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SEEN
AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL OPERA REVIEW
Pfitzner, Palestrina:
Bavarian State Opera, Simone Young, Nationaltheater,
Munich 19.1.2009 (JFL)
Intendant Klaus Bachler has brought Pfitzner’s Magnum
Opus, “Palestrina” back to the stage of the Bavarian
State Opera where it was premiered 92 years ago.
Although co-produced with the Hamburg State Opera,
this was to be a “Munichean affair”, and Bachler hand
picked Christian Stückl, a Bavarian wood
carver-cum-theater director - probably best known for
being in charge of the Oberammergau Passion Play.
One of the problems of “Palestrina” is that there is
too much text for the music and too little action for
the text. The first act, 100 minutes, is overlong and
its drama moves tediously. The next act sounds and
reads like a secular second coming of Die
Meistersinger. Instead of zooming in on the
conflict of arts and politics, it is 70 minutes of
clerical Barnum & Bailey in robes… but at least it
offers plenty action. The third act, with strong
shades of Parsifal, is most satisfying
musically and—refreshingly—only thirty minutes long.
Production Team
Christian Stückl (direction)
Stefan Hageneier (sets and costumes)
Michael Bauer (lighting)
Andrés Máspero, Stellario Fagone (choirs)
Cast:
Christopher Ventris (Palestrina)
John Daszak (Bernardo Navagerio)
Michael Volle (Giovanni Morone)
Carlo Borromeo (Falk Struckmann)
Wolfgang Koch (Count Luna)
Christiane Karg (Ighino)
Gabriela Scherer (Silla)
Roland Bracht (Cardinal Christoph Madruscht)
Peter Rose (Pope Pius IV)
Alfred Kuhn (Avosmediano)
Further cast members:
Steven Humes, Kenneth Roberson, Christian Rieger,
Ulrich Ress, Kevin Conners, Francesco Petrozzi, Todd
Boyce, Rüdiger Trbes, Anaïk Morel, Christoph
Stephinger, Christopher Magiera, Igor Bakan, Heike
Grötzinger, Laura Nicorescu, Elena Tsallagova
By his own admission, Stückl doesn’t like
“Palestrina” much, finding more redeeming qualities
even in Salieri’s “La Cifra”. No one will blame him
for trashing the libretto, though, written by
Pfitzner himself and amounting to little more than
brutally purple, pseudo-Wagnerian prose from which
one could quote at length to humorous effect. The
subject is the 16th century composer
Giovanni Pierluigi Palestrina who prevents music
being banned from church service at the council of
Trent through his ingenious mass, the Missa Papae
Marcelli, written under distress, angelic
influence, and breaking his writer’s block. A
sub-plot has his student Silla decide that the old
master’s traditional ways are not suited to his
creative endeavors and plans to move to that secular
sin-city of free roaming artists, Florence.
This would be a fine opportunity to stage the
conflict of art and politics and the tension of
traditional and modern art in times of renewal. That
potential was undoubtedly what fascinated Thomas Mann
and Bruno Walter at the premiere. And indeed, it
could be terrific sujet, but Pfitzner wastes
more opportunities than he takes, and Stückl’s
superficial production misses most that are left. For
a theater director being in charge, there was
surprisingly little coordination of the singers’
acting. The monochromatic stage and costumes—black,
white, hot pink, and absinth green—by Stefan
Hageneier, were visually appealing at first, but
became gimmicky by the time the three-and-a-half
hours of music concluded.
Musically, matters were in solid hands with Simone
Young, decisively navigating the Bavarian State
Orchestra through two acts before losing focus in the
third. But one could not help but wonder what might
have been made of this, had Bachler managed to make
this truly a Munich affair and lure Christian
Thielemann, to whom Pfitzner’s idiom speaks so well,
into the pit. Troubled operas need all the help they
can get and Pfitzner’s music needs great performances
to appear great. Merely competent outings smother its
potential.
Some singers were outstanding in the otherwise evenly
good Munich cast: Most notably the Bernardo Novagerio
of John Daszak, whose controlled and comfortable
tenor rang with clarity throughout. Christiane Kart
brought a much needed high voice to this opera
without female characters, and her Ighino, the son of
Palestrina, was bright and strong, with a young and
tightly-luscious vibrato anywhere above her weaker
low register.
“In-house baritone” Michael Volle was his usual
compelling self as Morone, bass Peter Rose hit even
the lowest of Pope Pius IV’s low notes with seeming
ease, and tenor Christopher Ventris in the title role
was commendable, but paled a bit next to the
ruthlessly booming baritone Falk Struckmann who
apparently so takes to his role as Carlo Borromeo
that he’ll perform it again when the Frankfurt Opera
premieres its Pfitzner in June.
There are many better operas more neglected, and many
worse operas performed more often. It’s good to have
“Palestrina” back in Munich, but Pfitzner ultimately
needs a more sympathetic and concentrated treatment
to convince those who don’t already believe in the
work’s flawed greatness.
Pictures © Wilfried Hoesl
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