Heiner Goebbels/Ensemble Modern/Joseph Bierbichler
Eislermaterial
THE GUARDIAN UNLIMITED (23.08.2002)
Goebbels: Eislermaterial
Hanns Eisler is Heiner Goebbels's musical hero; he keeps a bust of the
east German on his desk when he is composing, a reminder that it was his
encounter with Eisler's works and writings in the early 1970s that got
him into the business in the first place. Goebbels, who was 50 last week,
was studying sociology in Frankfurt when he discovered Eisler, whose ability
to bring together politics and music in a perfectly natural, outward-looking
synthesis, has informed his own music ever since, allowing him to cross
the borders between the avant garde, jazz and rock.
The very first album that Goebbels made was a series of improvisations
upon Eisler's music, and those same works are brought into Eislermaterial,
which is surely his definitive homage. It is an hour-long compilation
of his idol's songs and instrumental pieces, interspersed with Goebbels's
own musical commentary, woven into a spell-binding continuum. In Ensemble
Modern's live performances it has been staged, with the musicians ranged
in an arc around the platform with Goebbels's own bust of Eisler at the
centre, but it is not strictly a music-theatre piece in the dynamic way
that the earlier Black on White and the later Hashirigaki unmistakably
are.
As always with Goebbels, the combination of these different elements is
greater than the sum of its parts - he interlaces Eisler's bittersweet
melodies and biting lyrics (most of them by Brecht) with his own arrangements
and freely invented music worked out in rehearsal with Ensemble Modern.
The opening is totally magical: a wheezy harmonium cranks out the tune
of Eisler's Anmut sparet nicht noch Mühe, then quietly, and totally
without self-parody, the instrumentalists sing the first verse, before
the cracked, achingly nostalgic voice of soloist Josef Bierbichler takes
over. The songs that Bierbichler contributes, with their simple, effective
melodies, contrast with the highly wrought samples of Eisler's instrumental
music - he was after all a Schoenberg pupil - yet everything coheres,
everything is bound together by Goebbels's enthusiasm and his gift for
the most unlikely juxtapositions.
Eislermaterial is simultaneously a tribute, a disinterment and a deconstruction;
but it is also an enchanting and affectionate portrait of one of the most
fascinating and underrated figures in 20th-century music, put together
by one of the most original composers working today.
(Andrew Clements)
THE SCOTSMAN (26.08.2002)
Heiner Goebbels: Eislermaterial
In the same week that Heiner Goebbels's Surrogate Cities receives
its UK premiere at the Edinburgh Festival, ECM has released a new disc
of the 50-year-old's fascinating tribute to Marxist song-writer and
Brecht collaborator Hanns Eisler, Eislermaterial. Festival-goers of two
years ago will recall its haunting impact - songs soaked in the murkiness
of Brechtian Germany, the haunting dry interjection of Eisler's own
voice (filched from recordings), the grizzled combination of actor Josef
Bierbichler and the Ensemble Modern, all stitched together in Goebbels's
magical and thoughtful presentation. Even without the stage element, this
passionate view of Eisler has an irresistible appeal.
(Kenneth Walton / Kenny Mathieson)
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