Kirchschlager/Henschel/Drake - Wolf, 6 January 2013
Wigmore
Hall
Königlich
Gebet
Der
Sänger
Auf
einer Wanderung
Erstes
Liebeslied eines Mädchens
Das
verlassene Mägdlein
Lebe
wohl
Im
Frühling
Prometheus
Grenzen
der Menschheit
Philine
Spottlied
aus Wilhelm Meister
Harfenspieler
I-III
Mignon I-III
Kennst
du das Land
Anglelika Kirchschlager (mezzo-soprano)
Dietrich Henschel (baritone)
Julius Drake (piano)
Twelfth Night at the Wigmore
Hall brought Hugo Wolf from Angelika Kirchschlager, Dietrich Henschel, and
Julius Drake. Whilst there was much to enjoy, most of that came courtesy of Kirchschlager,
Drake proving variable in his command of Wolf’s admittedly difficult piano
writing, Henschel having one wish for variability in order to leaven an often
unpleasant tone.
Mörike settings opened the
programme. In Auf eine Wanderung, Kirchschlager
and Drake offered heightened, Schubertian expectancy, presenting the song as a
child of Die Post. Ghosts of Tristan were to be heard during the
interlude between the two stanzas, harmony quite properly the agent of
transformation. Kirchschlager’s communicative artistry told, both through the
excellence of her diction and, just as important, her use of those words. (It
is no good simply being heard, if one does not know what to do with the words,
what their implications might be, as many of us found to our cost with Bryn
Terfel’s deeply disappointing recent Wotan at Covent Garden.) In Lebe wohl, harmony and vocal line
sounded anticipatory of Strauss, whereas Mahler and the Second Viennese School
hovered on the horizon in Das verlassene
Mägdlein. If only Drake had been more in command of the piano part here and
elsewhere, this could have been very special indeed; as it was, it seemed,
rightly or wrongly, as if more practice would have been in order. Nevertheless,
Kirchschlager offered a soaring account of Im
Frühling, albeit an account without the lack of verbal attention that often
accompanies that adjective. Moreover, she showed how she could scale her tone
down to the greatest intimacy. Erstes
Liebeslied eines Mädchen took us both back and forward to youthful
excitement. The delirious nature of Wolf’s post-Wagnerian writing was
compromised a little by Drake’s less than complete technical control;
nevertheless, the essential mood of the song still registered.
Goethe settings made up the
rest of the programme. Drake proved a little too orchestral in Königlich
Gebet, which sounded oddly akin to an orchestral reduction. However, he
proved admirably detailed in his response to Der Sänger. Henschel’s dryness became increasingly difficult to
bear, though, especially when, as in Grenzen
der Menschheit, it was compounded by seeming inability to maintain a vocal
line, let alone to shape it. The song, alas, might have been better off
entitled Grenzen der Sänger; indeed, Sprechstimme would have come as a relief.
In Prometheus, the piano was furious,
Lisztian in spirit, yet often surprisingly inexact. The voice had not improved;
if anything, it had deteriorated, hectoring beyond anything even
Fischer-Dieskau’s wildest detractors might ever have alleged.
Henschel returned after the
interval to introduce a second half made up of songs from Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre. The second Harfenspieler suffered from Drake’s inability to make Wolf’s
syncopations sound as such, rather than as simply odd metrical uncertainty,
though matters improved as the song progressed. Henschel offered more of the
same, so it was a great relief when Kirchschlager returned for Philine, coquettish, seemingly
anticipatory of Schoenberg’s cabaret songs. Henschel’s Spottlied presented a voice that had seemingly disintegrated; there
was little to hear beyond barking. Despite occasional intonational issues, the
return of Kirchschlager for the Mignon songs was again most welcome, the first
in particular a hochdramatisch
reading, the third suffused with sadness, its onward tread maintained as if to
prevent any slide into the merely lachrymose. Kennst du das Land, the fourth of the set, was almost, yet rightly,
not quite, operatic; once again, Strauss beckoned. The encore, Schubert’s duet
version of Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt
seemed, to me at least, to cross the operatic line, but with Henschel in
attendance, that hardly mattered.