2011.10.27 – Herbst Theatre, San Francisco: Malcolm Martineau
Recital
27 October 2011
Herbst Theatre, San Francisco
Simon Keenlyside (baritone)
Malcolm Martineau (piano)
Gustav Mahler:
Ich atmet’ einen linden Duft!
Des Antonius von Padua Fischpredigt
Ich ging mit Lust durch einen grünen Wald
Blicke mir nicht in die Lieder
Frühlingsmorgen
Liebst du um Schönheit
Wer hat dies Liedlein erdacht
George Butterworth:
A Shropshire Lad (1st set only)
Loveliest of trees
When I was one-and-twenty
Look not into my eyes
Think no more, lad
The lads in their hundreds
Is my team ploughing?
Interval
Richard Strauss:
Winternacht
Waldesfahrt
Das Rosenband
Befreit
Epheu
Ständchen
Henri Duparc:
Le Manoir de Rosemonde
Phidylé
Claude Debussy:
Nuit d’étoiles
Voici que le printemps
Les Angélus
Mandoline
Encores:
1. Der Einsame (Schubert)
2. Sea Fever (Ireland)
3. Sprig of Thyme (Grainger)
4. An mein Klavier (Schubert)
What the critics say
The opera tattler.com, 29.10.2011
San Francisco Performances’ 2011-2012 recital series continued with baritone Simon Keenlyside (pictured left, photograph by Ben Ealovega) accompanied by pianist Malcolm Martineau last night. There were programs this time, and all the texts were provided. As it happened, the recital was so gripping that it was quite difficult to even look at the words. Keenlyside’s diction is crystal clear, whether singing in German, English, or French. Likewise, Martineau’s playing is very clean without being dry or boring. The evening began with 7 songs from Mahler. “Frühlingsmorgen” was funny and “Liebst du um Schönheit” quite beautiful. Keenlyside sounds very comfortable, but his movements are rather idiosyncratic, and he does not quite what to do with his hands, it seems. The Mahler was followed by the first set of George Butterworth’s songs based on poems from A Shropshire Lad. Keenlyside introduced the songs by asking us not to write them off as “English pastoral frippery,” noting Housman’s poems deal with mortality and became popular during the Second Boer War. The songs are rather dark, “Is my team ploughing?” is particularly distressing, and both singer and pianist pulled these songs off brilliantly.
After the intermission we heard 6 songs from Richard Strauss. The words were all enunciated perfectly, and “Befreit” was especially transparent and lovely. The program ended with songs of Duparc and Debussy, of these, perhaps “Phidylé” was most impressive. The 4 encores were Schubert’s “Der Einsame,” Ireland’s “Sea Fever,” Grainger’s “Sprig of Thyme,” and Schubert’s “An Mein Klavier.” All were sung and played with the vibrancy and freshness that characterized the entire performance.
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