Just a short post to recommend tonight’s performance. Act Two just over and it’s absolutely tremendous...
Opera On 3 - Götterdämmerung
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The days when I could listen to a complete Gotterdammerung on the radio are long gone.
But, in 2019, you have a choice: you can liisten to a compromised current performance with principals who are, at best, adequate, or you can pull your Solti/Karajan/Bohm/Furtwangler set off the shelves and listen to people who could do it.
I will say: I’ve seen Christine Goerke twice (both times as Elektra) and she is a singer who needs to be experienced in totality. A bit like Gwyneth Jones, perhaps.
Wagner is not Davis’ comfort zone. It’s too long? Well, it shall to the barber’s, with his beard.
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Originally posted by Conchis View PostI will say: I’ve seen Christine Goerke twice (both times as Elektra) and she is a singer who needs to be experienced in totality. A bit like Gwyneth Jones, perhaps.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostWell put. She doesn't sound well in front of your average microphone, or in your average front room, but in the hall ... wow! And those old sets had some pretty ropey performances too - although he did his best, I can't listen to Wolfgang Windgassen these days without considerable distress, even in the Böhm Tristan with Nilsson. His musicality is as suspect as his singing.
To be fair, he is excellent in the Knappertsbusch Parsifal and he sounds very fresh in the Solti Gotterdammerung. But in the Tristan and Tannhauser he recorded near the end of his career, he sounds....well, tired might be the kindest word.
There has only ever been one tenor who could sing the Heldentenor repertory properly and that, of course, was Melchior who retired long before the era of complete recordings. Apparently, he wasn’t much of an actor, though: and he always sounded a bit too ‘cheerful’ -fine for (most of) Siegfried but a bit of a drawback in the likes of Tristan.
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I had forgotten the 1954 Knappertsbusch Parsifal, where his singing is good, though he is still a little inclined to "rush his fences" even there. That's one of the reasons I usually fancy the 1962 Knappertsbusch more, for Jess Thomas's less communicative but sweeter-sounding assumption.
There's one, more recent tenor who shouldn't be forgotten. He sang nearly all the great, Wagnerian Heldentenor roles, I think with the exception of Tannhäuser. And he recorded several of them. His acting was heartfelt if basic, his singing reliably impressive: and his name was Alberto Remedios, of course!
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostI had forgotten the 1954 Knappertsbusch Parsifal, where his singing is good, though he is still a little inclined to "rush his fences" even there. That's one of the reasons I usually fancy the 1962 Knappertsbusch more, for Jess Thomas's less communicative but sweeter-sounding assumption.
There's one, more recent tenor who shouldn't be forgotten. He sang nearly all the great, Wagnerian Heldentenor roles, I think with the exception of Tannhäuser. And he recorded several of them. His acting was heartfelt if basic, his singing reliably impressive: and his name was Alberto Remedios, of course!
I have an aversion to Wagner in English (and also, I’m afraid, to Reginald Goodall) so I can’t appreciate Remedios as much as I might. I’ve read that an international career escaped him because he coudln’t be bothered to improve his German pronunciation!
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