The soprano
Véronique Gens is a regular on our stage. She made her debut here as Donna
Elvira (Don Giovanni) and then performed Iphigénie (Iphigénie en Aulide), Roi
Gaële (Alceste), Vitellia (La clemenza di Tito) and, most recently, Madame
Lidoine (Dialogues des Carmélites). She is also a passionate interpreter of
French mélodie.
AFTER A REMARKABLE
PORTRAYAL OF MADAME LIDOINE IN DIALOGUES DES CARMÉLITES AT LA MONNAIE, YOU ARE
RETURNING FOR A NEW RECITAL ON FEBRUARY 11TH 2019.
It’s a recital
devoted entirely to French mélodie, a repertoire that is sufficiently rich to
cover all the variations in atmosphere. I want to avoid performing the
umpteenth version of universally-known song cycles like Banalités and La Courte
paille. I prefer to go off-piste, off the beaten track, so first of all I turn
to Reynaldo Hahn, an all too little known composer whose exceptional qualities
and variety of songs I really relish. There is also music by Gounod, the
melancholy of Duparc, the lightness of Massenet who isn’t perhaps as profound
as Duparc – which makes it difficult to fit him into a recital programme – but
who has a charm all of his own. So as to send the audience home in up-beat
mood, I round off with the popular La Fontaine Fables, which were wittily set
to music by Offenbach. I assure you, French mélodie is so rich in itself that
it is quite unnecessary to add songs by Schubert or Schumann, which I have been
asked to do on occasions.
YOUR PROGRAMME ALSO
INCLUDES A SONG BY PRINCE EDMOND DE POLIGNAC, BETTER KNOWN AS THE HUSBAND OF
ONE OF FRANCE’S GREATEST PATRONS OF AVANT-GARDE CULTURE THAN AS A COMPOSER
TRAINED IN MUNICH AND PARIS.
The ambiance of his
Lamento, to a text by Théophile Gauthier which was used by Berlioz in Les Nuits
d’été under the title Au cimetière, is so special that each time I sing the
composition it takes the audience by surprise. At the request of La Monnaie,
which will shortly be staging the opera Robert le Diable, I have also included
several pieces by Meyerbeer. But that takes us back to the lighter sphere of
romance and ballades, and that means I have to be mindful again of the balance
between the composers. You can’t place Meyerbeer alongside Duparc.
BEFORE CONTACTING
YOU, I RE-READ LA MÉLODIE ET LE LIED BY RÉMY STRICKER (1975). IT SEEMS TO ME THAT
IN THAT PERIOD FRENCH MUSICOLOGY RATED THE MÉLODIE LESS HIGHLY THAN THE LIED.
And yet French
mélodie is full of beautiful things! Many scores have since been published but
they are rarely if ever performed. I am once again drawing on an experience I
had back in the 1990s with the Centre de musique baroque de Versailles, where
baroque music that was gathering dust in libraries was rediscovered. I relived
that process with the Palazzetto Bru Zane in Venice, whose research into French
romantic music put the spotlight back on music that had not been sung since the
nineteenth century.
DID YOU PUT THIS
PROGRAMME TOGETHER WITH THE PALAZZETTO BRU ZANE?
No, this is the
result of research I carried out with my loyal pianist partner Susan Manoff.
First of all we work separately and then we get together to try things out and
decide what gives us the most pleasure to sing and play. Susan Manoff’s
interest in the repertoire of the mélodie goes back a long way and she has a
well-stocked library on the subject.
DOES THIS RECITAL
HAVE A THEME?
It’s all to do with
the desire and pleasure of researching and interpreting a whole variety of
things.
SO DO YOU FEEL MORE
LIKE A NARRATOR-POET OR A SINGER?
Not entirely one or
the other. It is half and half. I don’t sing recitals to display brilliant
vocalism or to perform bel canto. I look for something more intimate, something
simpler, I look for an immediate rapport with the audience. I stand on the
stage to tell a story through sublime texts written by great French poets. And
Susan Manoff’s piano playing helps create the ambiance for me to do that.
AT THE TIME OF THIS
INTERVIEW YOU ARE REHEARSING BERLIOZ' LES TROYENS AT THE OPÉRA BASTILLE
DIRECTED BY DMITRI TCHERNIAKOV. CAN YOU TELL US SOMETHING ABOUT THAT?
No (laughs), except
that it is something grandiose.
AND AFTER THAT?
I will continue in
my role as the ambassador of neglected French music. I have lots of recitals
scheduled. In March I am singing the role of Donna Elvira directed by Antonello
Manacorda at the Wiener Staatsoper, in May I am at the Bozar for an Armide
(Lully) with the Concert Spirituel led by Hervé Niquet. And I am looking
forward to the freedom and joy of Jacques Offenbach’s comic opera Maître
Péronilla which will be at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in June. It will then
be recorded for Bru Zane.
YOU LOVE WALKING IN
THE CITIES WHERE YOU ARE WORKING. WHAT ARE YOUR FAVOURITE PLACES IN BRUSSELS?
Now that I am
working here, I don’t just explore the city at random, but I always like going
along to the Sablon to visit a famous chocolatier, for example, and to the
Saint-Hubert galleries. And in the restaurants I can never resist the real
Belgian soups.
Recorded by Benoit
van Langenhove
https://www.lamonnaie.be/en/mmm-online/1187-veronique-gens
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