Wagner: Der Fliegende Holländer.
Kwangchul Youn, Anja Kampe, Christopher Ventris, Jane Henschel, Russell Thomas,
Terje Stensvold; Chor des Bayerischen Rundfunks, WDR Rundfunkchor Köln, NDR Chor and Royal Concertgebouw
Orchestra conducted by Andris Nelsons. RCO Live. $27.99 (2 CDs).
Mozart: Requiem; Vesperae
Solennes de Confessore. Carolyn Sampson, soprano; Marianne B. Kielland,
mezzo-soprano; Makoto Sakurada, tenor; Christian Immler, baritone; Bach
Collegium Japan conducted by Masaaki Suzuki. BIS. $21.99 (SACD).
Gounod: Requiem; Dvořák:
Mass in D. Anne Bretschneider, soprano; Christine Lichtenberg, contralto;
Holger Marks, tenor; Georg Witt, bass; Rundfunkchor Berlin and Polyphonia
Ensemble Berlin conducted by Risto Joost. Carus. $18.99.
The live recording of Andris
Nelsons leading the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra in Wagner’s Der Fliegende Holländer seems
designed to test a truism: if Italian opera is primarily concerned with the
voice and French opera balances vocal and instrumental elements, in German
opera the orchestra is paramount. Like many clichés, this one arose because it
contains a germ of truth, and perhaps more than a germ. Certainly in much of
Wagner, the orchestra, pervaded by leitmotif
after leitmotif, is as much a part of
the stage action as any of the singers. But there are limits to the
effectiveness of seeing Wagner through a primarily instrumental lens, and this
recording shows what they are. Like other great art, Der Fliegende Holländer has inspired multiple interpretations
and has stood up to just about all of them. One particularly intriguing one
treated the whole opera as a sort of “fever dream” of an unbalanced Senta,
ending in her suicide. This is certainly not what Wagner intended, but the
approach did solve some problems, such as the fact that everyone in the opera
knows exactly what the Flying Dutchman’s ship looks like, but when the ship
appears in reality, absolutely no one knows what it is; and the Dutchman’s
portrait is prominently displayed in Senta’s home, but when the man himself –
exactly matching the picture – shows up, no one but Senta recognizes him,
either. Opera is not renowned for logic, but Wagner, here as elsewhere acting
as his own librettist, surely knew of these plot inconsistencies, deeming them
insignificant next to what he was trying to say about the redemptive power of
love – his preoccupation for virtually everything he was to write after this
opera, his fourth.
In Der Fliegende Holländer, the Dutchman is intended
to come across as a sort of force of nature – certainly his Satanic sentence to
roam the seas unceasingly, bringing all his unfaithful brides to eternal
damnation, seems disproportionate to his “crime” of steadfastly refusing to be
stopped by weather from rounding a cape. The Dutchman is, as a human, a
tormented soul; this balances his supernatural presence. Unfortunately, in this
RCO Live recording, Terje Stensvold gives us a Dutchman who is neither
particularly otherworldly nor particularly human. His voice is barely up to the
part – in his first appearance, in particular, it is weak and shaky – and he
never achieves the rumbling drama of a true bass-baritone, perhaps because he
is not one: he is really a baritone, and a comparatively light one, at that. This
leaves the much-deeper-voiced Kwangchul Youn, as Daland, to dominate the men’s
meeting in Act I (Wagner wanted Der
Fliegende Holländer played straight through, but most performances divide
it into three acts, as this one does). Yet Daland is supposed to be a
superficial character concerned strictly with worldly goods – a good, reliable
ship’s captain, but not a deep thinker and not much of a father, hesitating not
at all to promise his daughter to a just-met stranger for the sake of wealth.
The strongest voice and characterization in this recording are those of Anja
Kampe as Senta: her handling of the ballad describing the Dutchman’s hubris and his fate is highly affecting,
and her final scene is as dramatic as it can be – in contrast with the
Dutchman’s rather pallid revelation to all (at last) of who he is. Better than
all the soloists, though, are the three combined choruses – the wonderful scene
in which Daland’s sailors taunt and then are taunted by those of the Dutchman
is effectively spooky here – and the orchestra, which plays with smoothness,
excellent sectional balance and considerable power. The positioning of
microphones for this live recording could partly explain the comparative
weakness of the soloists’ voices, especially Stensvold’s, but the audio of the
choruses and orchestra is very good indeed, perhaps reflecting what seems to be
Nelsons’ concern to focus the performance on the instrumental elements rather
than the vocals. In all, this is a reasonably good, very-well-played reading
that gives short shrift to characterization and vocal storytelling while
placing choral and instrumental elements front and center throughout. Like its
title character, though, it is pale (the Dutchman, both in his portrait and as
a person, is described as den bleichen
Mann); and while it has many effective elements – and, thankfully, includes
a full libretto – it is simply not as involving or emotionally trenchant as Der Fliegende Holländer is capable of
being.
The emotional impact of
Mozart’s Requiem is certainly high in
a new BIS recording featuring the Bach Collegium Japan under Masaaki Suzuki.
But this release seeks to be more than an effective presentation of Mozart’s
unfinished masterpiece: it wants to be a reconsideration. This is not the
familiar (and familiarly flawed) completion of the Requiem by Franz Xaver Süßmayr
but an altogether new version put together by Masato Suzuki, son of the
conductor and a member of Bach Collegium Japan. The younger Suzuki uses a
combination of Süßmayr’s work
with that of Joseph Eybler (1765-1846), the friend of Mozart who was first
asked by the composer’s widow to complete the Requiem but was unable to do so – leading to Constanze’s selection
of Süßmayr, whose work Mozart
did not respect (he liked and admired Eybler’s). Add in some material from Masato Suzuki himself and you have the Requiem as heard here. It would be
unfair to say that all this is much ado about nothing – it is, in fact, much
ado about something very important, for the Requiem
is magnificent music left incomplete, and any and all thoughtful attempts to
turn it into a fully integrated work are most welcome. However, it is worth
pointing out that, just as non-specialists are unlikely to hear the flaws in Süßmayr’s work (technical errors,
unnecessary doublings of voices, and some generally uninspired writing), so
they are unlikely to perceive significant improvements in what Masato Suzuki
has done. There have been a number of other attempts to complete Mozart’s Requiem, some being on the radical side
(Duncan Druce), others being considerably more modest in scope (Franz Beyer,
H.C. Robbins Landon), and still others lying somewhere in the middle (Robert
Levin, Richard Maunder). Certainly Masato Suzuki’s work is worthy within this
group of rearrangements (or re-completions), and certainly the performance here
is thoughtful, well-paced and effective. As a rethinking of Mozart’s Requiem, though, neither the new version
nor the new performance breaks significant new ground. The CD also includes a
very fine recording of Vesperae Solennes
de Confessore, which contrasts well with the later Requiem, plus an alternative version of the Tuba mirum from the Sequentia
of the Requiem.
The concept of a Requiem expanded significantly, along
with much else, after Mozart’s time, and there is a richness and opulence to
Gounod’s Requiem in C that make the
work both moving and attractive from a strictly sonic point of view. A new
Carus recording led by Risto Joost, however, forgoes aural splendor and turns
this work into something even smaller and more intimate than what Mozart
produced: the Berlin Radio Choir is accompanied only by organ (played movingly
by Hye-Lin Hur). This is a strange, if interesting, way to hear Gounod’s Requiem, which dates to 1893, more than
a century after Mozart’s. The mysterious commission that led Mozart to write
his Requiem is well-known, but there
is no mystery about Gounod’s inspiration: he wrote his Requiem after the death of his four-year-old grandson, Maurice. It
was to be Gounod’s final work, as Mozart’s was his; but except for some details
on which Gounod was working at the time of his death, his Requiem, unlike Mozart’s, is complete. The intimacy that Gounod’s
work receives when heard as a vocal composition with only organ accompaniment
gives it an even stronger religious orientation and seriousness than it has in
its orchestrated form. Yet this is scarcely a traditional Requiem: it omits the Offertory,
for example, and sets the Introit and
Kyrie together to begin the work. The
atmospheric orchestral opening is lost here, and therefore so is the effect of
the first, hushed choral entry; but the overall sparseness of the performance
makes for a moving recording, if scarcely an authentic one. The disc also
includes a rethought Dvořák Mass in D (1892), heard here with wind
quintet rather than full orchestra. Interestingly, the original version of this
work (dating to 1887) was written for organ accompaniment – but rather than use
that form, Joost offers one featuring flute, oboe, clarinet, horn and bassoon.
The solemnity of this wind quintet actually comes across quite well, with the
lower instruments frequently dominating the discourse and giving the work
considerable depth – although never as much as it has in its orchestral version.
The most interesting element of the piece, namely the way the composer combines
then-new harmonic approaches with old church modes, does comes through well in
Joost’s version. And even if this disc as a whole is a bit of a curiosity, it
will be of considerable interest to listeners already familiar with these two
heartfelt works and intrigued by the chance to experience them in previously
unheard forms.
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