Prom 49: R. Schumann - Das Paradies und die Peri, LSO, Rattle, Tues. 22 Aug. 2023

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  • bluestateprommer
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 3010

    Prom 49: R. Schumann - Das Paradies und die Peri, LSO, Rattle, Tues. 22 Aug. 2023

    Tuesday 22 August 2023
    19:30
    Royal Albert Hall

    Robert Schumann: Das Paradies und die Peri (first complete performance at The Proms)

    Lucy Crowe, soprano
    Jeanine De Bique, soprano
    Magdalena Kožená, mezzo-soprano
    Andrew Staples, tenor
    Linard Vrielink, tenor (Proms debut artist)
    Florian Boesch, baritone (Proms debut artist)

    London Symphony Chorus
    London Symphony Orchestra
    Sir Simon Rattle, conductor​

    Sir Simon Rattle and the London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus present Schumann’s choral and orchestral cycle Das Paradies und die Peri – its first complete performance at the Proms.


    Starts
    22-08-23 20:00
    Ends
    22-08-23 22:00
  • CallMePaul
    Full Member
    • Jan 2014
    • 791

    #2
    I'm surprised to see that Florian Boesch is making his Proms debut!

    Comment

    • edashtav
      Full Member
      • Jul 2012
      • 3670

      #3
      I’m struggling to be positive re tonight’s Concert despite a strong cast of singers with Sir Simon Rattle in charge of the LSO. I’m a Schumann lover and so I’ve made an effort to enjoy this extended work but I’ve never progressed beyond the dismay voiced by London critics after the work’s (reluctant?) first performance in London which was attended by Royalty:

      THE PRESS June, 1856
      “Perhaps Monday last was one of the dreariest Philharmonic nights ever experienced; and yet there was a strong disposition amongst the amateurs to be as gracious and forbearing as possible, first on account of the sympathy felt for a composer who as a critic has written generously of English musicians; secondly, because Schumann's reason has left him for ever ; and, lastly, because his wife, the distinguished pianist has been nobly struggling this season in London, with a broken spirit, for her husband and children. If Mme. Goldschmidt-Lind, [i.e ‘Jenny’] in consenting to sing for one night at these concerts, exacted as a condition that the " Paradise and the Peri" was to be executed, then was her boon to the society a positive act of cruelty to the subscribers, who have thus been deprived of a night of good music for a speculative triviality, which has brought the concerts to a dismal ending. If the "Paradise and the Peri" be a specimen of the modern composers of Germany, then indeed have the giants been succeeded by dwarfs.”

      MORNING POST June 1856

      “The cantata was received with civility; but we apprehend there were few who did not heartily rejoice when it came to a close.”

      I hope that the 5000+ enthusiasts in the RAH tonight and the millions of listeners on Radio 3 gain great enjoyment from the occasion.

      Comment

      • gradus
        Full Member
        • Nov 2010
        • 5612

        #4
        It was one of the 5 essential Schumann pieces in last Saturday's BAL and the excerpt was out of the ordinary with RS pre-figuring Wagnerian harmony and writing beautifully for the voices.

        Comment

        • Master Jacques
          Full Member
          • Feb 2012
          • 1888

          #5
          Utterly gorgeous Schumann, the musical equivalent of one of those delectable Victorian canvases full of colour, foliage and fairies. I love every bar, and this was never less than an affectionate performance with good choral singing (though not all the soloists were at the level of Lucy Crowe, who was on good form even for her).

          Comment

          • french frank
            Administrator/Moderator
            • Feb 2007
            • 30326

            #6
            Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
            Utterly gorgeous Schumann, the musical equivalent of one of those delectable Victorian canvases full of colour, foliage and fairies. I love every bar, and this was never less than an affectionate performance with good choral singing (though not all the soloists were at the level of Lucy Crowe, who was on good form even for her).
            A short clip of Simon Rattle on "the great masterpiece that you haven't heard ... one of the most perfect choral pieces there is." [On 2015 perf].

            Last edited by french frank; 23-08-23, 13:54.
            It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.

            Comment

            • edashtav
              Full Member
              • Jul 2012
              • 3670

              #7
              Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
              Utterly gorgeous Schumann, the musical equivalent of one of those delectable Victorian canvases full of colour, foliage and fairies. I love every bar, and this was never less than an affectionate performance with good choral singing (though not all the soloists were at the level of Lucy Crowe, who was on good form even for her).
              I gave the piece another chance last evening and gained a substantial level of enjoyment from a committed interpretation. Suspect it takes a Jenny Lind to get it fully aloft and ai agree that Lucy Crowe was a great advocate. The LSO orchestra and the Chorus were well invested in the performance, too. That’s not easy given the text which is full of Irish whimsy. Sir Arnold Bax would have been charmed by it all. For my part, I was glad to be home when mirth took me over at the end of Part II when the chorus sang ‘ruhe in Träumen voll Duft ' i.e. Sleep on, in visions of odour rest. When the cinema came to Buckingham’s cramped, airless Town Hall, during intervals Usherettes would push amongst the steaming hordes, wafting scent from large bottles. Last night I dreamed of SmellyVision quenching the odour of Popcorn in the RAH.

              To summarise: I’m not a convert but I’m on the turn.
              Last edited by edashtav; 23-08-23, 14:22.

              Comment

              • Master Jacques
                Full Member
                • Feb 2012
                • 1888

                #8
                Originally posted by edashtav View Post

                I gave the piece another chance last evening and gained a substantial level of enjoyment from a committed interpretation. Suspect it takes a Jenny Lind to get it fully aloft and ai agree that Lucy Crowe was a great advocate. The LSO orchestra and the Chorus were well invested in the performance, too. That’s not easy given the text which is full of Irish whimsy. Sir Arnold Bax would have been charmed by it all. For my part, I was glad to be home when mirth took me over at the end of Part II when the chorus sang ‘ruhe in Träumen voll Duft ' i.e. Sleep on, in visions of odour rest. When the cinema came to Buckingham’s cramped, airless Town Hall, during intervals Usherettes would push amongst the steaming hordes, wafting scent from large bottles. Last night I dreamed of SmellyVision quenching the odour of Popcorn in the RAH.

                To summarise: I’m not a convert but I’m on the turn.
                Very good! I love your comparison with Bax - now you mention it, his Nympholept is indeed something of a Swinburnian retread of Schumann's world of Faerie.

                Comment

                • edashtav
                  Full Member
                  • Jul 2012
                  • 3670

                  #9
                  Parts of Spring Fire cover similar territory, too.

                  Comment

                  • Barbirollians
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 11709

                    #10
                    Looking forward to catching up on this today - I am a fan - have not heard Rattle's recording but the Harnoncourt is outstanding.

                    Comment

                    • bluestateprommer
                      Full Member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 3010

                      #11
                      Exceedingly belated (and generic, at 4 months' listening distance) post on this Prom, and also a bit of a thread-bump, as this Prom is set for a Christmas/New Year's repeat on January 3:



                      I'd thought that I'd heard the work on a recording some years back, but didn't really remember it. So hearing this Prom was, for all intents and purposes, a 'first listen'. On that listen, I understand why SSR adores the work and sings its praises. The performance was enthralling from start to finish, with Lucy C. heading a strong line-up of soloists. If anyone missed it at the time, it's well worth a visit, or a re-visit for those who want to give it another go.

                      Of course, the fact that it does require six solo singers is probably one reason why it doesn't seem to crop up all that often in live concert, at least outside of Austria and Germany. Haven't tried to look for evidence of other recent performances besides this Prom. I recall that SSR dared to program it in Philadelphia in the 2000's, and in a Philadelphia Inquirer article, mentioned a musician in the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra (ironically enough, now) who had texted SSR with a message to the effect of:

                      "I've been an orchestral musician for 40 years and have played all the great masterpieces. How is it that I have never heard of or played this Schumann work?"

                      Not the exact words (don't have the article in front of me, if I ever did), but this is the gist of the BRSO musician's text to SSR. SSR said that he kept that text message on his phone as a memento. Found some old links about the related performance at Carnegie Hall in 2007:

                      "Anyone with open ears is going to be stunned by the overwhelming beauty of the piece," Simon Rattle told The Philadelphia Inquirer about Robert Schumann's Das Paradies und die Peri . "For me it ... goes the closest to the heart of what I consider real Romanticism. Not that dark, dangerous Wagner Romanticism, but the real idealistic Romanticism."


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