BBC Hoddinott Hall, Cardiff, 29 October 2013
Alban Berg – Violin Concerto
Simon Holt – The Yellow Wallpaper
Franz Schmidt – Symphony No 4
Conductor: Thierry Fischer
Soprano: Elizabeth Atherton
Violin: Baiba Skride
Members of the BBC Singers
According to his biographer, Norbert Tschulik, the composer Franz
Schmidt was colour blind; only able to see in different shades of grey.
So the irony seems cruel, then, that his music is often said to be
stylistically grey, backwards-looking and – worse – derivative; so
different from the progressive modernism emanating from the Vienna of
his day. Indeed, Schmidt has not so much been unfashionable post-war as
untouchable; a situation not helped by his monumentally ill-judged – and
mercifully unfinished – cantata, Grossdeutschland of 1939; a
piece which set an unequivocally National Socialist text – albeit
whether by choice or coercion remains unclear. Nonetheless, Schmidt
himself and his music have had some prominent champions over the years,
not least the redoubtable Hans Keller, who knew a thing or two about
Nazism from bitter personal experience, and who remembered Schmidt with
fondness and respect from his youth in Vienna.
Politics aside, Schmidt could certainly be found guilty as charged as
a musical reactionary, for he persisted in adherence to an ‘outmoded’
style which, for many listeners still today, is all-too redolent of
Brahms and, especially, of Bruckner. Schmidt was born, in fact, the same
year as Arnold Schoenberg, in Pressburg in 1874, and the two men grew
acquainted in Vienna, where Schmidt was well known as an excellent
cellist and pianist; leading a much-praised performance of Pierrot lunaire
no less, from the keyboard in 1929. Schoenberg is on record as
remarking merely that Schmidt had ‘too much talent’, purportedly
baffling his target, but implying that Schmidt might have done better
had he been forced to struggle for his art – presumably, like Schoenberg
himself did on many levels.
This programme from the BBC National Orchestra of Wales featured
Schmidt’s best known and most respected work, his Symphony No. 4 of
1932-3, in a programme that was either cunningly devised or heavy-handed
depending on your point of view. Personally, I plump for the former
despite the preponderance of shared, weighty themes of requiems and
suffering women that I will come to. For it placed Schmidt’s work in
Viennese context with Berg’s Violin Concerto; by far the most popular
and ‘approachable’ work of the mature so-called ‘Second Viennese
School’, together with a world premiere by BBC NOW’s outgoing Associate
Composer Simon Holt, thereby giving the programme an interesting slant
from a ‘new music’ perspective. ‘New music’, after all, can be a
relative term, as contemporaries of Schmidt were very well aware.
A pity then, that the enduringly iconic Berg Violin Concerto which
opened the concert did not galvanise from the start. Indeed, the
performance only really took off from the second movement; notably from
the Adagio onwards, whence the soloist, Baiba Skride, took
charge. Skride was in command of her own, virtuosic part throughout,
applying her rich, full tone with spirit and energy. And there were some
lovely, poignant touches too from the orchestra. But conductor Thierry
Fischer seemed to proceed by section rather than finding the lines and
phrasing which are so necessary to this concerto’s through-momentum and
coherence. He made little distinction at times, for instance, between Hauptstimme, Nebenstimme
(main and secondary voices – some of which are rhythmic motifs) and
minor colouristic parts, so that tiny details of Berg’s orchestration
seemed to take on undue importance – a distraction not helped by some
occasionally awry ensemble, particularly in ritardando passages. But Skride effectively took the reins after the initial rendition of Bach’s quoted chorale Es ist genug (It is enough),
physically turning towards the upper strings to lead them in an
extended passage of jointly electrifying intensity which reached its
climax at the chorale’s second variation. Only then was it made apparent
what might have been for the entire performance.
Berg’s Violin Concerto has become known as his personal requiem. He
was ill whilst composing it (in 1935) but died unexpectedly without
hearing the work performed. It was written in quick, heartfelt response
to the tragic death of Manon Gropius (daughter of Alma Mahler and Walter
Gropius) aged just eighteen; lending the piece coincidental kinship
with Schmidt’s 4th Symphony, which was dedicated to the memory of his
daughter Emma after she died unexpectedly following the birth of her
first child. In Schmidt’s case, however, the piece signaled a return to
health for its composer, who was lifted through its composition from a
precarious state of mental near collapse.
If only the protagonist of Simon Holt’s piece, The Yellow Wallpaper,
and countless women of her time and predicament, had had similar access
to creative work – at all, never mind during periods of mental anguish.
The work is a setting of an extraordinarily courageous short story by
the early American feminist Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1890, extrapolated
by David Harsent, further adapted by Holt), who dared to write about
her personal experiences of post-natal depression. The story makes for
enraging and painful reading, as the woman is shut inside a
foul-smelling bedroom with barred windows and wallpaper which ‘color is
repellant, almost revolting; a smouldering unclean yellow.’ Holt
responds with music which deftly and sensitively illuminates the woman’s
descent into madness with a highly colouristic use of instrumentation,
including the literal tearing of rolls of wallpaper and the placing of
six sopranos and altos at random within the orchestra; all conveying
symptoms of the woman’s fragmentation as she attempts to liberate
herself, and the other women she hallucinates, from their entrapment
behind the wallpaper.
Soprano soloist Elizabeth Atherton sang a challenging part with
clarity, poise and feeling – and she was in very fine voice tonight. But
her rendition was a little too Britten-esque for my liking; too safely
dependent on the melodic arc for expression. Whereas a more pointed
vocal delivery of consonants both hard and soft, for instance, could
have produced a more intense musical characterisation without danger of
over-dramatising. Indeed, Holt is scrupulous in giving virtually every
syllable of his dynamic vocal part particular and often maximal
articulation in the score. Moreover, a dramatic intent of sorts – if
only to stress the Woman’s exhausted isolation – is signaled by his
score indication for her to ‘walk slowly on to the stage’ whilst
percussionists tear wallpaper at the start of the piece, and to walk
slowly offstage at the end still singing; directions which were foregone
tonight. It seemed unclear from this performance why the piece was
broken into nine distinct ‘miniatures’ heralded by pauses rather than
being through-composed. But I suspect a more idiomatic vocal approach
from both soloist and ensemble singers (who were miked up but whose
words were fairly inaudible) might throw an entirely different light on
Holt’s structural design.
Talk of things idiomatic returns us to the tricky figure of Schmidt
and his Bruckner-esque 4th Symphony – of which Fischer and the BBC NOW
gave a passionate and pretty well convincing performance on its own
terms. For, whilst it is valuable and thought-provoking to hear his
music alongside more ‘progressive’ work of the time, it seems ultimately
beside the point to compare Schmidt’s work with that of his
contemporaries – or even with those elders he emulates – in terms of
relative ‘originality’; indeed it is a moot point how far originality is
a reliable touchstone for musical integrity in any case. For a great
many excellent composers might fall down if such a criterion were too
rigorously applied – Holt included, as the sounds and techniques used in
The Yellow Wallpaper are familiar from fifty-odd years of ‘new music’, and yet the piece is surely none the worse for that.
Even so, there is much to admire in Schmidt’s music, which ultimately
stems from a Schubertian (rather than Beethovenian) classicism in that
it ‘constantly takes pause, recapitulates, reformulates’ as Rudolf
Scholz put it, with repetitions that appear
straightforward on first hearing, but which are often gradually revealed
as subtle re-workings of surprisingly strong themes. Similarly,
Schmidt’s ear is finer than his decriers sometimes acknowledge, as he
utilises some deft melodic and harmonic turns in the 4th Symphony, for
example, to shape an ambitious four movement structure played without a
break, but lasting nearly fifty minutes. The idiom might be
stylistically anachronistic, but the influences are varied and Schmidt
nonetheless manages to evoke a world of feeling without dipping into the
sentimental – and without sounding faux in my opinion but,
rather, simply elegiac and unforced. Tonight, Guest Principal Victoria
Simonson gave eloquent voice to the singing cello solo of the second
movement that would have been very close to Schmidt’s heart. Indeed, the
whole orchestra felt committed and alive to the music under Fischer’s
admirably clear shaping of the work (quite different from his Berg)
between its opening and closing trumpet solos.
In recent years, various aspects of the modernism that arose in the
first half of the twentieth century have begun to be re-examined – not
least the foundational assumption that the contrasting, revolutionary
figures of Schoenberg and Stravinsky swept all before them. In any case,
whatever one’s opinion of Schmidt’s actual music, I think Keller and
other commentators are right to conclude that this seemingly
‘extra-historical’ composer (Bayan Northcott’s term) deserves much
greater recognition. For clearly, at the very least – and
notwithstanding Schmidt’s once acerbic description of Mahler’s
symphonies as ‘cheap novels’ – the Central European romantic symphony
did not die with Mahler, however much prevailing music history tries to
teach us otherwise.
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