Babette Hierholzer
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  • Ms. Hierholzer performed the soundtrack and double/stand-in role for Clara Wieck (Natassaja Kinski) in Peter Schamoni's film Spring Symphony, about the life of Robert Schumann.

    ZWICKAUER TAGEBLATI - ZWICKAU, June 19, 1996

    An evening with Babette Hierholzer - "Festival Clara"
    Grand sounds again

    ZWICKAU - A piano recital by Babette Hierholzer formed the latest brilliant concert tn Zwickau's "Festival Clara" series. The soloist recorded the sound-track of the 1981 Schumann film “Spring Symphony” and also stood in for Nastassja Kinski in her role as Clara Wieck-Schumann. On this occasion too – her second appearance in Zwickau - she devoted her talent to works of Robert Schumann’s wife and companion This time, Babette Hierholzer had prepared very special fare indeed: the selfsame. very demanding concert programme that Clara played in London in June 1856, only shortly before Robert died

    The commanding power of Ludwig van Beethoven's "Eroica" variaticns opened the concert. This work was followed by rarities to the German concert platform "Andante cantabile" and "Presto leggiero" by the English composer William Stemdale Bennett, which called to mind Schumann's "hving, sounding landscapes". Appropriately enough, Clara Schumann’s own vanations on a theme by Robert formed the central focus on the evening's programme, in an interpretation that impressively displayed both the poetic and the virtuosic aspects of the composition This applied likewise to the seldom-played and barely-known Sarabande and Gavotte by Johannes Brahms, the autograPh of which is to be found in Zwickau's Robert Schumann luluseum On the other hand, the A malar sonata by Domenico Scarlatti was somewhat less of success, much of its playful magic and transparency going missing. Schumann's "Camaval” resounded with great power of expression, its individual characters and dances assuming almost tangible form in an imaginative and most effective performance.

    The highlight of the evening was, of course, the enswng rededication of the piano upon which the nme-year-old Clara Wieck gave her erst pubbc concert at the Gewandhaus in Leipzig in 1828. After decades of serving merely as a display piece in the Robert Schumann Museum, the piano has now undergone a quite miraculous restoration at the hands of Robert A Brown (Austria) Dressed in appropriate period costume. and in the presence of Brown, Babette Hierholzer played the three Polonaises of Clara's opus 1, gering the audience an opportunity to hear far themselves the tonal excellence the instrument again possesses. E. Moiler

    Translation: Janet & Michael Berridge