
He was making patterns with the past, too. Serialism
reinvigorated for him the standard forms, especially variations and
canon. And it brought him closer to the old masters. Starting with his
Symphony (1927-28), most of his movements are canons of one kind or
another, often allowing an expressive gesture to be answered, balanced
and pinpointed by a copy moving in the other direction, a lift by a
sigh, along the course of a regularly waving rhythm.
Canonic and variation forms were also outcomes of a
quest for integration, for creating music in which a motif of three or
four notes would be constantly present in different colorings,
registrations and rhythmic placements. Hence the paradox that the music
feels, expressively, so fragile that it might fall apart if one put a
finger on it and yet, structurally, it is tightly made and reinforced in
every direction. It is at once tender and tough.
As for links with predecessors, that same symphony,
although it has just two movements, is scored for chamber orchestra and
lasts less than 10 minutes, has something of the grand melodic sweep
Webern admired in Bruckner. The concerto that came soon after is a
modern ''Brandenburg,'' and Bach is invoked again in the two cantatas on
spiritual themes that came near the end of Webern's life.
At the same time, Webern outfaced his nostalgia by
resolute adherence to the new means he had devised for himself, with
cues from Schoenberg, and by steady exploration of their possibilities.
He never worried that his music, in essential respects, sounded quite
unlike anything that had come before or was being written around him. He
just went on, with exemplary persistence. He had no way of knowing that
the vacuum in which he worked would rapidly be filled after his death,
not least by Stravinsky, who learned a lot from his music in the 1950's,
but also by many younger composers.
Among the eager Webernians then was Pierre Boulez,
who returns to be the mastermind of the new recordings, just as he was
30 years ago for a set made by CBS, now available on CD from Sony
Classical. But there are differences. One is that the new box (Deutsche
Grammophon 457 637-2; six CD's) is twice as large, including many works
Webern withheld from publication.
Some of these are juvenilia, imparting the
unsurprising news that the composer at 16 was a talented, hopeful,
somewhat incompetent beginner. His later rejects, though, include
wonderful pieces, especially among the songs and instrumental movements
he wrote in 1913 and 1914. During that period he gave thought to a
sequence of orchestral pieces, some with solo soprano, rather in the
manner of a distilled Mahler symphony. There might have been a similar
string quartet with voice. Much later, though, Webern decided to issue
sets of purely instrumental movements: the Six Bagatelles (Op. 9) for
string quartet and the Five Pieces (Op. 10) for orchestra.
This left out of account not only the song movements
-- two with orchestra and the one with quartet are breathtaking -- but
also quite a number of orchestral movements. Mr. Boulez includes five,
and two extra bagatelles.
A CD player can be programmed to present, say, Opus 9
followed by the two unselected bagatelles and, to end, the song with
quartet, which not only provides a passionate slow finale but also
leaves a clue to the music's expressive core, in a sense of grief and
loss. Similarly, one can reconstruct a vocal symphony, which would have
to include an alarming brassy piece (No. 3 among the additional
orchestral movements) and the magical setting of a Stefan George poem,
with its delicious spot for voice and percussion, and its penultimate
gesture of a huge rise from the singer on the word ''holy.''
These and many other pieces sound, here, marvelous
to perform. All the string quartets and trios are played by the Emerson
String Quartet, which, strong and expressive, makes every little
miniature sound big. Nearly all the songs, and the soprano parts in the
cantatas, are sung by Christiane Oelze, for whom the music seems to have
been waiting. Defying gravity, Ms. Oelze moves with ease through the
enormous pitch intervals Webern loved and makes them beautiful and true,
keen points in the continuing phrase and markers of exaltation or
anguish.
Her contributions include, happily, all the songs
with piano, which again embrace remarkable items Webern did not publish:
the Five Dehmel Lieder of 1906-8, right on the bright moonlit borders
of atonality; and 4 George songs from the next year, in addition to the
10 published as Opuses 3 and 4. Webern changed his mind about the
planning of these cycles, eventually deciding that each should have an
introduction followed by four songs in which the singing persona's
feelings are reflected in nature (Op. 3) or in a tragic relationship
(Op. 4). The numbers thus omitted are well worth hearing, especially
when sung so well -- and played so well, by Eric Schneider.
Among other exceptional pianists at work here are
Pierre-Laurent Aimard, in the quartet with saxophone and the concerto,
and Krystian Zimerman, in the Variations (Op. 27) and two other pieces.
Mr. Zimerman gives a beautiful account of the variations: the finale,
highly effective, has wide-spanning melodies, often violent and gentle
in the same breath, searching in a musical space that comes to be
defined by chord resonances in the background.
But of course the performer who figures most
prominently and comprehensively is Mr. Boulez, as conductor. To an
astonishing degree, his tempos are close to those of his earlier
recordings. Yet consistency of timing is deceptive, for within identical
spans a lot has changed. Mr. Boulez is working here with the Berlin
Philharmonic and the Ensemble Intercontemporain: musicians who have a
much fuller appreciation than anyone did three decades ago of Webern's
flow, dependent on subtle phrasing and a chamber-musical responsiveness
of one player or section to another.
Where, for instance, the arrangement Webern made of
the six-part ricercar from Bach's ''Musical Offering'' almost fell apart
in the 1969 London Symphony recording, the new version is secure and
even imposing. The earlier performances of the original works often
sound scrappy and preliminary, and though the first clarinet in the
symphony achieves some suavity in rather torn textures, the same part
emerges in the later recording far more gorgeous and sensitive.
Inevitably, there are losses as well. The spikiness
Mr. Boulez found in this repertory when he was in his mid-40's was not
just a result of unconsidered playing: it came from a conviction that
the music was fierce and that it mattered. Witness, for example, the
swing between aggressiveness and recuperation in the second movement of
the symphony, or the way the choral women in the third movement of the
Second Cantata seem to sing with teeth bared, like Valkyries. These
moments are more beautiful in the later recordings but not necessarily
more exciting.
There are also performances in the earlier set that
will not be supplanted, like the account of the two Rilke poems, with
Heather Harper, or the many appearances of another soprano, Halina
Lukomska, whose flaming voice is so different from Ms. Oelze's but
equally apt.
Something else has happened to Webern during the
last three decades: we know far more about his life, and about his
opinions, which were not all edifying. His pursuit of purity in his
music -- of complete homogeneity and integration, of absolute precision
in the minutest detail -- and the high value he placed on German culture
led him, crazily and dismayingly, to consider that his ideals were
shared by the Third Reich.
He was not an anti-Semite. Indeed, he helped conceal
Jews in Vienna. But he seems to have thought that Hitler was some kind
of agent of spiritual regeneration, and that the spreading Nazi
conquests of 1939 to 1941 were all to the benefit of the nations
overcome: this even though the annexation of Austria in 1938 had put an
end to his activity as a conductor and to any hopes he had of hearing
his music again, other than in neutral Switzerland. The Nazis closed his
public career. And yet, privately, he applauded them.
Knowing this, we might want to listen to the
Variations for orchestra of 1940 a little more carefully and a little
more critically: to pay less attention, perhaps, to the coherence and
symmetry the music so ostentatiously exhibits than to the delicacy,
strangeness and variety of its component parts, and even to insist,
contra Webern, on multiplicity and ambiguity as essential elements in
his art.
More useful, too, than dismissing him for his
foolish views would be to learn from his example of magnificent but, in
crucial respects, misaligned idealism. Snowflakes and flowers are all
very well, and we need them, but their rules arCDe not those of politics. (Paul Griffiths / The New York Times)
Idealismo disecado y glorificado.Webern,lo mejor que hiciste fue en el Viento de verano,la hierática Sinfonía y rondó para arcos.Chau,Boulez.
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