Wagner: Das Liebesverbot.
Michael Nagy, Peter Bronder, Charles Reid, Simon Bode, Franz Mayer, Christiane
Libor, Anna Gabler, Thorsten Grümbel,
Kihwan Sim, Anna Ryberg, Julian Prégardien;
Chor des Oper Frankfurt and Frankfurt Opern-und Museumorchester conducted by
Sebastian Weigle. Oehms. $39.99 (3 CDs).
Wagner: Die Walküre.
Tomasz Konieczny, Iris Vermillion, Robert Dean Smith, Melanie Diener, Timo
Riihonen, Petra Lang; Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin conducted by Marek Janowski.
PentaTone. $59.99 (4 SACDs).
At first glance or first
hearing, there is a world of difference between Wagner’s second opera, Das Liebesverbot, and his second Ring opera, Die Walküre. The differences are
particularly apparent in performances as fine as these two – and yet because the performances are so good,
they show that the two operas ultimately occupy worlds that are not so
different after all. Both Das
Liebesverbot (first performed a single time, disastrously, in 1836, and
never again in the composer’s lifetime) and Die
Walküre (first heard in 1870 and first staged as part of the Ring cycle in 1876) are ultimately about
the inevitable conflict between intense erotic love and the strictures of
society – with the early opera, a comedy, eventually resolving happily, while
the later one ends with a fateful decision by Wotan that will soon enough doom
him and all the gods. Interestingly – and in faithfulness to Shakespeare, whose
Measure for Measure provided Wagner
with the story that he turned into the libretto of Das Liebesverbot – the characters in the earlier opera are so stiff
and mercurial that they barely seem human, while those in the later one,
including the gods, are all too human in their desires and manifest foibles.
Das Liebesverbot fairly closely follows the events although not the
geographical setting of Shakespeare’s play, whose primary protagonists in
Wagner’s opera are the puritanical and hypocritical regent of Sicily,
Friedrich, and the insensitive and mercurial Isabella – two characters as
difficult to empathize with in Wagner as in Shakespeare, and in many ways two
sides of the same unpleasant coin. As in his first opera, Die Feen, Wagner in Das
Liebesverbot channels and reinterprets the work of others – Marschner in
the earlier work and Rossini in this one. The sheer ebullience of the model
never quite emerges, even though Wagner refocuses the work’s ending to
emphasize enjoyment and pleasure for all rather than justice triumphant, as in
Shakespeare. Still, there are some very upbeat elements here, including a fine
carnival song and the final crowd scene, and they are well juxtaposed with a
more-serious overarching structure that resembles nothing less than Fidelio, with the same
tyrant-prisoner-woman layout as in Beethoven’s opera and the same appearance at
the very end of a more-benevolent ruler. And since Fidelio is in its form a
French rescue opera, it is not surprising to find that Das Liebesverbot sports French influences as well. More
interestingly, though, it also shows very early signs of forms that Wagner
would later develop musically: there are no extensive leitmotifs here, but there is already the stirring of thematic
identifications important to the plot and used in both anticipatory and
reminiscent passages – most notably a theme representing the Liebesverbot (“ban on love”) itself. As
in Die Feen, Wagner here calls for a
large cast of characters and rather more soloists than it is possible to keep
track of, but the Frankfurt performers handle their roles quite well: the
recording is drawn from two concert performances in May 2012, and it is a very
fine one both dramatically and acoustically (it was made at the Alte Oper
Frankfurt, a top-notch venue). Conductor Sebastian Weigle deserves much credit
for not looking down upon this as “merely” an early work of little consequence
(which is how Wagner himself came to regard it): Weigle gives it plenty of
weight and attention without striving to turn it into a grander or more-effective
opera than it is, and without being afraid to let the seams show, as they do a
number of times. English speakers will, however, be frustrated to discover that
the complete libretto is given in the booklet – but only in German. Das Liebesverbot is actually an
interesting and impressive work on its own merits, and would be worth an
occasional hearing even if it were not by Wagner. Clearly the fact that it is by Wagner is the reason for the
attention it currently receives at the bicentennial of the composer’s birth –
and truthfully, it is about time that Wagner’s three operas from before Der fliegende Holländer got some
attention, with the grandest and most complex of them, Rienzi, most in need of revival and most demanding of singers and
staging alike. For a full understanding of Wagner and a full appreciation of
his work, seeing how he handled the themes and approaches of Marschner, Rossini
and (in Rienzi) Meyerbeer is
invaluable. The new recording of Das
Liebesverbot is therefore an important accomplishment partly because this
is interesting, well-made music that is very rarely heard – and also because it
shows aspects of Wagner’s style and thought (the latter in the libretto) that
have far too infrequently been available to modern opera lovers.
Die Walküre, on the other hand, is so
popular that it is often performed as a standalone opera, which means that a
great deal of it makes little musical or dramatic sense – but it does not seem
to matter amid the excellence of the music and intense drama of the story. This
is the first appearance in the Ring
cycle of humans, since Das Rheingold
includes only immortals, and the immediately recognizable themes of love and
hate, passion and adultery, acceptance and disobedience, make a heady brew that
sweeps the music drama forward from start to finish with impetuosity, lyric
beauty and tremendous intensity. This new Marek Janowski reading is the eighth
in the superb set of 10 PentaTone recordings of Wagner’s mature operas – only Siegfried and Götterdammerung remain to be released – and, like the
Frankfurt Das Liebesverbot, this
Berlin Die Walküre is a live
recording of a concert performance (from November 2012). It continues the
extremely high quality level of all the Janowski Wagner recordings for
PentaTone – as well as the high quality of the company’s SACD sound, which is
as impressive for its silences and extremely quiet passages as for its full,
booming climaxes, and the excellence of the extensive booklet notes and
German-English libretto. Robert Dean Smith and Melanie Diener make a strong,
passionate mortal pair – very well-matched as singers – in the roles of
Siegmund and Sieglinde, and the contrast with the godly duo of Tomasz Konieczny
as Wotan and Iris Vermillion as Fricka is particularly pronounced here, with
the immortals being distinctly pettier and more unpleasantly bound to their own
strictures than are the freethinking, although doomed, brother-and-sister
lovers. Timo Riihonen offers a strong, stolid reading in the thankless role of
Hunding, who stands for conventionality just as Fricka does and elicits just as
little respect or liking – he cannot really be made a sympathetic character,
but at least Riihonen gives him a certain wounded nobility. And then there is
Petra Lang as Brünnhilde, caught
between mortals and immortals and beholden to both, doomed by her own
headstrong nature and the curse of the ring to an end-of-opera fate that
eventually drags all the gods down as well – all for love. The whole Ring cycle is about love and the
consequences of denying, misusing or abandoning it, and in Die Walküre the theme coalesces into the realm of the highly
personal both at the gods’ level and at that of mortals. Janowski understands
this dynamic perfectly and brings it to the fore repeatedly, using the somewhat
fast tempos that he generally favors to make the music even more propulsive and
intense than usual. The Ride of the
Valkyries, arguably Wagner’s single most famous piece, is here not only
thrilling in itself but also perfectly integrated into the extreme drama of the
story at the point that it occurs. Brünnhilde’s eight sisters all sing their
minor roles strongly, too, which helps a great deal; they are sopranos Anja
Fidelia Ulrich, Fionnuala McCarthy and Carola Höhn; mezzo-sopranos Heike
Wessels, Wilke te Brummelstroete and Renate Spingler; and contraltos Kismara
Pessatti and Nicole Piccolomini. As in all these PentaTone recordings, the Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
Berlin plays with assurance, intensity and absolute beauty of tone, and
Janowski is so thoroughly in control of the proceedings that there is scarcely
a moment that flags from start to finish. The contrast between this extremely
well-known opera and the little-known Das
Liebesverbot is a very strong one, but even more interesting than the
differences – which are scarcely surprising after more than three decades of
the composer’s life – are the similarities of theme and the intensity with
which Wagner proclaims the importance of both love and passion, though the rule
of law collapse into unremitting celebration in the earlier opera and the world
itself go down in flames in the later one.
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