BBC Music Magazine

Whither Must I Wander

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Keel: Salt-water Ballads; Vaughan Williams: Songs of Travel; plus songs by Copland, Howells, Medtner and R Schumann

Will Liverman (baritone),

Jonathan King (piano)

Odradek ODRCD389 50:29 mins Baritone Will Liverman recently became the first African American to sing Pagageno at the Metropolit­an Opera, and this is his debut solo recital.

It’s built around Vaughan Williams’s Songs of Travel, and Liverman’s account of the opening song, ‘The Vagabond’, combines a firm, oaky baritone with a sharp interpreti­ve attitude – this wanderer imparts a sense of coiled expectatio­n without needing to hector aggressive­ly.

Some of the airborne quality of ‘Let Beauty Awake’ is sucked out by the dry acoustic of the recording, which tends to emphasise the piano to the detriment of Liverman.

His delicately floated legato at the conclusion of ‘Roadside Fire’ seems almost incidental to Jonathan King’s rippling accompanim­ent.

Forensic dissection of verbal detail is not Liverman’s thing. In ‘Youth and Love’ his satisfying­ly steady tone and ability to distil strong atmosphere without obtrusive interventi­ons make for gripping listening. Similarly, his readings of ‘The Infinite Shining Heavens’ and ‘I Have Trod The Upward And The Downward Slope’ have a palpable melancholy without undue self-dramatisat­ion.

A different acoustic – raggy, with some echo – cloaks the voice for Liverman’s colourful traversal of Keel’s Three Salt-water Ballads. The unfussy directness of his storytelli­ng makes Howells’s ‘King David’ quietly compelling, and both Medtner’s ‘Wanderer’s Night Song’ and Schumann’s ‘Mondnacht’ have an admirable poise and clarity of intention.

Copland’s ‘At the River’ is taken dangerousl­y slowly, and comes close to feeling sluggish. But most interpreti­ve decisions Liverman makes seem naturally right, and this is by any standards a notable debut recital. Terry Blain

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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