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On September 9 1960 the newstands of Stockholm were plastered with the news
“Jussi död i morse” (Jussi dead this morning). It is rare for newspapers to call an opera
singer by his Christian name, but then Björling's relationship with Sweden was a very special
one. It had begun forty-five years earlier, when his father David Björling - also a tenor -
decided to take little Jussi (born on February 5, 1911) on tour with his brothers Gösta and
Olle. The “Björling Male Quartet” could not fail to win audiences over, with the boys dressed
in traditional costumes singing music (including compositions by David Björling and the Swedish
national anthem) calculated to move. Yet the quartet's survival for twelve years (they remained
active until 1927, a year after the father's death), and the success of their United States
tour (during which they made six acoustic recordings for Columbia) were attributable to less
ephemeral qualities: the uniqueness of the “Björling sound” that the boys had inherited from
their father and grandfather, and the superior quality of their musical and vocal training,
described by David in a booklet entitled “How to Sing”.
David Björling had studied at the
Metropolitan School in New York at the beginning of the century and then at the Vienna
conservatory, and was prevented from having a successful operatic career only by his obstinate
character. Once, during an argument, he went so far as to kick Count Hans von Stedingk, the
manager of Stockholm’s Royal Opera, in the backside. It was thanks however to his training that
Jussi (after completing his studies with the baritone John Forsell) was able to enter that same
company when he was just nineteen years old, and to make his debut in 53 of his 55 roles in the
time span of nine seasons. Only Des Grieux in Manon
Lescaut and Don Carlo were added later (together
with Calaf, performed only on record).
In 1938, after his first United States
tour (as an adult), Björling left the company, but continued to sing at the Stockholm Royal
Opera every year (excepting 1949) until his death. Most of his career in fact was divided
between the United States and Sweden, with much briefer visits (often only for recitals) to
other countries. He sang in Italy (Florence and Milan) during the 1943, 1946 and 1951 seasons;
at the Vienna State Opera in 1936-37 and at Covent Garden in 1939 and 1960.
Björling was no less
precocious in his recording career, which until the invention of the LP was entirely confined
to Sweden. As early as October 1929 he signed a contract with Skandinaviska Grammophon, that
represented His Master's Voice in Stockholm, and in the years that followed he recorded with
them regularly, first for the Swedish market alone (a number of recordings of popular songs
were sold under the pseudonym Erik Odde), then - from 1936 onwards - for the international
market (with arias sung in the original language). In the 1950's on the other hand, Björling
did most of his recording in the United States and Italy, making several complete opera sets
(ten in all, plus the Verdi Requiem), almost all of them for RCA, which up to 1957 was linked
to EMI. He never entirely stopped recording in Sweden, however, and his final Swedish
recordings (1957, 1959) can be heard , together with 85 other recordings made in Stockholm
between 1930 and 1953 (including all those originally made for the international label) and
four selections recorded in London (1952) with Ivor Newton at the piano, in the EMI anthology
entitled “The Jussi Björling Edition”: An edition that includes a booklet with exemplary essays
by Harald Henrysson - Curator of the Jussi Björling Museum in Borlänge in Sweden and author of
“A Jussi Björling Phonography” distributed by the Amadeus Press - and English translations of
the Swedish songs.
These recordings confirm the tenor's
exceptional vocal reliability throughout thirty years of adult career. The 1959 recordings
reveal much the same beauty of timbre and flexibility heard in those made in 1930: the slight
loss of freshness being compensated by a more solid production of the voice. This vocal
longevity may seem less exceptional if one recalls that Luciano Pavarotti (whose voice is
similar to Björling's in color and volume) was capable of singing with almost equal
accomplishment at the age of sixty. Pavarotti however made his debut at the age of 26, and
enlarged his repertoire very gradually, while at the same age Björling had already sung the
following roles: Don Ottavio, Almavava, Arnoldo, Nemorino, Lensky, Radamès, Tonio, Turiddu,
Canio, Pinkerton, Florestan, Dick Johnson, Lionel, Il Duca di Mantova, Roméo, Narraboth,
Cavaradossi, Alfredo, Manrico, Tamino, Erik, Riccardo and the Fausts of Gounod, Boïto and
Berlioz (I have omitted the less important ones!). In the final years of his career, moreover,
he suffered from a serious form of heart disease. He often experienced alarming palpitations
during performances, and in March 1960 he had a heart attack shortly before the beginning of a
performance of La bohème at Covent Garden - which he courageously sang in spite of everything.
He also suffered from alcoholism, alternating throughout his adult life between colossal
drinking bouts and periods of semi-abstinence. This problem caused considerable unhappiness
within his family (as his wife has testified in her superb biography of her husband written
together with Andrew Farkas and published in 1996 by Amadeus Press), but had relatively little
influence on the singer's professional behaviour. When, in the winter of 1953-54, Björling was
forced to cancel many engagements, including the Toscanini recording of
Un ballo in maschera, the cause - in spite of rumors to the contrary - was a persistent
laryngitis. And it was his weak heart and not his drinking - as record producer John
Culshaw claimed - that accentuated the misunderstandings that led to the interruption of
another recording of Un ballo in
maschera (that conducted by Georg Solti) in
1960.
The fact that
Björling was able to cope with an extraordinarily heavy repertoire in his youth and sing
impeccably even when his health was undermined is a tribute to his exceptional musicality and
technique. Kurt Bendix, who conducted him many times at the Stockholm Royal Opera, stated that
the tenor was practically incapable of making a mistake: “he was the kind of vocal and musical
genius one is lucky to meet once in a lifetime.” The composer Sibelius (whose music Björling
found singularly congenial) also described him as a “genius.” And Nils Grevillius, who
conducted 275 of the performances sung by Björling in Stockholm and 81 of the 94 pieces
included in the “Björling Edition,” likened his control of his voice to “a Kreisler on the
violin, a Casals on the cello.” The English tenor Joseph Hislop - who helped Björling with the
placement of his extreme upper register at the beginning of his career - said that he “got as
much out of one single lesson as an average singer after six months instruction…His musical
taste, his phrasing, and feeling for rhythm reminded me of the violinist Jascha Heifetz's
playing.” One of the tenor's friends, Gösta Kjellertz, has spoken of his “incredible coloratura
technique, fully comparable to the greatest instrumentalists” - and further evidence of his
vocal flexibility has been revealed by his wife Anna-Lisa (herself a singer) who recalls his
vocalizing up to G above top C, and a performance in Stockholm during which he calmly
terminated an aria in falsetto for a soprano who had a fish bone stuck in her
throat.
On record I have not found examples of
Björling's falsetto, and his florid singing does not go beyond a fluent “Il mio tesoro” and a
brilliant cadenza at the end of “La donna è mobile.” The highest note recorded is the brilliant
top D flat that crowns one of his most joyful and exultant performances: “Ich hab’ kein Geld”
from Der Bettelstudent (sung in Swedish). Overall however the opinions quoted are fully
confirmed by what we hear on disc.
Of all 20th century tenors, Björling is
the one who possessed the most perfectly balanced combination of a voice of unmistakable beauty
(sufficiently ample and wide-ranging to cope with a vast repertoire), exceptional musicality
and technical assurance. If one judges tenors by these three criteria only Caruso and Pavarotti
can be considered of comparable stature. The former however - in possession of an incomparably
rich and suggestive timbre (in whose thrall Björling was to remain throughout his life) - lost
in the last ten years of his career that ease of dynamic modulation which Björling maintained
until his final concert with orchestra, recorded live a month before he died (it includes an
unforgettable excerpt from Lohengrin; a role he never performed
complete). Compared to Pavarotti, Björling's musical instincts were less fallible, his command
of the mezza voce and register break more assured (without those tight sounds that the
Italian tenor sometimes produces). At this point one might object that even Björling's voice
production seems to lack spontaneity alongside that of Beniamino Gigli, who possessed a still
more luxuriant timbre. No one would dream however (I hope) of comparing the musicality of Gigli
with that of the 20th century's greatest instrumentalists.
This unique combination of qualities
does not however automatically make Björling the greatest tenor of the century. As often
happens with naturally gifted singers, his interpretative talent was not always brought fully
and imaginatively into play. He did not like rehearsing, and both his singing and acting could
seem at times simply “competent and businesslike” (to quote a review of a London recital in
1937, which could equally be applied to the Bohème duet filmed with Renata
Tebaldi in the mid-1950's), while on other occasions - in operas such as
Manon Lescaut - he left “his heart and his blood on the stage” (Regina
Resnik).
His first operatic recordings made in
1930 – “Ah! lève-toi, soleil!” and “Questa o quella” - reveal scholastic phrasing and an
occasionally unfinished technique (understandable in a 19 year-old). But the timbre is unique
in its silvery overtones, and he already possesses such bel canto requisites as evenness of
tone throughout the range and a natural feeling for legato. It is one of those rare voices that
seem to adorn even the tritest of melodies (such as Idabelle Firestone's songs in the famous TV
programs now available on video); the sound blending bewitchingly with the accompanying
instruments.
If then we move on to
his first operatic recordings in the original language (1936), we encounter a supremely
confident performer, perhaps already aware of having few rivals on the world's stages. I do not
believe in fact that any other tenor in that period could have achieved in “Celeste Aida” such
a perfect combination of purity of line (the legato is impeccable, the breath spans long and
the breathing imperceptible), translucent beauty of timbre and dynamic control, even though
Björling does not attempt the morendo on the final high B
flat (many years later he regretted not attempting it on the complete recording made with Jonel
Perlea). His diction moreover is excellent, and his pronunciation decidedly good. Björling's
highly musical ear enabled him in fact to reproduce Italian vowel sounds most convincingly,
though consonants caused him occasional problems. The passing errors of pronunciation that can
be heard in many of his recordings rarely disturb the listener (Bruno Bartoletti, who conducted
him in Trovatore, Tosca and Bohème in Chicago in 1956-57
was struck by both the power and ring of the voice and by the «perfect pronunciation»), even
though his use of words lacks the inner resonance that we can hear in the finest Latin tenors.
In his first recording of “Che gelida manina” (Rodolfo was the role Björling performed most
frequently, followed by Faust and Manrico) the errors of pronunciation are somewhat glaring,
but they do not prevent the enjoyment of his highly musical timbre and phrasing that convey not
only the enthusiasm of youth, but also the shyness and melancholy that often accompany that
enthusiasm. In this sense Björling's approach is very different from the traditional Italian
interpretation, but it is a difference that enriches the expressive potential of the
role.
There is no doubt that compared to the
polyglot Nicolai Gedda or to Lauritz Melchior (who studied at length in Germany), Björling had
little direct knowledge of the cultures that most of his operatic repertoire derived from.
After conducting him in Vienna in 1936, Victor De Sabata would have liked to take him to Italy,
but Björling's contract with the Stockholm Opera made that impossible. He did however have an
excellent Italian maestro in Tullio Voghera (an ex-assistant of Toscanini and accompanist of
Caruso who had settled in Sweden), and in a certain sense his limited exposure to the Verismo
style of singing then in vogue in Italy enabled him approach the earlier 19th century
repertoire in a purer style that proved particularly telling in operas like
Il trovatore.
Of this century's
tenors, Björling is the one who has perhaps come closest to embodying the ideal qualities for a
role such as Manrico, thanks to his exquisitely youthful timbre, his inspired phrasing and
formidable ring in the upper register. These qualities are very much in evidence in the 1938
and 1939 studio recordings of “Ah sì, ben mio” and “Di quella pira,” but they emerge still more
irresistably in a live recording of a performance conducted by Vittorio Gui at Covent Garden in
1939. A performance worth hearing in its entirety (the cabaletta and the final duet
with Azucena are particularly memorable) that includes the most perfect interpretation of “Ah
sì, ben mio” ever preserved. Comparing this performance in fact with others by Caruso, Fernando
De Lucia, Aureliano Pertile, Antonio Cortis, Helge Roswaenge, Franco Corelli, Carlo Bergonzi,
Placido Domingo and Pavarotti - and also with Björling himself in the complete recording
conducted by Cellini - one discovers that no other tenor has succeeded in rendering so
poetically every detail of Verdi's score, both in the recitative and aria. This achievement was
made possible by Gui's respect for the prescribed tempo - Adagio (many conductors
transform it into an Andante) - and by Björling's
ability to sustain that tempo with extraordinary virtuosity. Only Bergonzi approaches the
effect he makes in this aria, but his line is less liquid, the details less finished, the
timbre less caressing.
In the same period
(1937-39) Björling recorded a numer of discs that have become touchstones in the history of
operatic performance: “En fermant les yeux” (Manon), “Salut, demeure”
(Faust),
“Adelaide” (which reminds us of his intense activity as a Lieder singer) and “Ingemisco” from
the Verdi Requiem (that Björling sang three times with Toscanini in the years 1939-40).
They are four miracles of vocal beauty and expressive balance, in which the singer's
sensibility appears profoundly attuned to the music performed.
It is interesting to compare his
performance of another aria – “Cuius animam” from Rossini's Stabat mater - with that of
Pavarotti. The Italian tenor's phrasing is more emphatic, the tone both indignant and
expansive, while Björling is more intimate and melancholy, his top D flat less prolonged and
sunny. There are also a number of oddly pronounced words here, as in “Cielo e mar” (where they
are more conspicuous), but on the whole this performance of Enzo's aria makes almost all other
recordings of the piece sound crude by comparison.
In the 1940's Björling continued to
record popular arias from the Italian and French repertoires and added a number of duets with
the soprano Hjördis Schymberg (prima donna at the Stockholm Opera) and with his wife Anna Lisa
(a lyric soprano). Vocally they are splendid, but interpretatively they seem more superficial
than the 1930's recordings, with a conspicuous lack of nuance in the more lyrical arias: “Una
furtiva lacrima,” “Je crois entendre encore” and “È la solita storia del pastore.” “Nessun
dorma,” on the other hand, is a triumph, and “L'alba separa dalla luce l'ombra” represents a
moving homage to Caruso, whose recording inspired Björling. He sought in fact to imitate the
phrasing and timbre of the Italian tenor (as he did when he recorded the
Otello duet with Robert Merrill after listening repeatedly to the
recording made by Caruso and Titta Ruffo). In the end however Björling wins over the
listener even here with qualities that are entirely his own: an airy lyricism that
contrasts with the warmer - but less elegant - sensuality of his model.
One notices often a difference between
the 1940's studio performances - rather stiff in expression - and the live radio broadcasts of
the same period. In the aircheck of Roméo et
Juliette at the Metropolitan in 1947, “Ah!
lève-toi, soleil!” is more varied in dynamics and spontaneous in rubato than in the 1945
recording. In “Dì tu se fedele” (Un ballo in
maschera) Björling is more high-spirited in New
Orleans in 1950 than in the studio in 1944: he plays with the rhythm, adds the odd
embellishment, and performs (the second time with brilliant success) the fearful leap from high
A flat to low C. And in “Donna non vidi mai” (Manon
Lescaut) the words are more alive and more
passionately projected at the Met in 1949 than in the studio recording a year earlier. And it
must be said that Björling betters his earlier performances also in the operatic recital
conducted by Alberto Erede in 1957 (available on a Decca CD), where he sings splendidly, and in
unusually idiomatic Italian, a number of arias recorded for His Master's Voice in the
1940's.
The Italian role which proved perhaps
most congenial to Björling (among those recorded complete) was Des Grieux in
Manon Lescaut. It was
one of the few parts in which he achieved a total identification with the character. Being
reserved and in some respects emotionally repressed, Björling found emotional release in the
extrovert passion of certain verismo characters (other
examples are Turiddu and Canio). A sense of release that is all the more electrifying in that
it is clearly the expression of someone who is used to controlling his emotions. He rarely
fractures the musical line in the manner of Latin tenors, but that line itself is stretched
almost to breaking point by pent-up emotion.
A similar expressive abandon - though at a lower emotional
temperature - can be heard in many of the Swedish songs included in the EMI anthology, some of
which he had sung since his childhood. It is significant in fact that even in the 1930
recordings - two sentimental yet attractive pieces by Wilhelm Peterson-Berger - he reveals an
interpretative assurance absent in the operatic recordings made at that time. Here and in the
romantic Ballads by Söderman (1957-59), Björling's timbre seems to reflect ideally the peculiar
luminosity of the northern landscapes evoked, and he spins out the tales with truly binding
legato. In a love song that Hugo Alfvén composed especially for him – “Så tag mit hjerte” (So
take my heart) - the 48 year-old Björling apostrophizes his beloved with the timid delicacy of
an adolescent. While in patriotic songs such as “Sverige” (Sweden) and “Land, du välsignade”
(Thou blessed land) his fervent phrasing and open-hearted, ringing tone never compromise the
perfect finish of the vocal line. Still more fascinating is “Tonerna” (Music) by Carl Sjöberg,
that speaks of music as a refuge from everday sorrows. This was a message deeply felt by
Björling himself and he sings the two verses with such spontaneity of expression that he seems
to have access to the same source of inspiration as the composer himself (there is also an
English language version with a piano accompaniment and a very different text).
Claude Levi-Strauss once wrote that “the
invention of melody is the supreme mystery of mankind,” and personally I feel that no tenor
better than Björling enables us to understand the depth of that mystery. Oscar Wilde on the
other hand wrote that “real beauty ends where an intellectual expression begins.” He was
referring to physical beauty, but the phrase is nonetheless applicable to the singing of this
tenor, who had nothing particularly cerebral about him (if he had not been a singer he would
have liked to be a fisherman), but who achieved in his moments of highest inspiration that
limpid fusion of form and feeling that other more sophisticated performers have sought in
vain.
Stephen Hastings is an English music critic who has been living
in Italy since 1978. He has been Opera News' correspondent from Milan for the last decade and
recently became Editor of the Italian magazine Musica. This article was first published in that
magazine in the winter of 1998.
[We thank Harald Henrysson and Carlo Ceruti for bringing this article to our attention and
providing preliminary translations to us, and to Andrew Farkas and Greg Fitzmaurice for their
comments. Ed.]
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