Anyway, loved Remedios's explanation of his various signals from the pit...
For me, he is the ultimate interpreter from whom to learn one's Wagner - in part because Mastersingers (especially) and the Ring - leap from the page as a result.
The slower tempi allow one to hear the work in its greatest amplitude, especially if you don't have infinite time with which to go back over a work time and again to hear what you have missed.
There are details heard not often before, but there is also a sense of structure which contains and makes sense of the motivic tapestry.
Above all, it is so clearly inhabited and lived inside-out by its performers.
For me, he is the ultimate interpreter from whom to learn one's Wagner - in part because Mastersingers (especially) and the Ring - leap from the page as a result.
The slower tempi allow one to hear the work in its greatest amplitude, especially if you don't have infinite time with which to go back over a work time and again to hear what you have missed.
There are details heard not often before, but there is also a sense of structure which contains and makes sense of the motivic tapestry.
Above all, it is so clearly inhabited and lived inside-out by its performers.
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