musicOMH
Chamber Prom 4:
Christian Gerhaher and Gerold Huber; Schumann Lieder
@ Cadogan Hall, London, 7 August 2006
4 stars
Gerold Huber
Gerold Huber
Baritone Christian Gerhaher and pianist Gerold Huber gave a somewhat depressing, but marvellously executed Chamber Prom concer at Cadogan Hall.

Their tribute to the famous Lieder composer, Robert Schumann included some of his most brilliant and moving works.

The performance started with the Dichterliebe, Op. 48.

These were sung superbly by Gerhaher whose expressive, yet easy sound was able to flow seamlessly through the songs' diverse emotions.

Huber accompanied sensitively on the piano, providing a firm but gentle support whilst bringing out the embedded meanings which saturate the music.

The first half of Dichterliebe focuses on a joyous love. The poetry is typically idyllic and speaks about a temperate, beautiful nature full off flowers and song birds. However, there is a realism which can be seen through the hint of melancholy that is quashed by the lover's desired one.

Particulaly evocative in this recital was the vivid and erotic music. For example, the words from Ich will meine Seele tauchen (I want to dip my soul) - 'Das Lied soll schauern und beben /Wie der Kuss von ihrem Mund' ('The song shall thrill and quiver like the kiss of her lips'. The second half of those songs was almost completely despairing. The tragic words ironically mock the idealistic romance of the first songs. The two musicians' performances immediately inverted the mood they had created in the beginning of this famous song cycle. The transformation provided a perfect and cutting display of raw emotion.

The heartbreaking tone which ended the Dichterliebe, made way for the equally morose Lieder from Op. 40, by Hans Christian Anderson. The poet is well known for his chilling visions, and the famous Schubert settings were conveyed, without exception, in a horrifically unsettling manner.

Article continues 


Gerhaher managed to go through a schizophrenic array of moods and personas. Sometimes he was representing the caring, hard-done-by mother. Then he suddenly switched to the alarmingly violent and almost reedy voice of the raven who declares, 'Dein Engel wird unser sein': 'your angel shall be our prey'!

Each song in this selection describes a very different form of heart-breaking disaster, but all centre around loss. First, the loss of a child, the loss of a best friend (Der Soldat, The Soldier), and the loss of a lover (Der Spielmann, The Fiddler).

The programme ended with the three songs sung by the blind harp player in Goethe's Wilhelm Meister the Harfner songs, Op. 98a. These three songs also centre on characters who face adversity. They focus on the depression of humanity and, once again, provided a medium for both Gerhaher and Huber to create a strong atmosphere. Both performers hypnotised the audience with their rendition.

It is a shame that so much of this concert focused on music which, as it was performed so well, would surely have left bosses wondering why their employees had come back from their lunch breaks so downhearted. On the other hand, maybe it got all the romantic mood swings out of their systems so that they were more productive. Howsoever the romantic wallowing affected the audience after this concert, it was certainly done wholeheartedly and with flawless technique. This dynamic duo work well together and they are certainly a pair to drop everything to go and see.


  share with:  Facebook | Digg | other sites



BUY CLASSICAL CDS
BUY CONCERT TICKETS
NOW IN CLASSICAL
BBC PROMS REVIEW:
Prom 65: Rattle and the Berlin Philharmonic 2

BBC PROMS REVIEW:
Prom 64: Rattle and the Berlin Philharmonic 1

BBC PROMS REVIEW:
Prom 62: Davis conducts Beethoven and Sibelius

BBC PROMS REVIEW:
PCM7: Mark Padmore sings Vaughan Williams

CLASSICAL INTERVIEW:
Ingo Metzmacher talks to MusicOMH about Messiaen

CD REVIEW:
The Palladians back catalogue on 8 CDs

COMING SOON:
Don Giovanni, ROH
Fanciulla del West, ROH
Cav & Pag, ENO
La Calisto, ROH

BBC Proms 2008:
Christine Rice, 4 Sept
Messiaen's Quartet, 4 Sept
Jurowski, 5 Sept

RELATED ARTICLES
PROM 72:
OAE/Mackerras

PROM 70:
BBCSO/Haitink

PROM 68:
Camarata Salzburg/Kavakos

PROM 67:
Philadelphia/Eschenbach

PROM 65:
Berlin Phil/Rattle

PSM 4:
OSJ/Lubbock & Wallfisch

PROM 64:
Berlin Phil/Rattle

PROM 61:
Pittsburgh SO/Slatkin

PROM 60:
ONF/Masur

PROM 58:
BBCCO/Hazlewood

PROM 57:
OCE/Herreweghe

PROM 56:
NDRSO/von Dohnanyi

PROM 55:
BBCSO/Saraste

PROM 54:
Minnesota/Vänskä

PROM 53:
LPO/Jurowski

PROM 52:
BBCSO/Gruber

PROM 51:
Mahler Jugendorchester/Jordan

PROM 50:
LSO/Davis

PROM 49:
Mariinsky/Gergiev

PROM 48:
Mariinsky/Gergiev

PROM SAT MAT 3:
Britten Sinfonia/De Ridder

PROM 47:
LSO/Gergiev

PROM 45:
City of London/Daniel

PROM 44:
Budapest/Fischer

PROM 43:
BBCSO/Belohlavek

PROM 42:
Finnish Radio/Oramo

PROM 41:
Philharmonia/Salonen

PROM 40:
Maxim Vengerov

PROM 39:
EYO/Ashkenazy

PROM 38:
John Adams

PROM 37:
Steve Reich

PROM 36:
BBC SSO/Volkov (2)

PROM 35:
BBC SSO/Volkov

PROM 34:
BBC Phil/Tortelier

PROM 33:
King's Consort/King

PROM 32:
BBCSO/Davis

PROM 30:
NYO/Davis

PSM 2:
AAM/Egarr

PROM 28:
RSNO/Denève

PROM 27:
BBCNOW/Ono

PROM 26:
BBCSO/Davis

PROM 25:
London Sinfonietta/Knussen

PROM 24:
The English Concert/Manze

PROM 23:
BBC Phil/Sinaisky

PROM 22:
BBC Phil/Noseda

PROM 21:
BBCSO/Robertson

PROM 17:
EBS/Gardiner

PROM 16:
CBSO/Sakari Oramo

PROM 15:
BBC CO/Barry Wordsworth

PROM 14:
BBC SO/David Robertson

PROM 13:
BBC NOW/Richard Hickox (2)

PROM 11:
BBC NOW/Richard Hickox

PROM 9:
Northern Sinfonia/Zehetmair

PROM 8:
BBC Philharmonic/Noseda

PROM 7:
The Queen's Prom: BBCSO/Jiri Belohlavek

PROM 6:
Glyndebourne Opera: Così fan tutte

PROM 5:
London Winds/Michael Collins

CHAMBER PROM 1:
Christoph Eschenbach/Paris Soloists

PROM 4:
Hallé/Mark Elder

PROM 3:
Siegfried: Christoph Eschenbach

PROM 2:
Scottish Chamber Orchestra/Roger Norrington

PROM 1:
BBCSO/Jiri Belohlavek

EXTERNAL LINKS
BBC Proms 2006



  opera and classical index...
about us | staff | copyright | write to us | mailing list | home page

© 1999-2008 OMH. all rights reserved