Beethoven
in Vienna: Beethoven Benefit Concert of 22 November 1808
One of a series of three recreated concerts
Beethoven: Symphony No.6 in F Op.68 'Pastoral'; Ah! perfido Op.65;
Mass in C Op.86: Gloria; Piano concerto No.4 in G Op.58; Symphony
No.5 in C minor Op.67; Mass in C Op.86: Sanctus and Benedictus; Choral
fantasia in C minor Op.80
Performers Janice
Watson (soprano); Jane Irwin (mezzo soprano); Toby Spence (tenor);
Neal Davies (baritone); François-Frédéric Guy
(piano); Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Edwin Paling (leader);
Günther Herbig (conductor); Edinburgh Festival Chorus, David
Jones (chorus master); Chorus soloists: Dorothy Fairweather (soprano);
David Hewitson (tenor) - Choral fantasia
Venue Usher Hall
Address Lothian Road Edinburgh
Reviewer Pat Napier
By far the most demanding of the three recreated composer/conductor
concerts in the 2001 Festival has to be Beethoven in Vienna,
the Benefit Concert of 22 November 1808 (St Cecilia's Day) in the
Theater an der Wien. This was a monster of a programme and included
two of the most famous and best-loved symphonies known today. Not
only did Beethoven compose and conduct, he was also the major soloist
in a concert devoted entirely to his own music. The Usher Hall concert
presented three and a half hours of music with two intervals and also
started at 6:30pm. However, a recreation can only recreate the music,
it cannot recreate the performance. Thank goodness!
Günther
Herbig
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Beethoven,
that prickly genius and titan of music, perennially short of money,
too irascible to endure a steady job, his deafness advancing at a
frightening rate and trying to exist on commissions desperately needed
the income a Benefit Concert would bring him. No doubt, his sacking
from his composer's post at this same theatre four years before still
rankled. Nevertheless, he made superhuman efforts to give value for
money by including the world premieres of his 5th and 6th symphonies.
The account of the concert tells of a catalogue of disasters which
would have ruined a lesser composer. Beethoven's temperament must
have been stretched to the limit of the proverbial piano wire from
an explosive mix of anxiety, excitement, fear that he wouln't perform
well and fear that the musicians, with whom he'd already fallen out
in rehearsal, wouldn't perform at all. Things were not helped by the
concert starting at 6:30pm - four hours late in bitterly cold weather!
The Usher Hall had neither of these disadvantages. It also had a capacity
audience, for whom the music was a much-loved entity, the 'home team'
of musicians and chorus, a vastly experienced conductor who also clearly
loved the music and who had a special rapport with his musicians and
outstanding soloists - the last being something Beethoven did not
have to support him. So 6:30pm on 25 August 2001 began in the most
different way possible from the original it was recreating.
As a dyed-in-the-wool Beethoven fan, this reviewer has to confess
to a certain amount of bias but even to my eyes and ears, this concert
was a smash hit success. The bows at the end (I lost count after five),
the thunderous and prolonged applause, the sighs of bliss at particularly
beautifu,l delicate musical passages all spelt out that it was a very
special experience for this knowledgeable audience.
François-Frédéric
Guy
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François-Frédéric
Guy, our present day Beethoven, played the fourth piano concerto to
perfection. He had the most gentle, delicate, caressing touch which
made the piano sing at all the right times, while also producing the
passion and tension as needed. From Beethoven's innovative introductory
shimmering piano solo we knew we were in for a treat and the rave
reception it got at the end proved that, as did the Choral fantasia's.
The two excerpts from the Mass
in C were glorious, with Jane Irwin's rich, creamy mezzo making
a very warm glow. But it is unfair to pick one voice out. All were
memorable, with the Festival Chorus soaring to the occasion and giving
us two extra soloists from their ranks. And when they all came together
for the final Hosanna in excelsis,
it was another magic moment. Applause and more applause was the order
of the day.
Even the humble furniture mover was applauded - more than once - as
he whizzed around moving seats and music stands to accomodate the
expanding and contracting orchestra size. Ever a showman, he rose
to the occasion and acknowledged his applause with wide smiles, bows
and waves. We all left for home in the best possible mood, again in
direct contrast to Beethoven's frozen cold, perplexed audience and
hostile musicians. How St Cecilia must have wept. I'm glad I was at
the Usher Hall rather than the Theater an der Wien!
© Pat Napier. 26 August 2001
The entire concert is being broadcast on BBC Radio 3 on 17 September
2001 and at some future (as yet unknown) time on the BBC Knowledge
Channel.
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