Simon O'Neill was excellent last night, as was the cast as a whole (although Denoke did seem to tire during Act II). The orchestra were on great form, but the chorus singing was out of this world. I have never heard the onstage chorus melt (I can think of no other word) into the offstage as it did last night during the grail scene in Act I. The production is one that I need, and want, to see again. Utterly absorbing, and I was spellbound throughout as I never have been before in Parsifal. I eagerly await the DVD.
Parsifal (ROH)
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostIt's being shown as a live broadcast to cinemas I think on Wednesday 18 December.
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Richard Tarleton
About the only things Hugh Canning liked were the orchestra and Pappano - but an interesting review in the ST. I like his comment [I think short quotes are permissible, no?]
....the sometimes questionable theories and opinions of endless self-styled Wagner experts and commentators. What used to be imparted to audiences through programme notes now has to be staged, it seems. It is a recipe for obfuscation and incoherence, neither of which Langridge avoids here
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slarty
I'm afraid the soprano has a very short top. anything above G is dodgy to say the least and her declamation is poor.
Oh to be back in the house when Amy was singing Kundry.
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Interesting comments about the tempi. I'd forgotten this was on and tuned in about halfway through act two, and to my ears it sounded unusually slow. Parsifal isn't exactly a speedy piece but I found myself wanting things to push on a bit faster than they were (and I saw Goodall do it!).
That was an amazing silence after the music ended: presumably there's an arresting stage picture held for a few seconds and only then does the curtain fall. Bravo.
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Well, Bert, to my ears the applause at the end of Act 1 was chasteningly perfunctory and rather reflected my own underwhelm. Maybe some at ROH did not clap because at Bayreuth one doesn't?
And agree about Kundry - tad pressed here and there.
Interesting that the BBC seem to be making the major case that Amfortas is really the central focus of the opera, and that a gormless Parsifal does what he does by blind instinct rather than any worked out attitude. Contrasts for me with Kollo for Solti whom one feels is at the end of a long spiritually and physically exhausting search in himself and journey during which he has worked out how mitleid can be applied - you feel Kollo will retire to mystic solitary contemplation - or very differently Kaufmann who seems to see Parsifal returning to lead the Grail Knights back to a cleansed, focused renewed collective life, different, but renewed. He seems a dynamic Parsifal coming into his own after truly ghastly Act 2 suffering. This ROH Parsifal [O’Neil] seems a much lesser figure even than the morally colossal figure of Pape's Gurnemanz - also wonderful at the Met. He sounds still bubbling vague platitudes compared to Gurnemanz. This Parsifal still does not seem to know at the end any more than at the beginning, BUT now he knows what ritual gestures to perform to cure Kundry and Amfortas, but isn't necessarily clear about the rationale behind the ritual. Is it in O'Neil's range - or maybe the production's range? Maybe it is all about blind passions healing themselves?
If you have an almost naked 12 yr old boy as your Grail in Act 1 [erm??], then what on earth can you have in Act 3 when the Grail is revealed in VERY different circs and presumably to unite, repair and heal, even re-kindle the knights? Martin Handley's description suggests the ICU is EMPTY at the end, no boy, no Christ sub, no sacrificial gestalt, which says to me that it's all been a preparation for emptiness, nothing, revealing it’s been a sort of lie, a cheat, a deception. And ALL that Parsifal has come back to do is just perform the physical actions of a walking A&E.
Baffled: the production seems to have so changed the visual image of the Grail that it's very hard to see what we take away at the end. Having a near-naked boy as the Grail is indeed a coup de theatre, but honestly....is it any more? Does Act 3 develop it, reveal it, contextualise it? Provide at least a sort of answer to the Parsifal conundrum?
And Act 3 was unbelievably slow and for me without visuals incoherent. Finley clearly tired audibly in Act 3 - maybe slow tempi took it out of him? Sorry, it just seemed to maunder and dawdle.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by DracoM View PostIf you have an almost naked 12 yr old boy as your Grail in Act 1 [erm??], then what on earth can you have in Act 3 when the Grail is revealed in VERY different circs and presumably to unite, repair and heal, even re-kindle the knights? Martin Handley's description suggests the ICU is EMPTY at the end, no boy, no Christ sub, no sacrificial gestalt, which says to me that it's all been a preparation for emptiness, nothing, revealing it’s been a sort of lie, a cheat, a deception. And ALL that Parsifal has come back to do is just perform the physical actions of a walking A&E.
I didn't listen on the radio, I imagine it was a challenging production for the excellent Martin H to convey.
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