Venturing into the Paris of the 1910s and 1920s, the Southbank Centre’s The Rest is Noise festival continues its journey through a brambly thicket of 20th-century music. Sunday’s programme focused on the output of Igor Stravinsky, the Russian composer who famously engendered riotous uproar at the Paris Opera House in 1913 with his savage ballet Le sacre du printemps. Yet 100 years after this momentous event, Stravinsky’s music still holds surprises in store for us. Under the directorship of Canadian soprano Barbara Hannigan, this insightful concert featured Stravinsky’s comic chamber opera Renard (1916), three of his folk-inspired chamber pieces, and the cantata-like Socrate (1919) by the eccentric French composer Erik Satie.
It was not only the programme that caused a stir, but also two staged readings given by actress Harriet Walters during the concert. With a script written by the award-winning playwright Timberlake Wertenbaker, we were reconnected to the patron’s voice; a voice that has tended to fall silent in the history of music. Winnaretta Singer (known then to society as the Princesse Edmond de Polignac) was not only the heir to the Singer sewing machine fortune, but also a prolific patron of the arts. Establishing a salon that was to become a sanctuary for avant-garde music in the 1890s, she went on to support some of the leading musicians of the day including Claude Debussy, Gabriel Fauré, Maurice Ravel and members of the Les Six collective. The dry humour and poised intelligence of Wertenbaker’s script was brilliantly animated by Walters’ delivery as Winnaretta, and the concert became not only a celebration of the Parisian avant-garde, but also of a proactive woman.
Opening with the voice and piano version of Satie’s Socrate, the concert saw Hannigan take on her customary role as a soprano. Her partnership with Dutch accompanist Reinbert de Leeuw has already resulted in some excellent performances during this festival and Sunday’s concert was no exception. Satie (nicknamed “the Velvet Gentleman” because of his love of velvet suits) is often perceived as a sharp-penned composer with a taste for sarcastic witticisms. Yet this work, based upon the life, trial and death of the Greek philosopher Socrates, could not have been further removed from such frivolities. Commissioned by Singer, Socrate uses extracts from Victor Cousin’s French translations of Plato’s dialogues, in which the details of Socrates’ death by poisoning are recorded. As a sparse piano part revolves around cycles of chant-like fifths, the vocal line persists in melodious monologue, imparting spiritual truths. When alluding to the swans that sing before their death in “The Death of Socrates”, Hannigan’s voice soared with haunting intensity, while de Leeuw’s accompaniment preserved a breathtaking luminosity of tone.