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Hermann Prey: King of the Schubertiade
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15924 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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7 / 1989 |
2,199 Words |
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Tom Pniewski Tom Pniewski is a musicologist at Hunter College in New York. |
Baritone Hermann Prey, one of the greatest masters of the German Lied, celebrates his sixtieth birthday on July 11. Yet, at a time of life when many artists consider gracious retirement, Prey is full to the brim with new ideas, new projects, and new enthusiasms. Franz Schubert is central to most of them, and it is probably to Schubert and his more than eight hundred songs that Prey owes much of his youthful vigor.
"No other composer offers the variety that Schubert does," the singer commented to me in a recent interview. "Any other composer seems limited by comparison; you hear a minute or so of music, and you know right away who it is. But with Schubert you hear someone who is always growing, always developing.
"When I was a student, I used to think that Schubert was too simple; like everyone else at the time, I admired the great Romantics, such as Brahms and Wolf, who seemed more intellectual. It took a while to appreciate Schubert's wonderful simplicity and economy. He can do things with a single note, a single change of chord, that take other composers five or six times as long."
Prey likes to tell of singing the Schubert song cycle Winterreise (Winter's journey) at a concert in Nice, France, some years ago, when the late Marc Chagall was in the audience. "He came up to me after the concert," recalls Prey, "obviously very moved by the music. 'Monsieur Prey,' he said, in his polyglot mix of languages, 'Beethoven und Mozart sind Genie, aber Schubert ist ein Wunder.'" (Beethoven and Mozart are geniuses, but Schubert is a wonder.)
Prey's
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