THE LIEDER SINGER
Introduction | Opinions and Reactions
| Accompanist
INTRODUCTION:
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'Music and poetry have a common domain, from which they draw
inspiration and in which they operate: the landscape of the soul. Together,
they have the power to lend intellectual form to what is sensed and felt,
to transmute both into a language that no other art can express. The magic
power that dwells in music and poetry has the ability ceaselessly to transform
us.'
—Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau |
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Fischer-Dieskau in Salzburg,1965
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Fischer-Dieskau
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In English-speaking countries, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau is known primarily
as a lieder singer. Part of the reason for this is that, with the exception
of a small number of guest appearances at Covent Garden and at the Edinburgh
Festival, Fischer-Dieskau did not appear in opera productions in English-speaking
countries. Conversely, his lieder performances, both live and recorded, were
a central part of the concert experience for British and North American music
lovers from the 1950s until his retirement from public performance. Countless
lieder lovers received their introduction to the art form from Fischer-Dieskau's
recordings, and many number his live lieder recitals among their most powerful
concert experiences. And even today, many music listeners who are too young
to have experienced Fischer-Dieskau during his long career are encountering
the world of lieder for the first time through his recordings.
Even after his own lieder singing activity ceased, Fischer-Dieskau continued
to be the model and inspiration for many young lieder performers. To mention
one notable example, the pianist Graham Johnson has said that Fischer-Dieskau
was the 'godfather' of his monumental Schubert Lieder Edition for Hyperion
Records.
It would be difficult to describe succinctly what made Fischer-Dieskau such
a powerful and effective interpreter of lieder. Some would cite his superb musicianship,
others his laser-precise diction, others his musical and literary imagination,
others the power of his character and personality in the service of the works
he sang, and still others his willingness to explore the unknown corners of
the lieder repertoire and his courage in bringing little-known works to public
attention through his live and recorded performances. Whatever the reason, Dietrich
Fischer-Dieskau is one of the giants among lieder interpreters and one of the
most influential musicians of the 20th century.
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Fischer-Dieskau and Guenther Weissenborn
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Fischer-Dieskau
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Introduction | Opinions
and Reactions | Accompanist
OPINIONS AND REACTIONS:
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'A year later I wrote in my diary: "January 1951 was important
for me because it introduced me to the Viennese in a recital sung before
an audience who still considered recitals a part of their daily bread."
Conditions in Germany were no longer quite as favorable. Scarcely any of
the outstanding lieder singers from the prewar period were still performing
(with the exception of Heinrich Schlusnus and Walter Ludwig). Even worse,
a kind of assorted menu had taken over the programs that is still prevalent
in many countries today. I countered this trend, mainly for the pure pleasure
of shaping a sequence, with lieder having a common denominator; this underlying
theme demands concentration from a concert audience expecting sensationalism
or distraction. The arrangement also corresponded to a performance style
I intended to perfect over time. I wanted to do justice to all the essential
characteristics of the form; I wanted to get close to the essence of the
lied, to suppress nothing and make no concessions either to vocal limitations
or popular taste. The task I set myself was to focus on the age-old struggle
between word and sound; every work resolves it in its own way, and every
composer places the emphasis differently. I wanted to mirror this relationship
faithfully. That my programs could communicate this purpose only with difficulty
at first, and that I had to overcome the resistance of many concert producers
and had to force audiences to listen, shows what a rut our thinking tends
to run in; we find it difficult to free ourselves from tradition because
it makes us feel as secure as if we were in the womb. And yet we too often
accept unthinkingly what we are spoon-fed by the self-appointed arbiters
of fashion, no matter how low the level of taste has sunk.'
—Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Reverberations
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with Daniel Barenboim
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with Aribert Reimann
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'His conception is evergreen, so that a repetition amounts
to an act of composition. He would not seek to 'improve' on Schubert or
Schumann, Wolf or Brahms, on the contrary, his respect for them is so profound
that in rehearsal he would approach a well-loved Lied as if it were fresh
to him. Plodding uniformity, mandatory bondage to the metronome, are anathema
to him; rhythm, lissome and alive, is his golden rule. As every artist of
authority should, he embraces a freedom that is subject to discipline of
form and taste. In short, Fischer-Dieskau believes in tempo rubato
and uses it with unparalleled finesse. It follows that each bar is not mathematically
the same length as its neighbour; it is subservient to the phrase which
may extend over several bars: the crucial moment of this phrase is sought.
It is, in other words, a high point, not necessarily significant by being
the top note in the vocal line, rather it may be a subtle turn in the melody
begging to be stressed, or a poignant change of harmony in the accompaniment,
or again, a vital word in the lyric. Once decided upon, this high point
can be projected gently and persuasively or driven home with emphasis, as
occasion requires; more important still, it can be given time. Rubato,
this life-force or main spring, is a most recondite affair and it is precariously
balanced; mishandled, it can reduce a passage of chaste beauty into sickly
sentimentality, it can distort and elegant phrase, turn nobility to vulgarity.
Fischer-Dieskau wields it with such control that he gives wings to the music's
urge and leaves the listener, be he never so enlightened, transported without
knowing the cause.'
—Gerald Moore, in the Forward to K. S. Whitton, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau:
Mastersinger
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with Gerald Moore
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Joerg Demus, Fischer-Dieskau, Irmgard
Poppen
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'The essential method of Fischer-Dieskau's interpretation
of lieder is to approach the songs in the same way their composers did —
working from word to music, rather than from music to word. The distinction
is everything: it's not a normal way for performing musicians to proceed
. . . Though Fischer-Dieskau's name has often been linked to that of Elisabeth
Schwarzkopf (whom I also admire), I think of the two as almost polar opposites.
Fischer-Dieskau works down from the 'large picture' and emphasizes available
details of text and music to support his conception. I sense that Schwarzkopf
does the opposite, pursuing minute musical suggestions in the score so indefatigably
that they eventually add up to a detailed interpretation. As a result, her
readings . . . often give the sense of tiptoeing through the tulips — of
delicately making the tour from one exquisite detail to the next. The result
may sometimes sound very similar to Fischer-Dieskau's, but in the end, the
baritone is more likely to have made a distinct point. And in any case,
the journey to the solution should never be discounted.' —James M.
Keller, Opera News
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'The baritone "accompanied" all his partners in
the same sense that the members of a great string quartet accompany one
another: an infinitely subtle, lightning quick, unobtrusive and probably
sometimes unconscious way of responding to the partner's moment-by-moment
rhythmic or coloristic impulses; a joining of two independent spontaneities
into an intricately well-meshed yet still spontaneous-sounding unity. The
great lieder of Schubert, Schumann, Brahms and Wolf are simultaneously "songs"
in the ordinary sense of vocal-poetic statement with instrumental support,
and musical duos in the same vein as the violin sonatas or piano trios of
the same composers. If dozens — even hundreds — of these songs had to wait
a century or more for Mr. Fischer-Dieskau to show that they held more than
specialized appeal, it was in large part because of the rarity of artists
simultaneously equipped to fulfill the traditionally communicative role
of "singer" and the subtle musical role implied above.'
—Will Crutchfield, New York Times
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with Maurizio Pollini
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with Christoph Eschenbach
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with Alfred Brendel
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Introduction | Opinions
and Reactions | Accompanist
ACCOMPANISTS:
How many accompanists did Fischer-Dieskau have during his long career?
He guesses between 120 and 130, but he points out that that figure includes
all the pianists who accompanied him, even if only once.
Here are some:
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Hans Altmann
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Joachim Kaiser
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Hermann Reutter
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Vladimir Ashkenazy
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Burkhard Kehring
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Sviatoslav Richter
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Daniel Barenboim
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Wilhelm Kempff
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Wolfram Rieger
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Leonard Bernstein
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Kurt Kiermeir
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Wolfgang Sawallisch
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Klaus Billing
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Hertha Klust
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Anneliese Schier-Tiessen
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Alfred Brendel
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Ernst Krenek
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András Schiff
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Benjamin Britten
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Daniel Levy
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Reinhard Schwarz-Schilling
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Elmar Budde
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Ernest Lush
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Norman Shetler
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John Buttrick
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Martin Mölzer
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Leo Stein
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Jörg Demus
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Gerald Moore
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Wolfgang Teuscher
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Karl Engel
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Gerhard Oppitz
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Tamás Vásáry
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Christoph Eschenbach
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Murray Perahia
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Otto Volkmann
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Irvin Gage
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Edith Picht-Axenfeld
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Charles Wadsworth
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Cord Garben
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Maurizio Pollini
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Margrit Weber
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Florian Henschel
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Michael Ponti
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Walther Welsch
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Hartmut Hölll
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Michael Raucheisen
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Erik Werba
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Vladimir Horowitz
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Aribert Reimann
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Rudolf Wille
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with Hartmut Hoell
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with Sviatoslav Richter
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© 2001 Celia A. Sgroi & Monika Wolf
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