Handel: Occasional Oratorio.
Julia Doyle, soprano; Ben Johnson, tenor; Peter Harvey, baritone; Chor des
Bayerischen Rundfunks and Akademie für
Alte Musik Berlin conducted by Howard Arman. BR Klassik. $37.99 (2 CDs).
Lehár: Der Graf von
Luxemburg. Daniel Behle, Camilla Nylund, Louise Alder, Simon Bode,
Sebastian Geyer, Margit Neubauer; Chor der Oper Frankfurt and Frankfürter Opern- und Museumorchester
conducted by Eun Sun Kim. Oehms. $29.99 (2 CDs).
Minor Handel done splendidly
and major Lehár handled
thoughtlessly show the promise and peril of releasing live recordings of
infrequently performed music with enough attention to packaging – or not enough
at all. The occasion for Handel’s Occasional
Oratorio was the Jacobite revolt of 1745, led by Bonnie Prince Charlie: the
work was intended to rally the populace, if not the troops, in the months
before the battle of Culloden brought a brutal end to the revolt in April 1746.
Handel created the work in haste and did considerably more than his usual
plethora of self-borrowings, including bits of everything from Israel in Egypt to Zadok the Priest to the Concerti Grossi, Op. 6. The libretto, a
mishmash of material from Milton, Spenser and others, takes various Old
Testament verses out of context and throws them together for a strong assertion
that righteousness (in the form of King George II and his Protestant
supporters) will triumph – a most suitable position for a composer beholden to
the king and court to take. But for all the haste of its composition and all
the flaws of its construction, and they are many, the Occasional Oratorio comes through highly effectively in a live
recording on the BR Klassik label, in a sure-handed and elegantly paced
performance led by Howard Arman and featuring first-rate singing and the
knowing use of original instruments by the Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin. The music is by and large excellent in a
“greatest hits” sort of way, the many recognizable arias and choruses never
really blending – they do have different sources, after all – but coming across
individually as highly effective. Because the occasion for the work’s
composition is now obscure, it is easy to listen to the oratorio divorced from
the religious turmoil and political machinations of Handel’s time and simply
enjoy the assertiveness, poetry and beauty of the music. Soloists and chorus
alike manage their parts with a sure sense of period style and with all the
seriousness and solemnity the rather overwrought texts require. Like
Beethoven’s Der glorreiche Augenblick,
another work that could be called an “occasional oratorio,” Handel’s piece is
scarcely among his best, being more interesting for showcasing the political
realities surrounding and impinging upon musical creation in the times when
Handel and Beethoven wrote – realities that were forerunners of those faced by
Prokofiev and Shostakovich, among others, at a much later date. BR Klassik has
given the Occasional Oratorio the
best possible showcase not only by making this excellent performance available but
also by including just what a well-made modern recording should have: a booklet
containing information on the work and its time, well-done but not overdone material
about the performers, and a full libretto in the original language (here, English),
with translation (here, into German). The presentation on CD makes this release
of Handel’s Occasional Oratorio into
an occasion worth celebrating – modestly – in its own right.
At the opposite extreme, the execrable packaging
by Oehms of Lehár’s Der Graf von Luxemburg will leave lovers
of this wonderful operetta continuing to hunger for a top-notch modern
recording and clinging gratefully to the EMI version featuring Nicolai Gedda if
they have it – despite the fact that that reading, conducted by Willy Mattes, is
now almost 50 years old. The problem here is certainly not the music. This is
Lehár’s most-tuneful opera,
without a single number that falls flat or fails to bring joy or heartbreak,
whichever the composer intended. It is the composer’s ultimately lighthearted
tribute to his friend Puccini’s La Bohème,
with the work’s second couple even being introduced in a “Bohème-Duett.” It is also very much a fin de siècle piece in
orientation, if not in its actual date (1909): there is a certain nostalgic
gloom underlying the proceedings, and the primary story is of two world-weary
people, to whom nothing much matters (certainly not love, with which both
clearly have considerable experience), discovering that love does matter after
all, and it is not too late to find that süsse,
goldene Traum. Of course the naïveté of operetta pervades this formulation
– Lehár himself was soon to
rebel against it – but in Der Graf von
Luxemburg the whole thing works, and works brilliantly, because of some
wonderful touches in the operetta’s libretto (by Robert Bodanzky, Alfred Maria
Willner and Leo Stein) as well as the unremitting beauty of the music. This is
an operetta that desperately needs dialogue, which was surely included in the
live performances from which Oehms took this recording. But there is none of it
here: the melodramas (words spoken through music) are present, but the dialogue
that carries the action along and explains it is wholly missing. And there is
no libretto here – a horrible decision, the opposite of that made for the
Handel recording, and one that is not easy to rectify by looking online (Oehms
does not offer any way to get the words). And to make matters worse, the
summary of the action is one of the worst accorded to any operatic work in
years. It goes beyond truncated to become incoherent and well-nigh illiterate. The
central importance of the perfume Trèfle
incarnat (“crimson clover”)? Never mentioned. The marvelous device by which
René and Angèle enter into a sham marriage,
without seeing each other, so she can obtain a title – using a painting through
which she inserts her hand, giving him the chance to be enchanted by it and
flirt with it? Never mentioned. The basic story arc of two jaded personalities
finding each other through an unlikely but emotionally satisfying chain of
events? Omitted. The summary is beyond useless: it is insulting to the story
and music. Making matters even more disappointing is the fact that Oehms had
plenty of room on the CDs for dialogue (the discs run just 35 and 51 minutes,
respectively), and plenty of room in the booklet for a libretto or, at the very
least, a far more extensive and decently written summary: the synopsis takes up
a mere three pages (with plenty of white space), but there are five pages
promoting other Oehms CDs, 19 giving information on the performers, and eight that
are blank except for graphics or section titles. This is beyond the realm of
ridiculous and into that of insulting to purchasers. The egregious presentation
errors make it tempting to dismiss this recording outright or give it only a
basic rating, perhaps (++). But the music is so wonderful, the orchestral
playing so fine, and the singing by some
of the soloists so good that the release gets a (+++) rating. The two female
leads are particularly good: Camilla Nylund, an opera singer of considerable
quality, is a wonderful choice for Angèle
– who, in one of the libretto’s many felicitous touches, is an opera singer.
And Louise Alder is light and airy enough to be a convincing Juliette – her
“Chanson” in the first act is lovely – although it is hard to figure out what
she sees in Armand, who is sung rather stolidly by Simon Bode. Unfortunately,
the weakest soloist is Daniel Behle as René: he repeatedly pushes his voice and characterization too far,
and the mundanity of his introductory aria makes Lehár’s brilliant stroke of later turning the bright and carefree
music into a bitter lament less effective than it can and should be. Eun Sun
Kim has a knack for bringing out the composer’s delicious orchestral touches in
this score – she particularly highlights the percussion, to fine effect – but
she tends to push the music too hard and too quickly from time to time, as in
the breakneck conclusion of the Act III “Marsch-Terzett” and, even more
clearly, the end of the Act II “Polkatänzer.”
The fact that the orchestra can even keep up with the conductor in these and
other passages is rather remarkable; indeed, the orchestral playing is a big
plus here, as is the choral singing. This recording of Der Graf von Luxemburg could have been a great or at least
near-great one. All it needed was somewhat closer attentiveness to the score
and much more attention paid to the packaging and presentation of a truly
marvelous work that remains vastly under-appreciated. As is, what listeners get
here is something wonderful-sounding but largely incoherent – so the
Gedda/Mattes recording remains the treasurable version of this most cherishable
operetta.
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