Weill: Threepenny Opera

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  • Bryn
    Banned
    • Mar 2007
    • 24688

    #16
    Somewhat OT but worth investigating two 5 CD sets of Weill conducted by Jan Latham-Koenig (the spelling he prefers):



    Both can be found for a total outlay of less than £30.

    Comment

    • Sir Velo
      Full Member
      • Oct 2012
      • 3229

      #17
      Originally posted by Bryn View Post
      Somewhat OT but worth investigating two 5 CD sets of Weill conducted by Jan Latham-Koenig (the spelling he prefers):



      Both can be found for a total outlay of less than £30.
      I didn't know Jan was such a looker.

      Comment

      • ferneyhoughgeliebte
        Gone fishin'
        • Sep 2011
        • 30163

        #18
        Originally posted by Sir Velo View Post
        I didn't know Jan was such a looker.
        Don't be silly; that's Kurt!
        [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

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        • LeMartinPecheur
          Full Member
          • Apr 2007
          • 4717

          #19
          Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post
          Also a good recent version from HK Gruber. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Weill-Dreig.../dp/B00001R3MQ
          Thanks, gurnemanz: I have invested.

          But would Bert Brecht (or even Kurt Weill, 1928 model) have liked my choice of verb...??
          I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!

          Comment

          • Nick Armstrong
            Host
            • Nov 2010
            • 26536

            #20
            Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post
            Has anyone ever seen this work?
            Yes, more than once (including being in it!). It was the final school production I was in, as trombonist (loved playing the solo in the Ballade von der sexuellen Hörigkeit) in the orchestra - we were on stage as a kind of street band, so I saw the whole thing repeatedly!

            And then in the late 80s I had friends living in Berlin, and on one visit, I suspect in December 1988 (I remember it was snowy and freezing), we crossed through Checkpoint Charlie and went to a production at/by Brecht's own Berliner Ensemble. Can't actually remember much about the production, but the experience of going to 'The East' was unforgettable...
            "...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..."

            Comment

            • LeMartinPecheur
              Full Member
              • Apr 2007
              • 4717

              #21
              Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post
              Thanks, gurnemanz: I have invested.
              Gurnemanz, even bigger thanks now I have heard these discs. [Yes it runs to two, but no extra cost.] It has given me a much better idea of how the work might have sounded in its first (1928) production and why this was a runaway success.

              It seems an easy work to misconstrue completely. The success of the Mack the Knife song, inserted a day or so before the opening, seems to get things off on the wrong foot. Though we haven't yet met him it tells us that Mack is a great big villain (robber, murderer and rapist). But is this how he comes over in the rest of the show? Absolutely not. He runs a pathetic little gang that just about manages to steal enough furniture to mount a wedding breakfast. But ionly in a tatty dockside stable! OK, he's something of a success with the 'ladies' (whores and a previous wife Lucy), but as for murder and robbery we see next to nothing: he's a semi-successful semi-bourgeois who aspires upwards but is short of dosh. He's even prepared to consider being moral, but only when he's no longer hungry. He is therefore very close to the Weimar theatre-goers who are therefore prepared to laugh at themselves in him. No big socialist message, just a bit of fun-poking. [Brecht of course was quick to ramp up the socilaist message in Pabst's film-version a couple of years later, and in later rewrites.]

              This HK Gruber version is surely an essential corrective. It is convincingly paced, helped by restoration of instrumental reprises to give time for essential stage action. The linking narrations explaining the plot are more helpful (and less hectoring) than in the old CBS and the Mauceri versions, helped by Gruber's use of some later Brecht rewrites. Even more importantly IMO, Polly Peachum gets the 'Pirate Jenny' song restored to her as originally intended, which makes her much less of a blank-slate character. She can imagine herself as a murdering pirate so she may well be capable of being one, so her attraction towards Macheath, and her willingness and ability to take over his crime syndicate - such as it is - is vastly more convincing.

              Also crucial is careful choice of voices. The Streetsinger in Mack the Knife is vastly less creaky-geriatric than Mauceri's. The Macheath is less grand-opera, more singing-actor than Mauceri's Kollo. Polly and Jenny are bright-voiced with no trace of late-vintage Lenya, Gruber himself convinces as Peachum. The only possible blot is the very croaky Mrs P. But she is convinces in the part, though I do wish she could sing the Ballad of Sexual Dependency a teeny bit more lyrically But still far and away the most convincingly theatrical Threepenny Opera in my book.
              I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!

              Comment

              • Bryn
                Banned
                • Mar 2007
                • 24688

                #22
                Originally posted by Bryn View Post
                Oh yes, just about all of them, but that was back in the late '70s or early '80s. They included a very full production of The Threepenny Opera in a suitably earthy English translation. The same era also had fine, full length productions of Gay's The Beggar's Opera and its sequel, Polly.
                I had quite forgotten that, when I first got a CD burner in 1998, I transferred the very full 5 October 1978 Radio 3 Threepenny Opera production (in a suitably fruity English translation by Ralph Manheim and John Willett) to 3 CD-Rs. Just now, searching out my copy of the H K Gruber discs I rediscovered those CD-Rs and though the cassettes they were transferred from came from an FM broadcast replete with occasional birdies, etc., I am very please to have found them. I had the good sense to include the presentation spiel too. I will back them up straight away. If anyone would like to hear this production, PM me.

                19.30: The Threepenny Opera (Die Dreigroschcnoper)

                A play with music in a Prologue and Three Acts, after The Beggar's Opera by JOHN GAY
                Words by Bertolt Brecht Music by Kurt Weill
                English translation by RALPH MANHEIM and JOHN WILLETT
                Brecht and Weill wrote their updated version of The Beggar's Opera in 1928 to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Gay's original. Now. 50 years on the BBC marks the birth of this most famous product of their collaboration.
                Starring in alphabetical order: Sarah Bade ), Paul Bentley
                Harold Kasket. Julia McKenzie Johanna Peters , Peter Pratt Jan Waters
                Pollys songs sung by ELAINE PADMORE
                INSTRUMENTAL ENSEMBLE conducted by MARCUS DODS coach NEIL RHODEN
                Technical presentation PETER NOVIS , MARTIN PAGE , PETER SIDHOM. Produced and directed bv IAN COTTERELL and ELAINE PADMORE. Act 1
                (Julia McKenzie Is in ' Ten Times Table' at the Globe Theatre, London) g.25* Interval Reading
                8.30* The Threepenny Opera Act 2
                9.25* Interval Reading
                9.30* The Threepenny Opera Act 3

                Music By: Kurt Weill

                Narrator: John Hollis
                Ballad Singer: Roderick Horn
                Mr Peachum: Harold Kasket
                Filch: Andrew Branch
                Mrs Peachum: Johanna Peters
                Matthew: John Hollis
                Macheath: Paul Bentley
                Polly Peachum: Sarah Badel
                Jake: Bill Monks
                Bob: Roy Spencer
                Ned: Manning Wilson
                Jimmy: Roderick Horn
                Rev Kimball: Peter Williams
                Tiger Brown: Peter Pratt
                Low-Dive Jenny: Julia McKenzie
                Vixen: Heather Bell
                Vixen: Sarah Badel
                Betty: Rachel Cook
                Old Whore: Hilda Kriseman
                Smith: Roderick Horn
                Lucy Brown: Jan Waters
                Last edited by Bryn; 12-02-17, 17:27. Reason: Typo

                Comment

                • LeMartinPecheur
                  Full Member
                  • Apr 2007
                  • 4717

                  #23
                  Anyone else seen this week's production of Threepenny Opera by RAM students at Shoreditch Town Hall? I was in London on business and just scraped in on Thurs, though missing the first 10 mins

                  There's an online review https://bachtrack.com/review-threepe...pera-june-2017 which IMHO gets it about right, though I'd be even stronger: this is surely a play-with-music, much nearer cabaret than opera or even operetta, and therefore demands singing actors not well-schooled classical singers. The very bel-canto Pirate Jenny song was indeed gorgeous as classical singing but that completely misses the point. Same goes for most of the performers and the basic production, though the disclosure behind Macheath, just after his own escape from hanging, of the rest of the cast pulling up their necks in their own halters did pack a proper theatrical punch.

                  I'm due to retire soon and have now decided my modest leaving present will have to be teleportation to the Berlin premiere
                  I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!

                  Comment

                  • cloughie
                    Full Member
                    • Dec 2011
                    • 22126

                    #24
                    Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post
                    Anyone else seen this week's production of Threepenny Opera by RAM students at Shoreditch Town Hall? I was in London on business and just scraped in on Thurs, though missing the first 10 mins

                    There's an online review https://bachtrack.com/review-threepe...pera-june-2017 which IMHO gets it about right, though I'd be even stronger: this is surely a play-with-music, much nearer cabaret than opera or even operetta, and therefore demands singing actors not well-schooled classical singers. The very bel-canto Pirate Jenny song was indeed gorgeous as classical singing but that completely misses the point. Same goes for most of the performers and the basic production, though the disclosure behind Macheath, just after his own escape from hanging, of the rest of the cast pulling up their necks in their own halters did pack a proper theatrical punch.

                    I'm due to retire soon and have now decided my modest leaving present will have to be teleportation to the Berlin premiere
                    LMP - ever heard Judy Collins singing Pirate Jenny. She tells the story wonderfully. It is on the, to my mind, wonderful album, 'In my life' which had the benefit of Joshua Rifkin's arrangements and production. As well as the title track there is also one of the best interpretations ever of Randy Newman's 'I think it's gonna rain today'. Well worth a listen.

                    Comment

                    • Bryn
                      Banned
                      • Mar 2007
                      • 24688

                      #25
                      I have not seen or heard the production referred to in the opening message but would refer back to messages #7 and #22 where I linked to information about the 1978 Radio 3 production. It was superb.

                      Comment

                      • LeMartinPecheur
                        Full Member
                        • Apr 2007
                        • 4717

                        #26
                        Originally posted by cloughie View Post
                        LMP - ever heard Judy Collins singing Pirate Jenny. She tells the story wonderfully. It is on the, to my mind, wonderful album, 'In my life' which had the benefit of Joshua Rifkin's arrangements and production. As well as the title track there is also one of the best interpretations ever of Randy Newman's 'I think it's gonna rain today'. Well worth a listen.
                        Cloughie: no, but I have now! (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NFAg8x6AXQY) Much, much more like it, though I still want my "Fifty guns loaded"

                        Glad to have seen that and I might just buy the album. I liked some Judy Collins a lot years back but didn't follow it up

                        Joshua Rifkin eh? Must be authentic, and hip, then
                        Last edited by LeMartinPecheur; 18-06-17, 17:30. Reason: 50 guns, not 60. We're not in an arms race yet!
                        I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!

                        Comment

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