{"id":24,"date":"2015-11-05T11:17:55","date_gmt":"2015-11-05T11:17:55","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/stefanlitwin.eu\/wp\/?page_id=24"},"modified":"2022-11-22T17:13:51","modified_gmt":"2022-11-22T17:13:51","slug":"rezensionen","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/stefanlitwin.com\/en\/pianist\/rezensionen\/","title":{"rendered":"Rewiews"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"pl-24\"  class=\"panel-layout\" ><div id=\"pg-24-0\"  class=\"panel-grid panel-no-style\" ><div id=\"pgc-24-0-0\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell panel-grid-cell-empty\" ><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pg-24-1\"  class=\"panel-grid panel-no-style\" ><div id=\"pgc-24-1-0\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-1-0-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"0\" ><h3 class=\"widget-title\">Clear the ring for a whiner<\/h3><div class=\"textwidget\"><hr \/>\n<p>\u00a0Staatstheater Braunschweig plays the opera premiere of \"How Mr. Mockinpott's suffering is expelled\" by Stefan Litwin<\/p>\n<p>\u2026 The focus is on the sad clown, our Mockinpott, whom Zacharias N. Karithi makes a popular figure despite all the laziness. Which is due to his lovable playing, but of course also to his so comfortably warm and powerful baritone voice, with which he is allowed to sing melodically according to Litwin's template. The way he complains about every rejection again and again in uncomprehending solitude and promptly throws himself hopefully into the next adventure, that also touches on his good-natured unteachability. It's all the sadder that the doctor has operated on his crying away and from then on he can only giggle and speak, no longer sing.<br \/>\nLitwin's decision to show his loss of humanity in this way is already the dramaturgical crunch point for Weiss: that without this center of human emotion he should come to a wiser point in the end. That may still be the old reflex against emotion and pity in the Brecht theater, but if Mockinpott is robbed of his humanity from then on, became part of the machine, a puppet, how can he then still gain spiritual insight? How is he supposed to sing the \"Internationale\"? After all, he goes off dancing, maybe in search of a new voice.<br \/>\nWith a lot of percussion, blasts of wind and plucked strings, Litwin drives the action forward. There is always a characteristic variety, whether cowbells profane the angelic song of the four choristers, a fraudulent waltz sounds on the occasion of adultery or the national anthem under the government gossip. It gets shrill when the dog barks or the sound bars and flute yell for the nasty surgery. Alexis Agrafiotis keeps his \u00bbcircus orchestra\u00ab together precisely behind the gauze curtain.<br \/>\nBut Litwin lets us feel that without the singing human voice, the whole circus of life is missing the crucial point. How much we would have liked to hear the liberated singing at the end. But, well, dialectics of the political show booth: sing yourselves free!<\/p>\n<p><em>Andreas Berger, Braunschweiger Zeitung, March 7, 2022\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pgc-24-1-1\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-1-1-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"1\" ><h3 class=\"widget-title\">Mr. Mockinpott&#8217;s knee is still reliable<\/h3><div class=\"textwidget\"><hr \/>\n<p>Rarely thought of in this way: the Staatstheater Braunschweig premieres the music theater work \u00bbHow Mr. Mockinpott's suffering is expelled\u00ab by Stefan Litwin based on Peter Weiss.<\/p>\n<p>... Stefan Litwin has transformed this Hanswurstiade into a subtle music theater that has now premiered at the Staatstheater Braunschweig - Litwin's second Weiss adaptation after the moritat \u00bbNacht mitGUeste\u00ab in Saarbr\u00fccken in 2016.<br \/>\nWeiss and Litwin are spiritual relatives in their orientation towards Bertolt Brecht, but it is only with Litwin's pointed music that the deliberately awkward text in Knittelversen finds its higher artistic character. The individually challenged ensemble of fifteen instrumentalists under the direction of Alexis Agrafiotis has the main task, because for each of the eleven scenes the cast, style and character vary as in a higher-level puzzle, everything in rapid succession. The operation scene, for example, is accompanied by deep palpitations and dizzying music without (harmonic) reason. In the picture \u00bbBeside the Government\u00ab, parodies of the march and scraps of the Deutschlandlied appear, the music alternates between rhythmic bustle and surreal emptiness. Before that, a grotesque waltz, the short epiphany of a string quartet or a dull contrabassoon for Mockinpott's rival (Benjamin Kaygun) ironize the action, later a concertante trombone will take over the voice of God - here wonderfully smug as an old woman in a fur coat at the walker (Julia Suzanne Buchmann, too as Mockinpott's wife). With the cowbells, the four angels also have a leading instrument that illustrates their rattling tin wings. They are also the only protagonists allowed to sing alongside Mockinpott, a recurring \u00bbMiserere\u00ab in the weird \u00bbold\u00ab style. Mockinpott himself only sings until his operation - after which he can only croak and giggle. Zachariah N. Kariithi not only ennobles the title role with a warm, lyrically flowing baritone, but also as an actor who brings the ridiculous type of simpleton into the character field and finds in the audience what they are looking for in vain on stage: compassion. But in his hopeless attempts to put the right shoe on the right foot without ever becoming impatient or even angry, one would gladly come to him for help. Only at the end does he find out when he has learned to walk (away). ...<\/p>\n<p><em>Lotte Thaler, FAZ, March 9, 2022<\/em><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-size: 16px;\"><\/span><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pgc-24-1-2\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-1-2-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"2\" ><div class=\"textwidget\"><\/div><\/div><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pg-24-2\"  class=\"panel-grid panel-no-style\" ><div id=\"pgc-24-2-0\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-2-0-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"3\" ><h3 class=\"widget-title\">Balancing on a Razor Blade<\/h3><div class=\"textwidget\"><hr \/>\n<p>Premiere of \u00bbNacht mit Gaesten\u00ab by Stefan Litwin at the Hochschule f\u00fcr Musik Saar<\/p>\n<p>A dark piece of music theatre based on a theatre piece by Peter Weiss just enjoyed a magnificent premiere \u2013 at a federal German school of music. First of all, mention must be made here of Stefan Litwin\u2019s artistic decision to provide a late \u2018delivery\u2019 of something that author Peter Weiss had hoped for in vain. Namely, a piece of music for \u00bbNacht mit Gaesten\u00ab that is neither an illustration nor plays like a barrel organ, but that rather is, first of all, carefully composed down to the last detail and, secondly, is instrumentally oriented towards the bustling fair, the clattering travelling theatre.<\/p>\n<p>Stefan Litwin has delivered all this with an ensemble structure that is permeated with instrumental theatrical gesticulations, with scratching and scraping noises, strained accents, exploding vocal lines. Most recently appearing at the Beethoven festival in Bonn as a splendid pianist and composer in his own right, he has with this music theatre piece added a new jewel to his always stimulating, ever ambitious compository oeuvre. One could also say: a piece of resistance aesthetics. Resistance no longer strictly in Weiss\u2019 but in the sense of it strengthening our will to survive in a new other violent environment. This is, roughly speaking, the composer\u2019s point.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><em>Georg Beck, <br \/>nmz 27.10.2016<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pgc-24-2-1\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-2-1-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"4\" ><h3 class=\"widget-title\">New Qualities<\/h3><div class=\"textwidget\"><hr \/>\n<p>Stefan Litwin\u2019s \u00bbNacht mit Gaesten\u00ab based on Peter Weiss' 'Street Ballad' of the same name.<\/p>\n<p>In Litwin\u2019s version, the whole thing gains new qualities, in particular because the score fulfils Weiss\u2019 wish to have a 'thorough composition' rather than merely accidental stage music. There are hardly any pretty melodies or \u2018songs\u2019 in the traditional sense such as in Weill or Eisler\u2019s work, yet much that is expressive, characteristic. Sounds reminiscent of jazz, L\u00e4ndler (a folk dance in \u00be time) and tango and countless more or less hidden citations from Schubert, Chopin, Brahms, Wagner, Mahler and Eisler further impart and substantiate. ...<\/p>\n<p>The music is consciously anti-psychologizing, and the coherent, convincing stage set and scenic action deliberately anti-naturalistic, corresponding with dramatic processes and text.<br \/>\nAnd finally, the two-dimensional props show the gloom in a geometric\/symbolic fashion (stage set and costumes: Annette Wolf). Face paints evoke Japanese Kabuki theatre. Analogue to the virtuously rhythmic speech are the elaborate, well and truly choreographed and similarly rhythmic gestures (director: Frank W\u00f6rner, voice professor at the Hochschule f\u00fcr Musik Saar).<\/p>\n<p><em>Hanns-Werner Heister,<br \/>\nNeue Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Musik, 1\/2017<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pgc-24-2-2\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-2-2-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"5\" ><h3 class=\"widget-title\">Sharpened Knives<\/h3><div class=\"textwidget\"><hr \/>\n<p>Litwin\u2019s \u00bbNacht mit Gaesten\u00ab is based entirely on the text, which is transformed into inflected speech. This rhythmic language not only ensures a maximum text comprehension but also encourages a consistently sustained swift pace. The orchestra consists of seven musicians \u2013 all excellent students attending the Saarbr\u00fccken University of Music \u2026<\/p>\n<p>The following characters appear in Annette Wolf\u2019s proscenium stage with its distorted perspective: father, mother, two daughters and two mysterious, sinister guests who kill each other at the end in a scene involving also instrumentally sharpened knives. The children are the only protagonists surviving this night with guests. Unmoved, they leave the bloody scene as full orphans \u2026<\/p>\n<p>Director Frank W\u00f6rner, who heads a voice class at the Saarbr\u00fccken University of Music, also staged the piece with very young students who brilliantly integrated themselves into the extremely physical, gestural puppet theatre, partly as comic figures, marionettes and silent film actors. \u2026<\/p>\n<p>The premiere in Saarbr\u00fccken is, in any event, a discovery of Peter Weiss for music. All of the smaller stages should now start trying to snag it.<\/p>\n<p><em>Lotte Thaler, <\/em><br \/>\n<em>SWR2, 24.10.2016<\/em><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pg-24-3\"  class=\"panel-grid panel-no-style\" ><div id=\"pgc-24-3-0\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-3-0-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"6\" ><div class=\"textwidget\"><p><img src=\"http:\/\/stefanlitwin.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2015\/11\/Litwin_Stefan_playing-e1493806441310-975x1024.jpg\" alt=\"Litwin_Stefan_playing\" width=\"962\" height=\"1010\" class=\"alignnone size-large wp-image-933\" \/><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pgc-24-3-1\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-3-1-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"7\" ><h3 class=\"widget-title\">Technical Brilliance<\/h3><div class=\"textwidget\"><hr \/>\n<p>The second piano sonata by Ives, \u00bbConcord, Mass. 1840-1860\u00ab, a key work on the intellectual center of New England's Transcendentalism, is a hypercomplex piece that really demands a man with two brains and three hands.<\/p>\n<p>Stefan Litwin mastered it as if it were the simplest thing in the world: complementing each other in ideal manner were technical brilliance, musical understanding, a sure sense of construction, and a kind of actor's art of transformation in the often abrupt changes in the heterogeneous layers of material and mood. <\/p>\n<p>But what is decisive is the seriousness with which Litwin plumbs the dignity of expression of the individual characters. Litwin plays nothing that he hasn't understood, and he seems to know at every moment what he wants to \u00bbsay\u00ab musically. <\/p>\n<p><em>Julia Spinola,<br \/>\nFrankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pg-24-4\"  class=\"panel-grid panel-no-style\" ><div id=\"pgc-24-4-0\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-4-0-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"8\" ><h3 class=\"widget-title\">As if Beethoven Himself Sat at the Piano<\/h3><div class=\"textwidget\"><hr \/>\n<p>A Revelation: Stefan Litwin at the Schauspielhaus <\/p>\n<p>Precisely what is special about this evening casts a dismal light on concert routine: Beethoven's Piano Concert No. 1, this time played, not by a pianist, but by a musician.<br \/>\nStefan Litwin is his name, and in his performance with the Berlin Symphony Orchestra and Gielen he does just about everything differently from the hundreds of piano laborers whose Beethoven presentations usually resemble each other as much as one tuxedo the other. [...] <\/p>\n<p>His playing of Beethoven is a revelation that need not fear comparison with Rattle's \u00bbPastoral\u00ab of last week, whose primary characteristics \u2013 the exploration of historical performance practice and the fusion of a thoroughly calculated artistic statement with the (seeming) spontaneity of the moment \u2013 also define Litwin's playing: staccato playing, transparent sound, and the balance of registers with a crisp, rhythmically vibrant bass, take us to the present directly from the forte-piano of Beethoven's era; Litwin colors them with magnificently rich Steinway tone. <\/p>\n<p>One can almost believe Beethoven himself were sitting at the piano, so fresh and improvisational does Litwin's playing sound. <\/p>\n<p><em>J\u00f6rg K\u00f6nigsdorf, Der Tagesspiegel, Berlin<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pgc-24-4-1\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-4-1-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"9\" ><h3 class=\"widget-title\">New Land Beyond Romanticism<\/h3><div class=\"textwidget\"><hr \/>\n<p>Michael Gielen and Stefan Litwin in the Alte Oper <\/p>\n<p>His interpretation of Beethoven\u2019s C minor concerto was downright sensational: with Litwin, not a nebulous \u203aromantic\u2039 virtuoso concerto, but crystal-clear \u203achamber music with piano\u2039. [...] <\/p>\n<p>The concept of the Beethoven solo concert must be reconsidered - and Litwin and Gielen provide an exemplary occasion for this. <\/p>\n<p><em>Hans-Klaus Jungheinrich,<br \/>\nFrankfurter Rundschau<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pgc-24-4-2\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-4-2-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"10\" ><h3 class=\"widget-title\">Wars of Liberation, Black on White<\/h3><div class=\"textwidget\"><hr \/>\n<p>Stefan Litwin analyzes and plays Ludwig van Beethoven's C Major Piano Concert<\/p>\n<p>For Litwin, interpreting means, in the emphatic sense, explicating - musically as well as in words. This is why he loves and cultivates the lecture-recital form already practiced by Walter Levin and Charles Rose. Everyone who has ever experienced Litwin on the stage knows that he is a brilliant speaker. But that his lectures are as stirring as they are illuminating is because nothing in them is learned ornamentation; all of it is argumentation.<\/p>\n<p>Nothing makes the inherent life and expressive overflowing of the works clearer than Litwin's own musical interpretation of the C major concert. The conflicts of the first movement, its melting utopia of freedom, and the yearning romance of the middle movement with its touching waltz episode, which on this recording is finally played out in a \"Viennese\" manner, as well as the Janissary music of the concluding rondo, which are full of willfullnesses - in Litwin's recording, all of this takes on a plasticity, forcefulness, and eloquence that makes all interpretive theory suddenly seem pale again. What more could one want?<\/p>\n<p><i>Julia Spinola,<br \/>\nFrankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung<\/i><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pg-24-5\"  class=\"panel-grid panel-no-style\" ><div id=\"pgc-24-5-0\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-5-0-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"11\" ><h3 class=\"widget-title\">Superior Perfectionist<\/h3><div class=\"textwidget\"><hr \/>\n<p>Stefan Litwin, who carried out the gigantic piano sonata by Jean Barraqu\u00e9, proved himself a superior perfectionist. Without palpable involvement or effort, but with inexorable precision, he worked through the demanding 45-minute opus.<\/p>\n<p><em>Albrecht D\u00fcmling,<br \/>\nFrankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pgc-24-5-1\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-5-1-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"12\" ><h3 class=\"widget-title\">Hommage \u00e0 Pierre Boulez<\/h3><div class=\"textwidget\"><hr \/>\n<p>This Mexico City-born specialist for New Piano Music achieved something enormous; especially with the \u00bbNotations\u00ab and the sonata by Boulez he was a master of balanced execution at the keyboard not weighted by hands. Much of Boulez, for example the second movement of the sonata or some of the twelve-measure pieces, demands a machine-like precision as with Ligeti, yet Litwin paired this manual skill even with unbelievable elegance and smoothness. <\/p>\n<p>He must be a pianist completely to Pierre Boulez' taste: clean and painstaking in dealing with sounds, precise to hard in his touch, calm, even easy-going on questions of form. And completely himself, without any extravagance. <\/p>\n<p><em>Stefan Schickhaus, Main-Echo<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><div id=\"pgc-24-5-2\"  class=\"panel-grid-cell\" ><div id=\"panel-24-5-2-0\" class=\"so-panel widget widget_black-studio-tinymce widget_black_studio_tinymce panel-first-child panel-last-child\" data-index=\"13\" ><h3 class=\"widget-title\">For a Few Fingers More<\/h3><div class=\"textwidget\"><hr \/>\n<p>On the world premiere of Michael Gielen's \u00bbrecycling der glocken\u00ab (recycling the bells) in Berlin <\/p>\n<p>The pianistic added value can hardly be grasped. Sometimes it sounds, and looks, as if the pianist, already facing a great challenge for a virtuoso, would have to grow another five to ten fingers. <\/p>\n<p>Stefan Litwin is not only one of the few thinking pianists who know how to bridle, including technically, such a \u00bbwarhorse\u00ab. Around this spectacular world premiere he also arranged one of his intelligent programs, in which cross-references are as meaningful as they are rich in leaps in knowledge. <\/p>\n<p><em>Eleonore B\u00fcning,<br \/>\nFrankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div><\/div><\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p class=\"excerpt\">\u00a0Staatstheater Braunschweig plays the opera premiere of &#8220;How Mr. Mockinpott&#8217;s suffering is expelled&#8221; by Stefan Litwin \u2026 The focus is on the sad clown, our Mockinpott, whom Zacharias N. Karithi makes a popular figure despite all the laziness. Which is due to his lovable playing, but of course also to his so comfortably warm and powerful baritone voice, with which&hellip;<\/p>\n<p class=\"more-link-p\"><a class=\"btn btn-default\" href=\"https:\/\/stefanlitwin.com\/en\/pianist\/rezensionen\/\">Read more<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":7,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/stefanlitwin.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/24"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/stefanlitwin.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/stefanlitwin.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stefanlitwin.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stefanlitwin.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=24"}],"version-history":[{"count":48,"href":"https:\/\/stefanlitwin.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/24\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1468,"href":"https:\/\/stefanlitwin.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/24\/revisions\/1468"}],"up":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stefanlitwin.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/7"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/stefanlitwin.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=24"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}