In de lente van 1827 droeg Franz Schubert de eerste twaalf liederen van Winterreise aan zijn vrienden voor. Zij waren verbluft over deze donkergetinte liederen die Schubert mit bewegter Stimme voordroeg. Schubert hield hun voor dat hij deze liederen het mooist vindt wat hij tot dan had geschreven. Schubert dacht dat Wilhelm Müller twaalf gedichten schreef. Tot zijn verbazing kwam hij bij een vriend een boek met alle 24 gedichten tegen. Uiteraard heeft Schubert ook deze twaalf gedichten in een tweede cyclus van noten voorzien. Door zijn voortijdig overlijden heeft Schubert helaas nooit de eerste uitgave van Winterreise gezien. Winterreise wordt gezien als één van de hoogtepunten van de Romantiek. Talloze vermaarde tenoren hebben deze liederen al opgenomen. Afgelopen voorjaar namen Mark Padmore en Kristian Bezuidenhout deze liederencyclus in de Doopsgezinde kerk van Haarlem op. Bezuidenhout begeleid Padmore op een fortepiano Graf uit de Edwin Breuk collectie.
Schubert: Winterreise D911
Mark Padmore (tenor), Kristian Bezuidenhout (fortepiano)
A journey into the Romantic self. It is clear from its genesis that Schubert did not have any strict dramatic action in mind in this song cycle. Unlike Die schöne Müllerin, Winterreise tells no story; it is a journey into the interior, into ever-deeper realms of loneliness. As Peter Gülke has put it: ‘The only progress the wanderer makes is a progress in perception, the agonising discharge of his memories, constantly threatened by regressions. . . . Continually in search of confirmations of his condition, he observes with an all too alert, painfully keen sensibility, and like an egocentric melancholic refers everything to himself or selects objects so that they can serve as mirror images and corroborations.’ To that extent, the sequence of the songs is not of decisive importance, since 'each of the melancholies he experiences is the worst at the time' (Gülke again).
The testimony of his friends justifies us in relating this ‘psychological profile of a melancholic character’ to Schubert himself. Nikolaus Harnoncourt once described the boundlessly subjective as the decisive factor in Schubert’s music. In Winterreise, the composer allowed his friends to look more deeply into his heart than ever before, which of course tended to repel sanguine characters like Schober. The ironic refraction and distance of the typical Viennese is here sublated (aufgehoben, in the Hegelian sense). Schubert’s friend Johann Mayrhofer immediately recognised this. For him, the cycle was a symptom of ‘how much more serious the composer became. He had been long and seriously ill, he had gone through disheartening experiences, and life had been stripped of its rosy colour; winter had come for him. The poet’s irony, rooted in despair, had appealed to him; he expressed it in cutting tones.’ The winter and the journey of the title are therefore, in the sense of Romantic irony, to be understood as the winter of life and a journey deeper and deeper into unhappiness, experienced by none other than the composer himself. Hence his feelings are isolated from his environment; they do not expect understanding on the part of his friends. The world of the melancholic is self-centred and hermetic.