I'm currently re-watching this once radical, now venerable, production.
Boulez was about fifteen years into his Wagner conducting career when this was filmed and whilst I can't say I find his approach to the Ring as offensive as some people, he's certainly not the man to go to if you want richness of texture and the 'saturated sound', a la Furtwangler.
As to Chereau's contribution....it probably says a lot for the impact this Ring had that it now hardly seems radical and in many ways, conservative. Chereau's directorial coup had been to locate the action in the period of the Ring's composition, turning it into an allegory of the rise of capitalism; while this was striking at the time, it was hardly a new idea, as the same thing had occurred to Bernard Shaw nearly a century earlier. But the concept has clearly been thought through and all of Chereau's actor-singers seem to be on board with it.
Great performances from MacIntyre, Jones, Hofmann and Jeanine Altmeyer (as the kind of Sieglinde Brian Wilson might have sung about), all in their absolute prime - as were rising stars Matti Salminen and Graeme Clark.
Pity about Manfred Jung's Siegfried, though.
Boulez was about fifteen years into his Wagner conducting career when this was filmed and whilst I can't say I find his approach to the Ring as offensive as some people, he's certainly not the man to go to if you want richness of texture and the 'saturated sound', a la Furtwangler.
As to Chereau's contribution....it probably says a lot for the impact this Ring had that it now hardly seems radical and in many ways, conservative. Chereau's directorial coup had been to locate the action in the period of the Ring's composition, turning it into an allegory of the rise of capitalism; while this was striking at the time, it was hardly a new idea, as the same thing had occurred to Bernard Shaw nearly a century earlier. But the concept has clearly been thought through and all of Chereau's actor-singers seem to be on board with it.
Great performances from MacIntyre, Jones, Hofmann and Jeanine Altmeyer (as the kind of Sieglinde Brian Wilson might have sung about), all in their absolute prime - as were rising stars Matti Salminen and Graeme Clark.
Pity about Manfred Jung's Siegfried, though.
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