Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Schubert's Winter Journey by Ian Bostridge, book review: Kindred spirits on a poetic quest

Ian Bostridge has turned his obsession with Schubert into an exquisite memoir

Rebecca K. Morrison
Thursday 08 January 2015 17:10 GMT
Comments
Musical guide to a cold season: a winter's day
Musical guide to a cold season: a winter's day (Getty Images)

When Franz Schubert died aged 31 in Vienna in 1828, a year after the death of his hero, Beethoven, his deathbed contained the reading that had brought some distraction – a James Fenimore Cooper novel – and the proofs of Winterreise, his setting of 24 poems by Wilhelm Müller, a work of art which continues to enthral and fascinate. Schubert was not a revolutionary – although acutely politically aware – but his settings of poetry undoubtedly were.

The tenor and, it transpires, fine writer Ian Bostridge is a great guide to the mysterious winter-scape and supreme symbiosis of word and music, the marrying and tussling of piano and vocal lines, which Schubert took to hitherto unimaginable musical and emotional planes. Bostridge's engaging mélange of memoir, cultural history, close musical reading, glimpses of biography and wide-reaching examples of the ripple effect of Winterreise's influence on writers, composers, historians, and thinkers ever since – including Beckett, Benjamin Britten, Djuna Barnes, Paul Auster, Thomas Mann, and Slavoj Žižek – makes a strong case for Winterreise being as deserving of a place in our common experience "as the poetry of Shakespeare and Dante, the paintings of Van Gogh and Pablo Picasso, the novels of the Brontë sisters or Marcel Proust".

Bostridge's own "obsession" spans three decades, each performance an individual journey (as befits the "Everyman" quality of Schubert's dropping of Müller's definite article in the title), audience, venue – a Moscow ice-storm particularly evocative – and keyboard companion vital ingredients.

Taking each song as a chapter and springboard, he explores the context and times Müller and Schubert were working in, unearthing remarkable details along the way, from a cultural history of tears, to early photographs of snowflakes, the last days of charcoal-burning as a profession, to 19th-century understanding of natural phenomena such as Ignis fatuus (will-o'-the-wisp) and "mock suns", the linden tree in German lore, to Goethe on glaciers.

He unpacks a possible backstory. Could this wanderer in a hostile, frozen landscape, where dreams of a thaw and springtime are just that, illusion, have been a private tutor, à la Rousseau's La Nouvelle Héloïse, a familiar post still for the early-19th-century intelligentsia (Schlegel, Fichte, and Hölderlin were all tutors), ousted from the home of a moneyed daughter beyond his station – a pertinent subject at this time of restrictive Hapsburg marriage laws? Perhaps.

But Bostridge also allows much of the cycle's mysterious nature to rest unpicked, "absence" in the Byronic sense of displacement as much a character as winter. And winters were extreme then: frozen rivers, ice-flowers, the shifting ice of the Baltic's surface the norm, the mightiness and transience of nature omnipresent.

Some words redolent of German Romanticism are lingered over, such as "fremd", the cycle's opening utterance, with its associations of "stranger", "alienation" and "otherness", significant after the passionate fervour of Napoleon's heyday in Europe, and what came after in Metternich's Austria of censorship and restriction, elsewhere, too, a time of stifled nationalism. Or "Einsamkeit" with its Romantic ambivalence of "solitude" and "loneliness", conjuring up images of Caspar David Friedrich paintings, imperative to an understanding of Schubert, Bostridge argues.

Some of the writing on music is exquisite and revealing. How true that the moments in the major key are sadder than the minor: "dreams of happiness, cast in the major key, [are] all the more heart-breaking for it". Or: "the gentle rustling… itself gently interrupted by horn calls, the Romantic sound par excellence, the call of the past, of memory, sensuality at a distance".

In his diary of 1815, Müller wrote: "But courage! Perhaps there is a kindred spirit somewhere who will hear the tunes behind the words and give them back to me." He was never to hear Schubert's settings, but Bostridge leaves us in no doubt that Schubert succeeded beyond Müller's wildest dreams.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in