No one - not even Otto Klemperer - can convince me that Fidelio is anything other than (at best) a seriously flawed work.
To begin with the obvious: there are no 'real' characters in this opera, only abstractions masquerading as people - Florestan supposedly represents 'the oppressed', Leonara represents that old (even in 1808) chestnut 'the eternal feminine', Rocco represents the average Joe whose intentions are fine but who won't dare stick his head above the parapet for fear of getting it blown off. Don Pisarro is the most pathetically undeveloped villain in all operatic history (and that includes all of Verdi) - a Punch and Judy puppet of malignity jerked about by the strings of an over-simplistic plotline. Marzelline and Jacquino are a couple of fey teenagers who seem to have wandered in from some generic musical comedy.
A lot of people claim that Fidelio is 'the greatest of all operas', but what exactly do they mean? Don't they mean to say 'the noblest'? Well, if if you think free speech and freedom for all are noble ideals to strive for (which they may be), then fair enough. But it doesn't necessarily make for good music drama. I find Beethoven's only opera to be pompous, windy and dramatically empty.
This is not to deny that some of the music (but only some of it) is marvellous: the quartet in Act 1 and the Prisoners' Chorus. But there's a lot of trudging 'this'll do'-ness inbetween and - I repeat - the drama is painfully undernourished.
A more interesting opera would have portrayed Don Pisarro as a responsible military govenor, trying his best to restore order in a country that was verging on civil war. But I don't think such a 'grey' view of things would have appealed to the politically naive LvB.
Sidebar to all this - and on a slightly more frivolous note - the role of Leonora must be one of the most unappealing that a singer could be asked to consider: the impeccably elegant Nina Stemme was made up to look like some lardy fitter's mate in the recent Covent Garden production.
To begin with the obvious: there are no 'real' characters in this opera, only abstractions masquerading as people - Florestan supposedly represents 'the oppressed', Leonara represents that old (even in 1808) chestnut 'the eternal feminine', Rocco represents the average Joe whose intentions are fine but who won't dare stick his head above the parapet for fear of getting it blown off. Don Pisarro is the most pathetically undeveloped villain in all operatic history (and that includes all of Verdi) - a Punch and Judy puppet of malignity jerked about by the strings of an over-simplistic plotline. Marzelline and Jacquino are a couple of fey teenagers who seem to have wandered in from some generic musical comedy.
A lot of people claim that Fidelio is 'the greatest of all operas', but what exactly do they mean? Don't they mean to say 'the noblest'? Well, if if you think free speech and freedom for all are noble ideals to strive for (which they may be), then fair enough. But it doesn't necessarily make for good music drama. I find Beethoven's only opera to be pompous, windy and dramatically empty.
This is not to deny that some of the music (but only some of it) is marvellous: the quartet in Act 1 and the Prisoners' Chorus. But there's a lot of trudging 'this'll do'-ness inbetween and - I repeat - the drama is painfully undernourished.
A more interesting opera would have portrayed Don Pisarro as a responsible military govenor, trying his best to restore order in a country that was verging on civil war. But I don't think such a 'grey' view of things would have appealed to the politically naive LvB.
Sidebar to all this - and on a slightly more frivolous note - the role of Leonora must be one of the most unappealing that a singer could be asked to consider: the impeccably elegant Nina Stemme was made up to look like some lardy fitter's mate in the recent Covent Garden production.
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