Take the train from Melbourne to Brisbane, for instance, and you’ll see rolling hills dotted with scraggy eucalypts and think, ’That’s a Fred Williams painting!’ You might be listening to Mahler or Brahms or Schubert as you travel, and you might wonder: How does this music fit with these landscapes?
This is precisely the question that Musica Viva Australia’s acclaimed production of A Winter’s Journey seeks to answer. By pairing images of Fred Williams paintings with Schubert’s iconic Winterreise song cycle, director Lindy Hume, tenor Allan Clayton, and pianist Kate Golla take a fresh look at a core piece of Romantic repertoire.
In many ways, Winterreise is the epitome of European Romanticism. Schubert, aware that he was dying of syphilis, chose Wilhelm Müller’s bleak poems and set them almost all in minor keys. The poems describe a desperately unhappy man journeying through a winter landscape on his quest to put a soured love story behind him.
Is the cycle quintessentially European?
’What does that even mean?’ counters Kate Golla. ’I think it’s about emotional turmoil. Of course the aspect of nature is completely woven into the poetry, but I think it’s more about personal reactions to nature, awareness of where you are, and what’s inside and outside your head. And I think it absolutely can translate across any boundaries.’