Offenbach au Menu. Le Quatuor
Gastronomique (Sylvie Bertho, soprano; Marie-Thérèse Keller,
mezzo-soprano; Pierre Catala, tenor; Jean-Marc Salzmann, baritone); Mary
Dibbern, piano. Maguelone. $16.99.
Rimsky-Korsakov: Kashchey the
Immortal. Alexander Arkhipov, Irina Zhurina, Nina Terentieva, Vladislav
Verestnikov, Vladimir Matorin; Yurlov Academic Choir and Bolshoi Theatre
Orchestra conducted by Andrey Chistiakov. Brilliant Classics. $7.99.
Franz Ignaz Danzi: Der Berggeist.
Colin Balzer, Daniel Ochoa, Sophie Harmsen, Sarah Wegener, Christian Immler,
Tilman Lichdi, Patrick Pobeschin, Robert Buckland, Philip Niederberger, Vincent
Frisch, Bernd Schmitt; Kammerchor Stuttgart and Hofkapelle Stuttgart conducted
by Frieder Bernius. Carus. $18.99.
It is not difficult to move
off the beaten path in the world of opera, since there are so many non-canonic
works just waiting to be explored. But there are many ways to look into the
less-known repertoire. A particularly clever one is in evidence on a Maguelone CD
called Offenbach au Menu, which
collects more than two dozen food-related ditties from Offenbach’s less-known
works and presents them in the context of an imagined multi-course (and very
French) supper, complete with clinking glasses, brief verbal byplay between
musical courses, and a meal divided among Les
Pátés, La Soupe, Les Plats, Les Desserts
and Les Fruits, plus an interval here
and there. The whole presentation is extremely clever, right down to the way
the texts are presented: they are in a PDF file that can be opened on computer
and read while the CD’s musical portion is being played elsewhere. It is a fair
bet that very few listeners will be familiar with Wittington et son chat, Croquefer, Le Chanson de Fortunio, M. et Mme. Denis,
Pomme d’Api or most of the other works from which these musical trifles are
taken, although here and there a piece comes from a somewhat better-known
operetta such as Geneviève
de Brabant or La Fille du
Tambour-Major. The sources do not much matter, though. What is important –
to the extent that anything is important in this light and frothy production –
is discovering that Offenbach really did write about food and drink of all
sorts, and almost always in a forthrightly amusing way, unfettered by his
famous swipes at bureaucracy and pretension. In fact, only one piece here, “L’échaudé Favart” from Madame
Favart, contains a touch of Offenbachian ego-deflation, mentioning the very
light, hollow cake of the title and commenting that many people in France are
just like it: swollen with air and full of self-importance. The rest of the
songs are filled only with typical Offenbach musical touches, such as nonsense
syllables, repeated words and repeated parts
of words (first “jambon,” ham, and then repeated “jam-jam-jam” and
“bon-bon-bon,” for example). The gustatory topics range from cabbage soup to crèpes and include, of course, wine –
and also water and milk. The singers and pianist all seem to be enjoying
themselves thoroughly from start to finish, whether performing
straightforwardly or slurring their words after a bit too much imbibing (in a
drinking song from Le Château
à Toto). Offenbach wrote about 100 stage works of all types
and sizes, of which very, very few are well-known nowadays. Having the chance
to encounter excerpts from a heaping helping of them in Offenbach au Menu is an experience that deserves to be called
delicious.
At the opposite extreme from
the light and airy Offenbach concoction is the dour one-act Rimsky-Korsakov
opera, Kashchey the Immortal. The composer
called this 1902 work in three tableaux an “autumnal parable” and based its
libretto, which he wrote himself, on the same legend that Stravinsky would use
for The Firebird a few years later. The
harmonies and searching chromaticism of this opera are typical of late
Rimsky-Korsakov, and there are distinct Wagnerian elements in it as well:
Kashchey is sung by a tenor in a deliberately shrill, unpleasant voice like
that of Wagner’s Mime, and the sword-sharpening scene of Kashchey’s daughter,
Kashcheyevna, owes something to Siegfried’s sword-forging. But the
straightforward fairy-tale plot of Kashchey
the Immortal is clearly reflective of the old stories and legends to which
Rimsky-Korsakov was always attracted: Kashchey can die only if his hard-hearted
daughter sheds a tear that contains the sinister sorcerer’s death, and
Kashcheyevna has never cried. But she falls in love with a knight who has come
to rescue a princess held captive by Kashchey, and the princess takes pity on
Kashcheyevna, who is so moved by the gesture that she cries and is turned into
a weeping willow – and Kashchey dies. There is a fifth character here in
addition to princess and knight, sorcerer and daughter: the Storm Knight, a
sort of force of nature held captive by Kashchey and forced to do his bidding
as a messenger, but at the end welcoming the sun back to Kashchey’s dark
domain. Choral parts are minimal – the chorus produces a snowstorm at the end
of the first tableau that is nothing like the lighthearted one in Tchaikovsky’s
Nutcracker, and sings of life and
love at the end of the opera, but remains offstage throughout. The
orchestration is lush and effective; a number of the melodies, such as the duets
of princess and knight and knight and Kashcheyevna, are as lovely as any vocal
music Rimsky-Korsakov wrote; and there are a few exceptional touches, including
Kashcheyevna’s sword-sharpening song and the princess’ berceuse: forced to sing
a lullaby for Kashchey, she produces one that includes wishes for his death and
eternal pain. The Brilliant Classics CD of the opera – a 1991 recording – is a
very high-quality one and an exceptional bargain as well. The singing is quite
fine, the pacing feels just right for the story, and the Bolshoi Theatre
Orchestra under Andrey Chistiakov plays admirably from start to finish. The
CD’s booklet includes not only a plot summary but also an interesting
discussion of public response to the opera in late Czarist times, when there
was considerable ferment and violence in Russia. Listeners who want the
libretto will find the words – albeit in English only – at the Brilliant
Classics Web site (they are not as easy to locate as they could be, but they
are there). Kashchey the Immortal is
an impressive rediscovery that works equally well as fairy tale or as allegory,
and contains a considerable amount of very moving music.
Der Berggeist is a rediscovery not only of a forgotten opera but
also of a largely forgotten composer, Franz Ignaz Danzi (1763-1826). Danzi was
a fine cellist and conductor, knew and admired Mozart, and was instrumental in
promoting the music of Carl Maria von Weber. But his woodwind quintets constitute
almost the only music by him that is still occasionally performed; the world
première recording of Der Berggeist shows Danzi in a light not
hitherto known. This CD from Carus is from a live April 2012 performance, with
a few cuts apparently made so the opera would fit on a single disc (an
unfortunate decision, along with Carus’ choice to provide a libretto only in
German). The opera’s title refers to a well-known mountain spirit called Rubezähl, about whom both Danzi and Weber
created stage works: Weber in 1805 (although his work was never performed and
only three numbers from it survive) and Danzi with Der Berggeist in 1813. Danzi’s opera, determinedly Classical in
musical approach, contains many elements that modern listeners will recognize
as Romantic – he actually called it a Romantische
Oper, by no means a common designation in 1813. The parallels and conflicts
between the human and supernatural world are the core of the work, in which
Rubezähl can only awaken his
consort Erli from a century of magical sleep through the intercession of a pure
human virgin – Anne, whose role in the Rubezähl situation understandably conflicts with her relationship with
her betrothed, Heinrich. Some family conflicts on the human side contribute to
the drama. The opera combines effective elements, such as the strength of the
minor-key start of the opening scene, with less-successful ones, such as the
rapid switch of that scene to a straightforward narration by Rubezähl; the effect, here and elsewhere,
is of a work that starts and stops intermittently rather than one that
progresses throughout. Nevertheless, the contrasts between the music for the
humans and the gnomes over whom Rubezähl
rules is frequently very well done, with the woodwind use for the human
choruses brightening their passages considerably. Danzi proves adept in all the
operatic forms of his time: the first act, for instance, contains a septet and
a particularly impressive accompanied recitative for Anne, followed by an aria;
while the second act includes two terzetts. The Stuttgart performers –
soloists, chorus and orchestra – are all very fine, especially Colin Balzer as
Rubezähl and Sarah Wegener as
Anne. The musical is a throwback to
Mozart, and clearly intentionally so, which makes it very pleasant to hear but
not very distinguished, certainly in light of listeners’ retrospective
knowledge of the musical developments of the early 19th century. Danzi
was too conservative in Der Berggeist
for the work to be more than a curiosity. But it is a very well-constructed curiosity;
and it contains a few hints, although only a few, of the flowering of German
Romanticism that would soon be ushered in by Weber and, after him, developed by
Marschner, in a line that would lead directly to Wagner.
No comments:
Post a Comment