Wagner: Siegfried. Tomasz
Konieczny, Stephen Gould, Violeta Urmana, Anna Larsson, Matti Salminen, Jochen
Schmeckenbecher, Christian Elsner, Sophie Klußmann; Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin conducted by Marek
Janowski. PentaTone. $49.99 (3 SACDs).
Wagner: Overtures to “Die Feen,”
“Christoph Columbus,” “Das Liebesverbot,” “Rienzi,” “Faust,” “Der fliegende
Holländer,” Act III of “Lohengrin,”
“Tristan und Isolde,” and Act I of “Die
Meistersinger von Nürnberg.” Royal Scottish National
Orchestra conducted by Neeme Järvi.
Chandos. $19.99 (SACD).
Jake Heggie: Moby-Dick. Jay
Hunter Morris, Stephen Costello, Morgan Smith, Jonathan Lemalu, Talise
Trevigne; San Francisco Opera Chorus, Dance Corps and Orchestra conducted by Patrick
Summers. EuroArts DVD. $24.99.
The ninth in PentaTone’s
excellent 10-release series of Wagner’s 10 mature operas tackles the most
difficult opera of the Ring cycle to
bring off – and as with all of these releases conducted by Marek Janowski, produces
a resounding success thanks to the conductor’s intimate familiarity with the
music and his willingness to take chances with tempos, characterizations and the
complexities of a live performance (this one dating to March 1, 2013). Siegfried (which Wagner originally
called Young Siegfried) is a very
talky opera, more so than usual in Wagner – whose music dramas are talky by
design and for that reason are unappealing to some operagoers. A voyage of
self-discovery climaxed by returns to events of earlier operas, Siegfried brings back Alberich and Mime
– giving the latter, whose portrayal owes much to Wagner’s anti-Semitism, more
prominence than in Das Rheingold.
Fafner also returns, the giant of the first opera now transformed into a dragon
that is conquered rather abruptly. Nothung, the sword shattered by Wotan’s
direct intervention in Die Walküre,
is forged again here in the opera’s most-famous scene; and Wotan himself,
rapidly becoming a shadow of the powerful (if flawed) god he has been before,
is back as well, rehashing much of the plot of what has come before (leading
the wonderful parodist of classical music, Anna Russell, to comment that Wotan
comes down from Valhalla to play “Twenty Questions” with Siegfried). The
comparatively static Siegfried stands
in strong contrast to the nearly frenetic activity of Die Walküre, although after the death of
Fafner and Mime, as we return to the fire-surrounded rock from the ending the
previous opera, and Siegfried discovers the sleeping Brünnhilde, there is certainly drama enough. Janowski builds the
opera toward this climactic moment throughout the nearly four-hour running time
of the recording, with the contrast between Tomasz Konieczny’s increasingly
feckless Wotan/Wanderer and the rather simple-minded, straightforward strength
and bravery of Stephen Gould’s Siegfried communicated particularly well. Christian
Elsner is suitably slimy as Mime, and his confrontation with the sly vengefulness
of Jochen Schmeckenbecher as Alberich is handled with skill. Violeta Urmana is
not an ideal Brünnhilde – Petra
Lang was more intense and fiery in Janowski’s Die Walküre – but Urmana certainly sings
well and with considerable emotion. Anna Larson as Erda – another revenant from
earlier in the cycle – handles her scene with Wotan well; Matti Salminen has
plenty of depth to his potent bass voice as Fafner; and Sophie Klußmann does a fine job with the small
but crucial role of the forest bird. Janowski again conducts with a sure hand
and very considerable intelligence, and the Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin
turns in yet another of those first-rate performances that the players seem to
produce effortlessly. Siegfried is a
particularly difficult opera to bring off effectively, and Janowski’s success
here – a success that includes PentaTone’s consistently excellent SACD sound –
virtually guarantees that Götterdammerung,
the final Ring opera and concluding
entry in PentaTone’s Wagner-bicentennial sequence, will also be a splendid
production.
Wagner’s purely instrumental music – what
there is of it – tends to get short shrift in comparison to his operas, but
some of the opera overtures and preludes have become reliable staples of the
concert hall. Some, however, have not, a fact that makes Chandos’ new recording
led by Neeme Järvi particularly
welcome. This is actually a compilation of Järvi performances from 2009-2011, plus one (Der fliegende Holländer) not released before. The SACD is notable
for sound quality, length (a full 80 minutes), and inclusion of some rarities
along with the more-familiar works. Christoph
Columbus, a 1907 concert-overture version by Felix Mottl of Wagner’s 1835
opening for a stage play, may not be top-flight Wagner; but Faust, written in 1840, revised in 1855,
and originally planned as the first movement of a symphony, is certainly worth
more-frequent performances. So are the overtures to Wagner’s first two operas, Die Feen and Das Liebesverbot, in which the music may not sound “Wagnerian” as
that term later came to be used but is certainly well-made and effective. As
for the overture to Wagner’s third opera, Rienzi,
it is broad, exciting and exceptionally tuneful – deserving, like the opera
itself, of being considerably better known. The remaining works on this SACD
are familiar, and all are very well played by the Royal Scottish National
Orchestra – although Järvi’s
tempo choices are occasionally questionable and he does not come across as a
top-notch Wagner conductor in terms of sensitivity to the nuances of, say, Tristan and Meistersinger. Nevertheless, all the readings here are better than
serviceable, and the fine playing and sound, along with the intriguing mixture
of well-known and little-known music, makes this a very worthwhile recording
indeed.
Wagner’s pervasive influence extends to
the present day, and it is certainly noticeable in Jake Heggie’s fascinating Moby-Dick, adapted from Herman
Melville’s novel by librettist Gene Scheer. The DVD of the San Francisco
Opera’s 2012 production features four of the five singers who presented the
opera at its world première in
Dallas in 2010. The exception is Jay Hunter Morris as Captain Ahab (the role
was created by Ben Heppner); but Morris handles the increasingly mad captain
with plenty of fervor and intensity, making him an effective center around whom
the action swirls. Scheer’s libretto hews closely to the actions of Melville’s
book – which, it should be remembered, is in large part not an action/adventure novel, since much of it is taken up with
discussion and exploration of whales and the whaling life. Eliminating all of
that, as Scheer does, makes the story manageable as a libretto, and emphasizing
the tragic elements and psychological darkness of the book is an intelligent
decision – simply treating the whole work as a morality play, which is
essentially what Melville did, would result in an overly rigid presentation for
modern audiences. Nevertheless, Scheer is basically true to Melville’s
approach, and manages to retain enough of the author’s language to give the
opera a feeling both old-fashioned and up-to-date. Heggie does the same thing
with the music: in addition to Wagnerian elements and a few approaches borrowed
from Debussy and from Britten’s Peter
Grimes and Billy Budd, there are
distinct echoes of Philip Glass and other minimalist composers, plus an
overarching sense of the drama and emotional turmoil of film music – which,
indeed, is exactly what the work’s instrumental opening sounds like. The
music’s accessibility makes this a very approachable opera indeed: what Heggie
does is scarcely innovative, but it is very well tailored to audience
involvement and to the dramatic story line. Leonard Foglia’s stage direction –
the same in San Francisco as in Dallas – is also integral to the success of the
presentation. And this is an opera that is decidedly better served by DVD
presentation than it would be in an audio recording, where the comparative straightforwardness
of Heggie’s music would make the work less appealing than it is when seen as
the multimedia totality it is intended to be: opera has in fact always been a
multimedia format, and the projections and perspective shifts of this
production make Moby-Dick even more
so. There are occasional elements that do not work – renaming Ishmael as
Greenhorn is simply too obvious and comes across as a bit silly, for example –
but by and large, this is a thoroughly enjoyable and effective music drama, not
in the Wagnerian sense but in an equally valid post-Wagnerian world, where
Melville is as much a part of the United States’ shared literary and mythic
heritage as the Nibelungenlied
was part of Wagner’s and Germany’s in the 19th century.
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