The Independent

A CHILLING ODYSSEY

Winterreis­e: A Parallel Journey, Wigmore Hall, London

- REVIEW BY CARA CHANTEAU

Matthew Rose’s most recent triumph on the London stage was as the bombastic vulgarian Baron Ochs in Strauss’s Der Rosenkaval­ier – a character he made human and funny for all his ghastlines­s. It was as far removed from the hyper-sensitive desolate wanderer of Schubert’s “Winterreis­e” as it is possible to imagine.

Schubert wrote this song cycle overshadow­ed by his own impending death, justly describing it as terrifying. Wilhelm Müller’s twenty-four poems follow the restless journey of a jilted lover through a frozen winter landscape, caught between remembered pleasure and despair. Though originally for tenor, the cycle is often transposed, and Rose’s gloriously rich, dark bass makes a wonderful foil for the depth of emotion while maintainin­g beauty of tone throughout. Where some singers deliberate­ly harshen to depict “The Crow”, Rose instead emphasises its wondrous strangenes­s. His interpreta­tion swells towards its bleak conclusion.

In 2012 when Rose and accompanis­t Gary Matthewman made their acclaimed recording of this, Rose asked artist Victoria Crowe if they might use some of her paintings of the Scottish winter as illustrati­on. In performanc­e, a moving panorama of Crowe’s silhouette­d branches and tree-shapes were projected centrestag­e, with pianist and singer placed to one side. With no action on stage to detract from, it provided a hypnotic accompanim­ent to Schubert’s inward odyssey.

 ??  ?? Matthew Rose breathes new life into Franz Schubert’s ‘Winterreis­e’ – a sombre song cycle written in the composer’s final days
Matthew Rose breathes new life into Franz Schubert’s ‘Winterreis­e’ – a sombre song cycle written in the composer’s final days

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