebtes Land!’ given with aching melancholy. ‘Wandrers Nachtlied’ was also finely sung – is it possible to sing this masterpiece any less than that? The Heine songs from Schwanengesang found both singer and pianist in varying form, ‘Der Atlas’ somewhat underpowered, but ‘Am Meer’ displaying a broad and confident legato. Naturally, ‘Die Taubenpost’ was the encore, the sublime ‘Sie heisst – die Sehnsucht’ given just enough pressure to make all the Schubertians sigh with pleasure.

The concert was broadcast live on BBC Radio 3 and can be heard on the BBC iPlayer.

Further details of Wigmore Hall concerts can be found at wigmore-hall.org

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