By adding Schubert’s Winterresie to her repertoire Alice Coote joins a long tradition of female interpreters including the likes of Christine Schäfer and her own mentor Brigitte Fassbaender. In this performance of Schubert’s great song cycle, however, it was the piano playing of Julius Drake, rather than Coote’s singing, which penetrated to the heart of the work.
There was a compellingly interior quality to Drake’s playing, particularly in the rapt pianissimos, which captured perfectly the sense of melancholy and loss contained in “Frühlingstraum”. Elsewhere, in “Auf dem Flusse” his sound had a biting edge to it and he hurled himself into the more tempestuous numbers with gusto. Coote, however, struggled to find a comparable range of registers and colours, her voice often sounding awkwardly restrained in all but the forte passages. The rare moments where she was able to match Drake’s level of sensitivity were among the most memorable of the evening; her ghostly, yet rich and centred, tone in the final verse of “Der greise Kopf” being particularly striking. “Das Wirthshaus” was another highlight; a daringly slow tempo lent the closing line, “Then onwards, ever onwards”, a sense of onerous weight and dread whilst the piano postlude was imbued with a searing intensity. The pauses between songs were judged to perfection by Drake; “Die Krähe” swooped down almost imperceptibly immediately after the final, leaden, chords of “Der greise Kopf” whilst the brazen emotions of “Mut” were allowed to completely dissipate before the strange and unnerving opening of the penultimate song, “Die Nebensonnen”.