| [ << sopranos ] |
|
Aaltje Noordewier-Reddingius Das is nicht eine
Sängerin wie andere, |
|
*) (That's not a singer like others; that's a phenomenon. Dr. Leopold Schmidt)
These words were written in a Belgian magazine on the occasion of Tinel's "Godelieve" (Leuven 1901). |
| 'Diese Stimme hat in der Vollendung, was eine Stimme nur besitzen kann: Kraft, Farbe, Glanz. Wie von Stahl, und doch wunderbar weich bis in die letzte Höhe kommen die Töne. Der Vortragstil ist von einer edlen Grösze, die kaum zu übertreffen ist.' - A critic in Heidelberg. (This voice ultimately has all that a voice can have: power, colour, lustre. The tones are as if made from steel, and yet wonderfully soft right up to the highest registers. The delivery is of a noble greatness that is hardly surpassable.) |
For
singers the first steps are as difficult as for other people.
The mezzo-soprano Julia Culp told that she was forbidden to sing
along in class 'because her voice was grumbly'. Even stranger
was what happened when the eighteen-year-old Aaltje Reddingius
applied to the Amsterdam School of Music (which had opened its
doors two years earlier) on September 1st, 1886, her birthday.
She was admitted conditionally on probation for a couple of months.
When the Principal, Frans Coenen, and the singing-teacher Johan
Messchaert had heard her sing at the audition, they had had strong
doubts about her capabilities. Never had they admitted such a
small voice to the School of Music. But its clearness had been
surprising and Messchaert thought he had heard something special
in the particular, lustrous sound of a single note. The small
voice with which Aaltje Reddingius presented herself in Amsterdam
originated in her home situation. She had lived with her sickly
mother who suffered from asthma (her father, the Protestant minister
of Deurne, had died young); the children always had to speak
in a soft voice and even when Aaltje sang her little songs for
pleasure she automatically did so with only half her voice. But
three months of hard work under the guidance of Messchaert changed
things. She was freed from her fear to sing aloud and to reach
the highest registers, so that her "angelic voice"
could acquire the great quality that she managed to maintain
for many years. |
|
Her piano playing, however, which she had developed in the
places to which the fatherless family had moved successively,
Helmond and Arnhem (with the conductor, organist and violist
Meyroos), had always been of considerable quality. Hence the
piano-teacher De Pauw, who is mentioned as such in the biographies
of dozens of prominent Dutch musicians, had immediately taken
her on as a student. Aaltje Reddingius continued studying with
him, even when singing had become her main subject. She rose
to performing the fourth piano concerto of Beethoven. As for
the accompaniment of the songs she rehearsed herself or with
her students, she took care of this herself up to a high age.
For some time she thought of studying the violin; she also wanted
to play a wind instrument. Although generally considered to be
the perfect oratorio singer, one-sidedness was not in her line.
For years she was especially known as the soprano in Bach's "Matthäus-Passion",
in the annual performance with Mengelberg, which she missed only
once or twice because of illness. It is a great pity that none
of these performances has been recorded. It would be a mistake to form an impression of the quality
of her singing from the records she made in America in 1926 and
in London in 1929, shortly before her 61st birthday. Technically,
the records made in New York show ignorance of how to handle
a voice that required a large space. The works she recorded under
more favourable circumstances with Anton van der Horst as organist
also failed to do justice to her characteristic timbre, which
so often had been called "not of this world". Because of her performance as first soprano of the delegation representing the Netherlands at the world exhibition for music and theatre in Vienna, she became acquainted with the town to which she would be invited repeatedly in the years thereafter. When the old Eusebius Mandyczewsky, the archivist of the Viennese "Society of Music Lovers", shortly before his death, guided a couple of young Dutchmen around, he asked with interest how Mrs Noordewier was - not Miss Reddingius, because in 1893 Aaltje had married Michiel Noordewier, painter and D. Litt., and thereby a colleague of the composer Alphons Diepenbrock, whom she had met already early in her career. In 1929 Mrs Noordewier moved as singing teacher to Hilversum, to the Beethovenlaan. The house was named "Nieuw Deurne", after her birthplace. In the years directly after her final examinations Aaltje often performed together with men's choirs. In this way she got to know the country - and the country got to know her. Lieder singing alone did not attract her; she preferred to sing with the "Concertgebouw" wind sextet. Nor did she have the ambition to join the opera: once or twice she sang the role of Senta (Wagner), in concert form, and that was it. The Wagner family, however, asked her several times to come to Bayreuth to sing. Cosima Wagner had attended one of her concerts and had said afterwards that she had never heard a singer who seemed so suitable for the roles of Elisabeth, Elsa and even Brünnhilde. |
|
Anton Verhey, Aaltje Noordewier and Pauline de Haan
|
|
When Messchaert could no longer continue singing in the vocal quartet, Aaltje Noordewier and Pauline de Haan went on together as a duo and together with the organist Anton Verhey sang for many more years at church concerts. She had studied Bach's Passion music and his cantatas in depth, but was also interested in composers like Ravel, Roussel, Milhaud, Caplet and Diepenbrock. Just as Pauline de Haan sang most of Diepenbrock's alto solos for the first time, so Aaltje Noordewier could boast most of the premieres of his pieces for soprano. For many years they performed together, a co-operation based on deep mutual respect. In 1913 to their surprise they were invited for a music festival in Leeds. It turned out that Arthur Nikisch, who had to conduct Verdi's Requiem, wanted not to take any risk with the difficult ensembles and had promised to come only on the condition that the two singers would be there. Because of personal circumstances Pauline de Haan had to give up the duo. Aaltje Noordewier continued to give church concerts together with Johan Wagenaar, De Wolf, Phons Dutch, George Robert, Anthon van der Horst, and others.
Bach, Cantate 151 |
|
|
|
(p) 2001 Dutch Divas |