[10/13/2011] And then came "Widmung" (continued)
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Soprano Elly Ameling with pianist Dalton Baldwin (1980)
You my soul, you my heart,Although actually I prefer the live performance above, here -- in consideration of the clip's technical limitations -- is the studio recording of "Widmung" that Elly Ameling and Dalton Baldwin made several years earlier.
you my joy, o you my pain,
you my world in which I live,
my heaven you in which I soar,
o you my grave in which
I have buried my sorrows forever.
You are rest; you are peace;
you were destined for me by heaven.
That you love me makes me feel worthy;
your glance has transfigured me;
you lift me, loving, above myself --
my good spirit, my better "I"!
You my soul, you my heart,
you my joy, o you my pain,
you my world, in which I live,
my heaven you, in which I soar --
my good spirit, my better "I"!
Elly Ameling, soprano; Dalton Baldwin, piano. Philips, recorded c1976
In Friday night's preview I expressly chose Jessye Norman's video performance for its breathless, even breakneck rendering of the "A" section of this simple-ish A-B-A song, in marked contrast to the performance we heard earlier by Hermann Prey and especially Elly Ameling's performances above. Not quite as exhilarating their way, is it? (I think every performer grasps that for the "B" section, dealing with "rest" and "peace," a slowdown -- though unmarked -- is appropriate.
Of course the faster tempo requires a willing-and-able vocal apparatus. In our next two performances, baritone Wolfgang Holzmair takes it about as quickly as he dares, while the fine Finnish baritone Jorma Hynninen gives it full voice at even quicker pace. (Note that we have two truly outstanding pianists here, by the way, both known for significant solo-piano careers. Hynninen was especially fortunate in his collaboration, in most of his song recordings, with Ralf Gothóni.)
Wolfgang Holzmair, baritone; Imogen Cooper, piano. Philips, recorded December 1998
Jorma Hynninen, baritone; Ralf Gothóni, piano. Tactus Oy, recorded c1978
WHICH PACE DID SCHUMANN WANT?
I honestly don't know. I have two editions of the song, neither notable for scholarly scrupulousness. The tempo marking on one is Animato ("animated"), while the other has the same marking that Liszt carried over to his version: "Innig, lebhaft." For innig my Langenschedit German-English dictionary offers "tender, affectionate; ardent, fervent; heartfelt, sincere," while for lebhaft we can straightforwardly read "lively." How exactly is the performer supposed to combine what might almost be taken as contradictory directions?
Coming up we've got a performance that, without sacrificing lebhaft-ness underlines the Innigkeit, with a vocal suppleness and tonal radiance that for me makes this a dream performance of this great song. The Fischer-Dieskau performance with Jörg Demus, which I'm dating at "c1960," would thus presumably have been recorded at almost the same time as the Tannhäuser in which he sang the Wolfram that I've latterly surprised myself by enthusing fairly wildly about. Some 14 years later, when he recorded the later version I've included, as part of his four-volume anthology of all the Schumann songs he deemed suitable for male voice, his upper range wasn't nearly as full and free.
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, baritone; Jörg Demus, piano. DG, recorded c1960
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, baritone; Christoph Eschenbach, piano. DG, recorded 1974
"WIDMUNG" ARRANGEMENTS DIDN'T END WITH LISZT
In October 1919, two years after he made a triumphant American debut at Carnegie Hall (the photo is from November 1917), a now-18-year-old violin phenom named Jascha Heifetz recorded an arrangement of "Widmung" for violin and piano by the violinist-conductor-composer Leopold Auer. Although Heifetz would continue recording for well over a half-century, he never rerecorded the piece.
SCHUMANN (arr. Auer): "Widmung"
Jascha Heifetz, violin; Samuel Chotzinoff, piano. Victor/RCA/BMG, recorded Oct. 13, 1919
LISZT-VERSION PERFORMERS TEND TO OPT
FOR INNIGKEIT, AT LEAST TO BEGIN WITH
Yevgeny Kissin has always been fond of the Liszt "Widmumg." This clip is from July 2010.
As I noted Friday night, Liszt's rendering of the song can't be called a "transcription," which would describe a straight transfer of the material from one medium to another. What Liszt did was to add an expansion to both the original and the repeat of the "A" section -- in the Rubinstein performance below, that's roughly 0:43-1:26 and 2:41-end.
Some editions (but not others) include a metronome marking for the tempo at the start -- how authentic I have no idea -- which is pretty moderate. Certainly the performance tradition calls for a fairly moderate (Ameling-ish) opening "A" section. But the expansions of "A" pile on so much sonic whoopee, especially the one for the repeat of "A," marked fff, that performers tend to accelerate accordingly and build to a tingly climax.
SCHUMANN (arr. Liszt): "Widmung"
Arthur Rubinstein, piano. RCA/BMG, recorded Mar. 11-12, 1947
NOW ABOUT THOSE RECITAL REFLECTIONS
Oops! It's already written, but the way this whole post has grown, that really amounts to another post. So I'm going to make it another post. Tune in next week.
RETURN TO THE BEGINNING OF THE POST
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Labels: Arthur Rubinstein, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Liszt, Schumann, Sunday Classics
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