Symphonieorchester Vorarlberg · Christoph Eberle, conductor
Florian Boesch / Cornelia Horak / Letizia Scherrer / Kurt Sternik
Schubert never ?nished his opera “Der Graf von Gleichen” after a libretto by Eduard Bauernfeld. On the occasion of the Styriarte Graz 1997, Richard Dünser completed the work, which is presented on this CD as a live-recording of the ?rst performance of the concert version from 2003, performed in the Festspielhaus Bregenz.
Franz Schubert (1797–1828)
Richard Dünser (*1959)
DER GRAF VON GLEICHEN
Opera in 2 acts
Libretto: Eduard von Bauernfeld
Spoken text written by Thomas Hoeft
Florian Boesch (baritone) | Graf (Count) / Sultan |
Cornelia Horak (soprano) | Suleika |
Letizia Scherrer (soprano) | Grafin (Countess) / Fatime |
Kurt Sternik (speaker) | |
KornmarktChor Bregenz
Wolfgang Schwendinger, chorus master
Symphonieorchester Vorarlberg
Christoph Eberle, conductor
Richard Dünser Komponist
Richard Dünser was born in 1959 in
Bregenz, Austria. After completing
secondary school and conservatory studies,
he began attending the University for
Music and Theater in Vienna, where he
studied composition with Francis Burt.
After receiving his diploma, he began
post-graduate studies with Hans-Werner
Henze in Cologne and spent a summer at
Tanglewood as the recipient of a composition
fellowship. His encounters with
Leonard Bernstein there were of particular
importance to him.
Dünser has won numerous scholarships,
prizes (incl. the BMUK prize of appreciation
and sponsorships from the Theodor-Körner
Foundation, the city of Vienna, the Republic
of Austria and the Vorarlberg provincial government)
and commissions (incl. the Bregenz
Festival, the styriarte festival of Graz, the
Festival Steirischer Herbst, the Gesellschaft
der Musikfreunde in Vienna, the Austrian
Ministry of Culture and others).
His works have been performed throughout
the world by renowned artists (incl.
Sylvain Cambreling, Christoph Eberle, Ivan
Fischer, Peter Keuschnig, Isabelle van
Keulen, Alfons Kontarsky, Donald Runnicles,
Jukka-Pekka Saraste, Heinrich Schiff, Martin
Schelling, Alexander Swete, Marcello Viotti,
Franz Welser-Möst), ensembles (Ensemble
Kontrapunkte, Ensemble Modern, Ensemble
Plus, Klangforum Wien, die reihe, Artis Quartett
Wien, Kreuzberger Streichquartett, etc.)
and orchestras (Vienna Symphony, Vienna
Concert-Verein, NÖ Tonkünstlerorchester,
NDR Symphonieorchester Hannover,
Symphonieorchester Vorarlberg, etc.). They
are also widely documented on CD (mica,
KOCH/SCHWANN, Caprice, Sony-Columbia).
He received international acclaim for
his version of the opera fragment Der Graf
von Gleichen, based on sketches by Franz
Schubert, which had its concertante premiere
in 1997 during the styriarte festival in
Graz, followed by a large-scale production
in the Bregenz opera house at Easter 2003.
Dünser’s orchestra work The Waste Land
also premiered in the same hall during
the 2003 Bregenz Festival, performed by
the Vienna Symphony under Jukka-Pekka
Saraste.
In addition to his activities as a composer,
the artist teaches at the Mozarteum
in Salzburg/Innsbruck, at the regional conservatory
in Feldkirch and in Graz, where
he has held a position as professor of music
theory at the University for Music and the
Performing Arts since 1991. Richard Dünser
has lived in southern Styria since 1995.
Christoph Eberle Dirigent
Christoph Eberle studied at the Vorarlberg
regional conservatory and the
Vienna Conservatory of Music, completing
his studies with honors.
His successful conducting debut with the
Wiener Kammerorchester took place in 1986.
International conducting engagements with
many orchestras followed, including with the
Mozarteum-Orchester Salzburg, Orchestra
Sinfonica della RAI Torino, Brucknerorchester
Linz, SWR Sinfonieorchester Baden-
Baden, RSO Wien, Wiener Concertverein,
Philharmonia Prague, Orchestre National de
Belgique, New Zealand Symphony, Florida
Philharmonic, Scottish National Orchestra,
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Hallé Orchestra
Manchester and many others. In 2003
he made his debut with the Philharmonia
Orchestra of London in the Royal Festival
Hall.
He has been invited to appear at
renowned festivals such as the Schubertiade
Feldkirch, Lockenhaus chamber music
festival, Bregenz Festival, Rheingau Festival
(Germany) and Bodensee Festival.
Numerous recordings and CD productions
as well as five televised performances
for ORF, ZDF and RAI attest to his artistry. In
1995, Christoph Eberle was a finalist at the
International Leonard Bernstein Conducting
Competition. He has conducted operas in
Bregenz, Ulm and St. Gallen as well as at
the Semper Opera in Dresden, the Salzburg
regional theater and the Vienna Volks- and
State Operas. In 2004, he conducted the premiere
of John Neumeier’s dance story Wie
es euch gefällt/As you like it (Shakespeare/
Mozart) and assisted in concert and CD
recordings for Bobby McFerrin and Valery
Gergiev and the Vienna Philharmonic.
Since 1988 he has been the principle
conductor of the Symphonieorchester
Vorarlberg and the Vorarlberg regional theater.
From 1997 to 1999 he was the direttore stabile
with the Orchestra Haydn Bolzano. He
was the principle conductor of the Wiener
Kammerorchester from 1999 to 2004. Since
fall 2004, Christoph Eberle has been the
musical director of the Salzburg regional
theater.
Symphonieorchester Vorarlberg
The Symphonieorchester Vorarlberg was
founded in 1984 by musicians living
in Austria’s westernmost province who
wanted to establish another professional
orchestra in the footsteps of the legendary
Vorarlberg RSO, which broke up in 1959. The
core of the Symphonieorchester Vorarlberg
consists of qualified musicians from the
region as well as from the neighboring
countries of Switzerland, Liechtenstein
and Germany’s Lake Konstanz area. The
orchestra works on a project-by-project
basis. It comes together for intensive working
phases and rehearses up to ten programs
per year, performing each of these
a number of times. Both public and press
laud the exceptional commitment of the primarily
young musicians who meet regularly
for rehearsals and concerts out of a love of
music and a desire to work intensively at
the highest artistic level.
Since 1988, the orchestra’s principle
conductor has been Christoph Eberle, a
native of Hittisau in the Bregenz Forest. The
ensemble also works regularly with other
young conductors like Gérard Korsten from
South Africa, David Wroe from England,
Manfred Honeck from Vorarlberg, Kyrill
Petrenko from Russia – now a Vorarlberg
resident – and Martin Turnovsky from the
Czech Republic. The Symphonieorchester
Vorarlberg has also worked with numerous
outstanding international soloists including
Heinrich Schiff, Thomas Quasthoff, Julian
Rachlin, Stefan Vladar, Clemens Hagen,
Elisabeth Leonskaja, Thomas Zehetmair,
the Ensemble Triology and the Wiener
Klaviertrio.
Due to their six-concert subscription
series – the first one in 1994 in Bregenz and
Feldkirch; since 2002 in the Bregenz Forest
as well (Hittisau and Schwarzenberg)
– and appearances in the province’s international
festivals (Bregenzer Frühling,
Schubertiade and Bregenzer Festspiele)
the Symphonieorchester Vorarlberg has
now become an important cultural institution
in Vorarlberg which no music lover
would want to do without. Parallel to this
development, it is highly evident that the
local population identifies with the ensemble
to an ever increasing degree.
Since 1990, one of the orchestra’s main
attractions has been its yearly staged
operas in cooperation with the Vorarlberg
theater. These works are performed at
the Bregenz theater or the Theater am
Kornmarkt. The joint production in early
2001 of Mozart’s Don Giovanni was internationally
acclaimed, lastly due to actor
Tobias Moretti, who debuted as an opera
director with this work. One year later,
Humperdinck’s Hänsel und Gretel was also
an enormous hit with the public, as was
Madame Butterfly in Spring 2003.
The orchestra has released five CDs,
including Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf
with speaker Tobias Moretti in 1998.
Four CDs were made with the ORF and
the Vorarlberg radio broadcasting company.
On the occasion of its 15th anniversary,
the ensemble recorded Ludwig
van Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 at the
Bregenzer Frühling 2000. They also made
a live recording with Vorarlberg author
Michael Köhlmeier retelling William
Shakespeare’s Midsummer Night’s Dream
in his very personal style to Mendelssohn’s
eponymous music. A live recording of
another production with Michael Köhlmeier
and Beethoven’s Creatures of Prometheus
will also be appearing soon.
The Symphonieorchester Vorarlberg’s
repertoire ranges from standard works
of the classic and romantic periods up
to contemporary music, the latter often
commissioned from Vorarlberg composers.
Tours have taken the ensemble and
its principle conductor Christoph Eberle
to Vienna (Grosser Musikvereinssaal,
Konzerthaus), Munich (Philharmonie),
Dusseldorf (Tonhalle), Madrid (Aditorio
Nacional), Bozen (Nuovo Teatro) as well as
to Salzburg and Naples.
Florian Boesch Bariton
Florian Boesch began his vocal studies with
Ruthilde Boesch while he was studying
product design at the University of Applied
Arts in Vienna. In 1997 he continued his vocal
studies with Robert Holl, with a focus on Lied
and Oratory, at the University of Music and
Performing Arts in Vienna. Since 2002 he is
vocally trained by Antonio Carangelo.
He appeared in various opera productions
of the University of Music and Performing
Arts Vienna as well as in productions
of some freelance opera companies in
Vienna. At the Wiener Kammeroper he
performed Jan Müller Wieland’s Das Märchen
der 672. Nacht and Schubert’s Winterreise,
at the Musikverein he made his
debut with Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater under
the baton of Martin Haselböck and the
Wiener Akademie. He was invited at the
Festival Bregenz to sing the role of Silvano
in Verdi’s Maskenball and he appeared as
Polyphem in Händel’s Acis and Galathea
at the Wiener Schauspielhaus. Under the
baton of Marcello Viotti he sang Silvano in
a concert performance at the Münchner
Philharmonie and under Claus Peter Flor
he could be heard in Beethoven’s Ninth
Symphony at the Wiener Konzerthaus.
Florian Boesch performed Count Almaviva
in Mozart’s Le nozze di Figaro at the Theatre
of Klagenfurt where he also made his debut
as Papageno/Die Zauberflöte. At the Theater
Wuppertal he appeared in the title role of Don
Giovanni and at the Bregenz Festival he sang
Schaunard and coverd Marcello/La Bohème.
In October 2003 he made his debut at the
Zurich Opera in the role of Papageno.
In 2004 he could be heard at the Volksopera
in Vienna as Figaro/Le Nozze Di Figaro, Leporello/
Don Giovanni and Papageno. In summer
2004 Florian Boesch makes his debut at the
Salzburg Festival as Polizeikommissar in a
new production of R. Strauss’s Rosenkavalier
under Semyon Bychkov, followed by his debut
as Guglielmo/Cosi fan tutte at the theatre of
Klagenfurt. During the upcoming seasons he
will sing the following parts at the State Opera
Stuttgart: Papageno, Figaro and Guglielmo.
In September 2002 he gave his outstanding
recital-debut at the famous Festival Schubertiade
in Schwarzenberg/Austria, followed by
recitals at the Austrian Cultural Forum New
York and at the Styriarte Festival in Graz.
Furthermore he appeared as Tiridate in
Händel’s Radamisto at the Salzburg Pentecost
Festival, in Dortmund and Spain, performed
Joseph Haydn’s Orlando Paladino under the
baton of Nikolaus Harnoncourt in Vienna’s
Musikverein, Mozarts c-minor Mass and
Bach’s St. Matthew’s Passion with Helmuth
Rilling and could be heard at the Styriarte Festival
in Graz in performances of Beethoven’s
Chorphantasie and Handel’s Alexanderfeast
under the baton of Nikolaus Harnoncourt.
During the last season Florian Boesch sang
the role of Simon in Schubert’s Lazarus, again
with Nikolaus Harnoncourt, in Vienna, Pisa,
Bremen und Berlin and Handel’s Messiah
under Martin Haselböck in Vienna and Lyon.
Further engagements included Mahler’s Lieder
aus des Knaben Wunderhorn and Schubert’s
E-flat Major Mass in Vienna, C. P. E. Bach’s
St. Matthew’s Passion in Ljubljana, Handel’s
La Resurrezione with the Combattimento
Consort Amsterdam at the Concertgebouw in
Amsterdam and orchestrated Schubert-Songs
with the Chamber Orchestra of Europe and
Nikolaus Harnoncourt at the Styriarte Festival.
Highlights of the 2004/2005 season are concerts
with Bach Cantatas at the Haydn-Festival
in Eisenstadt under Adam Fischer, Handel’s
Radamisto in Vienna and Amsterdam, Wolf’s
Michelangelo-Lieder with Berlin Symphony,
Winterreise in New York, Die Schöne Müllerin
in Tokyo and St. Matthew’s Passion in Milan
under Riccardo Chailly.
Cornelia Horak Sopran
Cornelia Horak was born in Vienna, singing
in various church choirs from the
time she was 10 years old. At the age of 12,
she began studying recorder at the Vienna
city conservatory with E. Kölz, continuing
this at Vienna’s University for Music and
the Performing Arts with H. M. Kneihs and
graduating with a teaching certi.cate in
1989.
During her school and university studies,
she sang in various baroque chamber
music formations and vocal ensembles and
choirs (Voces Vienna, La Capella, Concentus
Vocalis, Singakademie ...).
Cornelia Horak graduated from the
Goetheanistic Conservatory in 1993 with
honors after completing her vocal training
with Kammersängerin Hilde Rössl-Majdan.
In 1992, the soprano won the international
singing competition at
s’Hertogenbosch. She joined the ensemble of the
Landestheater Innsbruck in the 1993/94
season, where she remained until 1999.
After this, she was a member of the Volksopera
Vienna for one season.
Since 2000, Cornelia Horak has been
a full-time member of the Gärtnerplatztheater
in Munich. Her many roles include
Pamina, Hanna Glawari, Christl, Dolly,
Orlofsky, Despina, Marzelline and Kate.
The Münchner Merkur newspaper nominated
her for the Merkur Theater Prize
for her performance of Orlofsky (“…her
Orlofsky was the event of the new Fledermaus
at Gärtnerplatz…”), and she was
titled “Young Artist of the Year” by the
reviewer of the Tagesspiegel Berlin in its
2003 “Opernwelt” yearbook.
Cornelia Horak has performed under
such conductors as P. Schreier, B. Weil,
A. Fischer, N. Marriner and Ch. Eberle in
concerts and recitals at the Salzburg Festspiele,
Schubertiade Feldkirch, Styriarte
Graz, Haydn Festspiele Eisenstadt, Jazzfest
Saalfelden and the Klangbogen Vienna.
Critics especially praise her exceptional
versatility, breadth of expression and great
musicality.
Kurt Sternik Sprecher
Kurt Sternik was born in 1943 in Graz,
Austria. He completed his schooling
there, finally leaving the Academy for Music
and Performing Arts with his diploma. He
originally wanted to be a singer, but was
forced due to his voice to change to acting.
He has been active in the Bregenz
theater as a director and actor since
1970, and has also been invited to make
guest appearances in many other theaters,
e. g. as a director in Linz, in France
(with appearances in theaters such as
Nancy and the Theatre National Populaire
Lyon), and at festivals in Schwäbisch Hall,
Ettlingen and Spittal/Drau. His opera productions
in Bregenz include La Boheme,
Rigoletto, Cavalleria rusticana, Pagliacci,
Tosca, Hänsel und Gretel, Don Pasquale
and Madame Butterfly.
KornmarktChor
The Kornmarkt Choir was founded in
1990 for the yearly opera productions of
the Vorarlberg regional theater. It has performed
in fourteen operas, most recently
in Madame Butterfly. The choir’s members
are primarily trained singers and music
teachers. It has a stable base of ca. 20
members. The ensemble has celebrated a
number of highly successful performances
in recent years, singing such works as
G. F. Handel’s Messiah, J. Brahms’ Deutsches
Requiem, J. S. Bach’s St. John Passion,
L. v. Beethoven’s Symphonie No. 9
und J. Haydn’s Creation with the Symphonieorchester
Vorarlberg, G. Mahler’s Resurrection
Symphony in St. Stephan’s Cathedral/
Vienna, B. Martinu°’s Julietta (opera in
the Bregenz opera house during the 2002
Bregenz Festspiele), Kurt Weill’s Der Kuhhandel
(2004 Bregenz Festspiele, operetta
in the Theater am Kornmarkt). During the
2004 season, the choir performed a number
of concerts during the Schubertiade (with
Genia Kühmeier, Christopher Maltman and
Marcus Ullmann), the Bregenz Festspiele,
the Bregenzer Frühling and the Bregenz
Musik in Herz-Jesu concert series.
Wolfgang Schwendinger
Chorus Master
Wolfgang Schwendinger is the artistic
director of the Kornmarkt Choir as well
as a music teacher in Bregenz. He has
performed with the children’s choir of the
Bregenz Music School in such works as
Britten’s War Requiem and Berlioz’ Te
Deum at the 1994 Salzburg Festspiele, the
1999 Bregenz Festspiele (Greek Passion by
War Requiem, dem Te Deum von Berlioz,
B. Martinu°) and G. Puccini’s La Bohème on
the lakeside stage in 2001/02. He annually
conducts a concert of sacred works at the
Schubertiade Schwarzenberg. Wolfgang
Schwendinger has led the Herz-Jesu
Bregenz and St. Karl Hohenems church
choirs for 10 years. Since summer 2001
he has also led the choir of the Bregenz
Festspiele (La Bohème 2001/02, Julietta in
the opera house 2002, Der Kuhhandel in the
Theater am Kornmarkt, 2004), and has been
invited to conduct one of his own programs
in the St. Stephan’s Cathedral in 2005.
Der Graf von Gleichen
The Work
The exact origins of the bizarre story
of the “Count von Gleichen” have
still not been conclusively proven. In any
event, it seems that the legend was first
recorded by Hessian landgrave Philipp the
Benevolent, who introduced it as a “precedent”
when he went to Martin Luther and
Philipp Melanchthon with the request to
marry a second time. The first name which
emerges for this mythical count is ‘Ludwig’.
A Count von Gleichen with this name was
in the retinue of Emperor Friedrich II in
a 13th century crusade to Palestine. In
other versions of the legend, however,
the count’s first name is Sigismund or
Siegfried. In 1786, Johann August Musäus
began his fifth volume of German fairy tales
with the saga Melechsala oder die Sage
vom Grafen Ernst zu Gleichen und seinen
zwei Frauen [Melechsala or the legend
of Count Ernst zu Gleichen and his two
wives]. Musäus embellished his sources
richly, with the results becoming the
actual basis for Eduard von Bauernfeld’s
libretto. The friendship between Schubert
and Bauernfeld, which had existed since
February 1825, led one month later to
Schubert’s request that Bauernfeld send
him a text for an opera. About this, the latter
commented on in his diary: “He – Schubert
– wants a libretto from me, and suggested
the Bezaubernde Rose [Enchanting Rose].
As for me – a Graf von Gleichen is going
through my head.” Bauernfeld was able
to convince Schubert about the Graf and
hurriedly began bringing it to paper in May
1826. In July 1826, he was able to hand
over the completed text – which he had
only worked on for a total of eight days
– to Schubert, who immediately started
composing, even though censors had forbidden
the text the previous October. It is
not entirely clear when Schubert began;
the only date in Schubert’s handwriting is
July 19, 1827. What can be established,
however, is that Schubert worked on this
text until his death.
The degree of completion (or in this
case: lack of completion) varies. The score
contains everything from one-line melodies
(imagine if only the melody of Winterreise
had come down to us) to melodies with
bass, implied intermezzi and written-out
ensembles. Most of this material is only
sparingly sketched out; sometimes one can
no longer follow what Schubert wanted.
Some material – even with the most painstaking
care – remains illegible and inexplicable.
But we do have sketches for 26 numbers
in the opera. For the finale, however,
there is nothing!
This opera torso remained untouched
for decades, until the “Styriarte” festival
commissioned Richard Dünser to finish it
on the occasion of the Schubert anniversary
year 1997.
Why did Dünser take on the challenge of
“completing” this work in the first place?
When first asked to do so, Dünser was
highly skeptical. Not, however, after looking
at the existing music. The parts Schubert
did compose are some of his greatest
works – they are among his last pieces
– the time of his last symphonies, chamber
music works, Lieder, etc.
Dünser did not – as he himself says
– orchestrate the work like Schubert, but
as he would have if he had composed this
opera for a modern orchestra today. The
original is almost never a real short score,
i. e. a piano score noting which instruments
are meant for which lines; Schubert rarely
provided such information. No, Richard
Dünser composed a great deal of his own
music into this opera.
He completed all numbers for which
Schubert’s sketches exist “as [he] imagines
Schubert himself, also changing, shortening
or expanding the music – [resulting in] a
Schubert heard through the compositional,
tonal and listening experiences of the 20th
century.”
Dünser found it the most difficult to write
the finale, because Schubert did not write
a single note of it himself. Should he imitate
Schubert, or compose his own music
‘pure’?
Torn between these extremes, Dünser
found both to be impossible, unconvincing
or simply unsuitable, and thus decided on a
sort of “unfinished” synthesis comprised
of various fragments. Schubert’s world
continues to sound on, but in the course
of the intensifying and ever stranger plot,
this world is confronted by the “strange”,
the “contemporary” – which superimposes
itself on the “old” and shows it in a completely
different light. A fragmentary quote
from Winterreise helps to structure the end
of the opera. Schubert himself borrowed
music from this song cycle for the opera
(2nd act duet between the count and countess)
and literally quoted Nebensonnen, but
he interwove and extended these quotes
with new material.
The Plot
Act I
While on a crusade, Count Ernst von
Gleichen and his squire Kurt are imprisoned
by the Sultan of Cairo. The count
keeps his identity secret, but is made palace
gardener due to his skill. He there
makes the acquaintanceship of the beautiful
princess Suleika, who is to celebrate
her 15th birthday. As a birthday present,
the count has cultured and cared for a
rare purple rose. The count gives her the
flower, but before Suleika can confess her
love to him, the sultan appears with three
Indian princes, bidding Suleika to choose
one as a husband. Suleika is deeply upset
because she realizes that she can only
love the count. She asks her father to wait
another day and requests that he release
the Christian slaves from bondage. The
sultan agrees to this and orders that the
slaves leave Cairo by ship that very night.
After the count finds out the joyous news,
he comes into the garden, where Suleika is
expectantly waiting for him. As he begins
to bid her farewell, she asks him if he is
betraying their love, because the gift of a
purple rose is considered a confession of
love in the Orient. Although the count tells
Suleika about his wife and son, Suleika
tells him of her plan to flee with her servant
Fatime and the Christian slaves. When
Suleika then tells the count she wishes to
convert to Christianity, his resistance is
gone. All board the ship together, which
sails off to the happy cries of the liberated.
Act II
Meanwhile, back at the castle, the countess
watches as the harvesters bring
home bales of grain. Despite her husband’s
seven-year absence, she has not given up
hope that he will return. Her love to him is
unbroken. Even if he should never come
back, her love will never die, and she would
keep her pain alive. From the distance
come sounds of a choir of pilgrims who
have joined the count’s party. He recognizes
his castle but hesitates to reenter it.
Finally, he knocks on the door and requests
that the countess to be brought to him
under the pretense of bringing her news
about her husband. The countess comes,
and Count Ernst reveals himself and has
his son brought down as well. The happy
tidings of his return spread through the
castle. Suleika – now renamed Angelika
– as well as Kurt and Fatime have also now
arrived and are received by the countess.
Suleika goes to rest, and the count tells
the countess a secret (which the audience
doesn’t find out until the end of the opera!)
and asks her if she would be willing to
share his love for Suleika. Although the
countess promises this, both decide that
the countess alone must speak to Suleika.
While the countess unobtrusively observes
the sleeping Suleika, the latter wakes and
begins to pray. The countess comes to her
and asks her if she truly loves the count.
When Suleika immediately confirms this,
the countess wants to display her affection
for her, but out of shame, Suleika cannot
respond. The count enters, and both try
to calm down the agitated atmosphere. In
the great hall, the count gathers his friends
and now airs the secret: that the pope has
allowed him to take on Suleika as a second
wife because she has converted. Suleika
and all others rejoice, and the wedding is
held in the castle chapel.
Johannes Steinwender
Translation: Elizabeth Gahbler
Richard Dünser
Der Graf von Gleichen – A working report
“Pain sharpens the understanding and
strengthens the soul – in contrast, joy
seldom distresses one, pampering or making
one frivolous instead. From the depths
of my heart, I hate that prejudice which
makes so many wretched beings say that
only that which they do is the best, and that
everything else is nothing. It is true that one
beautiful thing should inspire humans and
carry them through life. But a shimmer of
this inspiration should light up everything
else.“
Franz Schubert in a diary entry from March 23, 1824.
He vacillated between joy and pain, between
extremes, in both his life and work.
His life seemed unbalanced, his art as
well; not “classic“, but defamed by Goethe as “sick”.
And his Winterreise: its bruskness, its
occasional brutality make it “modern”.
Icy nature as the source of metaphors
and symbols: “Romantic” parallels
to Caspar David Friedrich’s painting
Gescheiterter Hoffnung [lost hope], whose
title is actually Das Eismeer [the polar sea].
The painting Die gescheiterte Hoffnung
has been lost; its twin work was wrongfully
attributed with this title.
Lost, missing, fragments, ruins…
The mysterious attraction of the
unfinished…
Schubert left us with a number of unfinished
works, not only the Symphony in B
minor, D 759 which is so often played today,
200 years after Schubert’s birth, but also
the powerful torso of an opera: Der Graf
von Gleichen (D 918), based on the libretto
by Eduard von Bauernfeld.
Schubert worked on this opera during
the last two years of his life. The degree of
completion (or in this case: lack of completion)
varies. The score contains everything
from one-line melodies (imagine if only the
melody of Winterreise had come down to
us) to melodies with bass, implied intermezzi
and written-out ensembles. Most of
this material is only sparingly sketched out;
sometimes one can no longer follow what
Schubert wanted. Some material – even
with the most painstaking care – remains
illegible and inexplicable. But we do have
sketches for 26 numbers in the opera. For
the finale, however, there is nothing!
And as we all know, the finale of a piece
of music, especially one combining music
and drama, is the essential part of the
work. All conflicts must be worked out, the
knot untied (or cut through); the composer
must clearly take a position.
The fact that there was no conclusion to
this work – in addition to the early stage of
the sketches – must be one of the reasons
why this monumental fragment lay so long
in a drawer of the Vienna city and regional
library gathering dust. A facsimile of the
manuscript – highly difficult to read in some
spots – was first published in 1988.
Why did I take on the challenge of “completing”
this work in the first place?
At first, I was highly skeptical. Not, however,
after looking at the existing music.
The parts Schubert did compose are some
of his greatest works – they are among his
last pieces – the time of his last symphonies,
chamber music works, Lieder, etc.
I wanted to make this incredible music
heard again, but consciously. As I hear
it, as I imagine it, as my imaginary image
of Schubert, as a biography with some
fictitious and subjective material – quasi
composed by myself.
I did not orchestrate the work like
Schubert, but as he would have if he had
composed this opera for a modern orchestra
today. The original is almost never a real
short score, i. e. a piano score noting which
instruments are meant for which lines;
Schubert rarely provided such information.
No, I composed a great deal of my own
music into this opera.
Orchestrating in a truly “Schubertian”
manner could of course only be done with
original instruments, which doesn’t interest
me. Not out of prejudice or intolerance, but
because the primary interest of those who
play old instruments is on playing actual
“early” music.
I completed all numbers for which
Schubert wrote sketches as I imagine
“my” Schubert, also changing, shortening
or expanding the music – a Schubert heard
through the compositional, tonal and listening
experiences of the 20th century.
The most difficult part to write was the
finale, because Schubert did not write a
single note of it himself. Should I try to
imitate Schubert? Should I compose “purely”
my own music?
Torn between these extremes, I found
both to be impossible, unconvincing or simply
unsuitable, and thus decided on a sort of
“unfinished” synthesis comprised of various
fragments. Schubert’s world continues to
sound on, but in the course of the intensifying
and ever stranger plot, this world is
confronted by the “strange”, the “contemporary”
– which superimposes itself on
the “old” and shows it in a completely
different light. A fragmentary quote from
Winterreise helps to structure the end of the
opera. Schubert himself borrowed music
from this song cycle for the opera (2nd act
duet between the count and countess) and
literally quoted Nebensonnen, but he interwove
and extended these quotes with new
material. Wilhelm Müller’s enigmatic text:
“I saw three suns in the heavens, I
looked at them long and steadily; and they
stood there so stolidly, as though they
never wanted to turn away from me.
Oh, you are not my suns! Look others in
the face! Yes, recently I had three, now the
best two are down.
If only the third would follow! In the dark
I will feel better.”
was a key to my understanding of the
opera. At the point where Suleika comes
more and more into the sphere of the count
and countess, as the future “third in the
alliance”, the Nebensonnen – secondary
suns, as it were – are quoted. A vision
near the edge of madness. A number of
suns stand in the heavens, the viewer is
mulling over this vision; associations, reminiscences
come to mind and increasingly
stir him up. “Oh, you are not my suns! Look
others in the face! Yes, recently I had three,
now the best two are down. If only the third
would follow! In the dark I will feel better.”
Schubert uses this allusion to relegate
the opera’s completely unexpected solution
of bigamy into the realm of mad visions, a
utopia, “unfinished”…
Is it only chance that he made no more
sketches at the end? Or are there secondary
wives where there are secondary suns?
Translation: Elizabeth Gahbler