It is one of those strange – but ultimately fortuitous – ironies of history that a set of poems intended to be a satire of the gloomy, luckless romances that burst forth from Europe in the wake of Goethe’s Sorrows of Young Werther should itself become the heartbroken romance par excellence. Such is the case with Franz Schubert’s Die schöne Müllerin, a work surpassed in melancholy introspection only by his final song cycle, Winterreise. Taking as inspiration some nearly two dozen poems by Wilhelm Müller, which poked fun at the lachrymose inclinations of his literary contemporaries, Schubert instead took the poems at their word, shearing from them any remotely ironic nuance, and welded together one of his most personal utterances: one that in the hands of skilled musicians can prove to be nothing short of crushing in its impact.
Schubert was in good hands on Monday night at Disney Hall. Occupying the stage were Matthias Goerne and Christoph Eschenbach, both of them among the finest interpreters of Schubert’s lieder alive today.
It wasn’t merely the individual qualities they possess in abundance that made this recital one that will linger in memory. That Goerne’s intelligent singing and word painting, or Eschenbach’s eloquent pianism should be so deeply satisfying is no shock. But it was their careful interplay, where piano and voice seemed to blend and emerge from each other, and their ability to act as a single instrument on behalf of Schubert that truly was remarkable.