Originally posted by rubbernecker
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Opera on 3: 4.06.11, 6.00 p.m. - Massenet's "Werther"
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"I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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Originally posted by rubbernecker View PostSadly it has put me off shelling out to see Massenet ever again.
EDIT
Correction: for 'sadly', read 'happily'
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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I saw this a couple of weeks ago (the performance which was being taped for R3) and thought it extremely good. I was very impressed with Villazon - yes, his voice is much smaller than pre-vocal trials and tribulations (though this hardly mattered from about six feet away in the Stalls Circle), but he has matured as a singer and learnt not to be so reckless with it. Sophie Koch was utterly convincing as Charlotte, as was Audun Iversen as Albert.
SJT is certainly no pushover - have you read his review of ENO's Dream...?!!Our chief weapon is surprise...surprise and fear...fear and surprise.... Our two weapons are fear and surprise...and ruthless efficiency....
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Mandryka
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostWhy, what's wrong with it?
& Berlioz put in a pretty good effort, too.
Where to begin....?
Basically, Gounod took a weighty work about human nature and turned it into a boulevard frippery.
Faust is the worst opera I've ever heard: it is dreadful on just about every level, I'd say.
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perfect wagnerite
Originally posted by Mandryka View PostWhere to begin....?
Basically, Gounod took a weighty work about human nature and turned it into a boulevard frippery.
Faust is the worst opera I've ever heard: it is dreadful on just about every level, I'd say.
Morevoer - in contradiction to what is often claimed about it not living up to Goethe's work, ironically, by focussing on the Marguerite story, Gounod concentrates on the only aspect of Part 1 of Faust that Goethe originated. By concentrating on Faust's seduction and abandonment of Marguerite, Gounod was actually getting at a part of Goethe's personal history and psyche that the hero-worshippers have long swept under the carpet.
The rot set in in the late nineteenth century, when the piece attracted the derision of Bernard Shaw and other critics for whom it became a model of fustiness and reaction; essentially, it was done to death by pious Victorianism and the appropriation of its music for a thousand drawing-room piano selections and barrel-organ medleys. I'd suggest that anyone who thinks it's the worst opera ever written needs to get out more, operatically speaking (they could try some of Mendelssohn's now forgotten pieces, or the murky byways of bel canto, for a start).
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Mandryka
Originally posted by perfect wagnerite View PostI'd disagree pretty fundamentally with that, and I think the accusation of frippery is unfounded. The case of Faust is very much one where received opinion has driven out sense and judgement - not least because not a few of those who condemn it as a piece of nineteenth-century frippery have never heard the opera Gounod wrote, which is an opera-comique with spoken dialogue, without the leaden recitatives that burden most performances (they are a later addition) and which contribute to an air of piety that is reinforced by the "moralistic" conclusion. Taken on its own terms, much of Faust - Acts 2 and 3 in particular - is light, melodic, full of the charm that is the essence of French opera. A performance of Faust at the ENO in the 1980s as Gounod wrote it, stripping away the accretions of the late nineteenth century, was something of a revelation.
Morevoer - in contradiction to what is often claimed about it not living up to Goethe's work, ironically, by focussing on the Marguerite story, Gounod concentrates on the only aspect of Part 1 of Faust that Goethe originated. By concentrating on Faust's seduction and abandonment of Marguerite, Gounod was actually getting at a part of Goethe's personal history and psyche that the hero-worshippers have long swept under the carpet.
The rot set in in the late nineteenth century, when the piece attracted the derision of Bernard Shaw and other critics for whom it became a model of fustiness and reaction; essentially, it was done to death by pious Victorianism and the appropriation of its music for a thousand drawing-room piano selections and barrel-organ medleys. I'd suggest that anyone who thinks it's the worst opera ever written needs to get out more, operatically speaking (they could try some of Mendelssohn's now forgotten pieces, or the murky byways of bel canto, for a start).
So, let's just call it 'the world's most insufficiently neglected opera'.
I think I saw that ENO production - Ian Judge, wasn't it? - and I wasn't convinced at all. Pretty much a lowering experience all round.
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Originally posted by Mandryka View Postthere is a fatal lack of dramatic tension, since the 'decision' has been made at the end fo the first scene.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post. Beside Werther Don Ottavio seems like Superman.
And yet I find there are some studies of (apparently) pusillanimous men which are much more intriguing and engaging than Werther - Benjamin Constant's Adolphe, Eugène Fromentin's Dominique, Etienne-Pivert de Senancour's Oberman ...
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I was certainly underwhelmed by the Sorrows of Young W, but am inclined to reread it to make sure I haven't missed something very, very, significant.
I think of Adolphe and Dominique quite kindly through the light fog of time but suspect I would find both quite hard going now. Anyone written operas about them?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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