Quite a bit of attention has been paid lately to an odd account or letter
Schubert penned in 1822, titled by his brother Mein Traum ("My Dream"). Conductor
René Jacobs has made the startling suggestion that the composer's Symphony No. 8 in B minor ("Unfinished") was not unfinished at all and that
Schubert's piece of writing formed a kind of program for it. Now come baritone
Stéphane Degout and conductor
Raphaël Pichon, with the latter's
Ensemble Pygmalion, making
Schubert's account the basis for a kind of dreamlike program exploring the ideas of interruption and disjunction (the booklet essay is a bit impenetrable, but certainly original). The "Unfinished" Symphony is present, although the performers don't go as far as
Jacobs does. Surrounding it are opera arias, song arrangements for orchestra, and some choruses (including the famed Ave Maria, which takes on an entirely new flavor in this context), mostly by
Schubert, with a few by
Schumann and one by
Weber. One advantage of this kind of program is that the 19th century would have found the whole concept quite familiar; genres would freely mix in concert, and the theme of dreams is one common to a great deal of Romantic art. Another is that many of the pieces here are pretty rare;
Schubert's operas, despite manifold points of interest, are not often heard, and
Schumann's Meerfey (No. 5 from Sechs Romanze für Frauenstimme, Op. 69), is a welcome dive into the era's repertory for small chorus. Baritone
Degout, coming at this material with fresh perspectives, offers a semi-operatic feeling in the sequence of recitatives, arias, choruses, and songs, and it is hard to imagine that listeners won't feel some degree of engagement, whatever they may think of the whole idea. ~ James Manheim