
A fascinating concept album circling around the fragility of artistic
sensibilities in German musical and literary romanticism. Two important
pieces by Swiss composer Heinz Holliger (born 1939), both of them
inspired by Robert Schumann, are combined with a chamber work by Clara
Schumann. They all intersect in the year 1853, when 20-year-old Johannes
Brahms first visited the Schumann couple in Düsseldorf. The initial
piece, Clara’s three wonderfully melodic romances for cello and piano,
is followed by Holliger’s imaginative and multi-faceted hommage to
Robert’s “Romances” in the same scoring. Much to Brahms’ approbation
they were burnt by Clara in 1893 as she feared her late husband’s
reputation could suffer if compositions from the onset of his mental
illness would be publicised. All that survives is a vivid
description by violinist Joseph Joachim. Holliger takes this verbal account as a
starting point for a music that subtly meditates upon the double
character of love and death, music and silence, romances and cinders.
“Gesänge der Frühe” first performed in 1988 is scored for choir,
orchestra and tape. Schumann’s last piano work of the same title from
1853 is superimposed in a most visionary way with texts from the late
period of Friedrich Hölderlin – another romantic genius who fell prey to
mental illness.
(ECM Records)
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