Overall, I feel that this recital
lacks a little bit of structure. The main event is quite definitely RVWs Songs
of Travel: perhaps this should have been presented as the final work. And
maybe the CD ought to have begun with the vibrant Salt-Water Ballads. I
did feel that the concept of this being ‘a recital of travel songs’ was stretched
a little bit in places, especially with the ‘single’ songs.
I always feel privileged that my
introduction to English art-song was Ralph Vaughan Williams’s Songs of
Travel. For the ‘record’ this was John Shirley Quirk, baritone, accompanied
by Viola Tunnard on the piano. It was released on an old SAGA LP which is still
in my collection. Like many of my generation, I was brought up on Robert Louis
Stevenson’s novels – Treasure Island, Kidnapped and Black
Arrow. What I did not realise at that time was that Stevenson had written
much poetry, both in English and Scots. So, it came as delightful surprise to
discover the poems drawn from his Songs of Travel and Other Verses set
to music by Vaughan Williams. I soon came to realise that this song cycle was a
perfect fusion of words and music.
The ethos of this work is that of
an educated and sensitive ‘super-tramp’: the ‘world-weary’ artist who decides
to step aside from the social whirl. An interesting assessment is made in Wikipedia,
which I had not clocked. Songs of Travel is one of a set of important ‘wayfaring’
song-cycles including Franz Schubert’s Die schöne Müllerin and his Winterreise.
Yet Vaughan Williams’ ‘bitter-sweet’ work does not suffer the ‘naivety’ of the
former or the ‘destructive impulses’ of the latter.
Will Liverman presents these
songs with a sensitivity and wisdom seemingly beyond his years. He manages to
create a subtle balance between the ‘trudging’ ‘Vagabond’ and the magic of ‘Let
Beauty Awake’, which is my personal favourite. Then, there is the vivacity of ‘The
Roadside Fire’, the sheer poetry of ‘The Infinite Shining Heavens’ and the boyish
passion of ‘Youth and Love’. Equally thoughtful is ‘Whither must I wander’,
which surely brings a tear to the eye of anyone whose childhood home is no
longer there. And the powerful sentiment of ‘Bright is the Ring of Words’ The
final song, the posthumously added ‘I have trod the upward and downward slope’,
combines a sense of despair with the hope that the journey will continue even
after death. The thematic quotations from several of the previous songs adds to
the cyclic nature of the work. And let’s not forget the sensitive accompaniment
provided by Jonathan King.
The second important collection
of songs is James Frederick Keel’s nautical Three Salt-Water Ballads.
These were composed in the aftermath of the Great War and set poems by the English
poet, writer and traveller, John Masefield. The most popular number is Trade
Winds, which commanded considerable popularity for many years. The ‘Port of
Many Ships’ is thoughtful and reflects on the sailor’s ‘final’ voyage. The cycle
closes with the rollicking, but sinister, ‘Mother Carey’.
I understand that commentators
often regard Herbert Howells’s King David as the pinnacle of his song
writing. I appreciate that this setting of Walter de la Mare’s text epitomises
much of Howells’s musical style with its modal inflections, its perfectly contrived
balance between soloist and piano, and its congenial setting of the words. Yet,
I have never really enjoyed it. And besides, I am not sure what it has to do
with travel. All that said, it is
beautifully sung here.
Aaron Copland’s ‘At the River’ is
taken from his second set of Old American Songs. It is a beautifully
wrought number based on a once-popular evangelical hymn with music and words by
the Rev. Robert Lowry, dating from 1865. Clearly, it is about a Bunyanesque
journey to the sacred river and a life of blessedness with the angels and
saints.
‘Ten Thousand Miles Away’ is the most
‘modern’ song on this CD. It was arranged by Steven Mark Kohn and included in
his American Folk Set Volume 1 (2000). This gorgeous number is based on
a traditional song which majors on the journey’s destination, ‘his true love’,
rather than the rigours of travel. It is well written and exquisitely sung.
I think that Nikolai Medtner’s
‘Wanderer’s Night Song’, has little to do with ‘travel.’ This lieder is taken
from his Nine Songs after Goethe, op.6. It has more to do with relief
from mental anguish than with tourism.
This varied recital closes with ‘dreamlike’
‘Mondnacht’ (Moonlit Night) from Robert Schumann’s song cycle Liederkreis,
op.39, no.5. The poems were written by Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff. This
work was composed in the year that he married Clara Wieck. The sentiment of the
song displays a typically romantic attachment to the idea of landscape with its
varied emotions of ‘adventure, yearning, confusion, isolation and desolation.’
The baritone soloist is brilliant
throughout this recital. Will Liverman is a rising star in both the world of
opera and the concert room. He made his Metropolitan Opera debut in 2018 and in
January of this year (2020) he became the first African American to sing the
role of Papageno (The Magic Flute). The pianist Jonathan King makes a
huge contribution to the success of this CD with his sensitive and sympathetic
accompaniments throughout.
The liner notes written by Joanna
Wyld are excellent and include the texts of all songs. They are presented in
English, German and French.
Apart from my opening
reservations, this is an outstanding recital. I would have expected a little
more material than what is included on this CD: 50 minutes seems a wee bit mean
nowadays. I guess that Liverman could have squeezed in the whole of Schumann’s Liederkreiss
at a pinch. This would have rebalanced the recital.
Track Listing:
Ralph VAUGHAN WILLIAMS (1872-1958) Songs of Travel
(1904)
James Frederick KEEL (1871-1954) Three Salt-Water
Ballads (1919)
Herbert HOWELLS (1892-1983) King David (1919)
Aaron COPLAND (1900-1990) At the River (1952)
TRADITIONAL Ten Thousand Miles Away (2000) (arr. Steven
Mark KOHN (b.1957))
Nikolai MEDTNER (1880-1951) Wanderer’s Night Song (1905)
Robert SCHUMANN (1810-56) Liederkreis, op.39, no.5
Mondnacht (1840)
Will Liverman (baritone), Jonathan King (piano)
Rec. August 2017 and August 2018 Skillman Music Recording
Studio, Brooklyn, New York State, USA
ODRADEK RECORDS ODRCD 389
With thanks to MusicWeb International where this review
was first published.
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