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            Jules MASSENET 
              (1842 - 1912)  
              Werther (1892)  
                
              Rolando Villazon (tenor) - Werther; Alain Vernhes (baritone) - The 
              Bailiff; Sophie Koch (mezzo) - Charlotte; Eri Nakamura (soprano) 
              - Sophie; Audun Iversen (baritone) - Albert; Stuart Patterson (tenor) 
              - Schmidt; Darren Jeffery (bass) - Johann; Zhengzhong Zhou (baritone) 
              - Brühlmann; Anna Devin (soprano) - Käthchen; Jack Sullivan, 
              Valerie Zakharov, Pierce Adams, Kitty Woods, Harry Oakes, Nico Taylor 
              - The Bailiff’s young children; Chorus & Orchestra of 
              the Royal Opera House/Antonio Pappano  
              rec. live, Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, May 2011  
              Libretto with German and English translation enclosed  
                
              DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON 477 9340 [74:47 + 57:29]  
             
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                  Having collected most of the available ‘official’ 
                  recordings of Werther - as opposed to various off-air 
                  or other live productions - I have been astounded by the superb 
                  artistic quality. It all started back in the early electrical 
                  recording period with Georges Thill as a hard-to-surpass Werther. 
                  It was more than twenty years before Cetra issued a rival with 
                  Ferruccio Tagliavini and his wife Pia Tassinari - still not 
                  in my collection and probably ruled out since I believe it is 
                  sung in Italian. It took another fifteen years before EMI took 
                  the inevitable decision to record Nicolai Gedda and Victoria 
                  de los Angeles, a set that rightly was issued in the Great 
                  Recordings of the Century series; sadly not available at 
                  the moment. Then came a deluge of recordings: DG set down Domingo 
                  and Elena Obraztsova, EMI chose Alfredo Kraus and Tatiana Troyanos 
                  and Philips took two of their top names, José Carreras 
                  and Frederica von Stade. Somewhat later RCA picked Ramon Vargas 
                  and Vesselina Kasarova whereupon Erato launched Jerry Hadley 
                  and Anne-Sophie von Otter. EMI, again, recorded their dream 
                  couple Roberto Alagna and Angela Gheorghiu and finally Decca, 
                  who had never jumped on the Werther train before finally 
                  found a worthy tenor in Andrea Bocelli who teamed up with Julia 
                  Gertseva as recently as 2004.  
                     
                  So, do we really need another Werther? It seems that 
                  opera freaks have a constant need of new recordings of their 
                  favourite operas and that there is a lot of comparing going 
                  on when they meet. There are so many different components that 
                  have to function together in any operatic production and rarely 
                  do all these components fit one hundred per cent. They don’t 
                  here either but they cohere well enough to make this recording 
                  attractive, so the answer is: Yes! We - or many of us - do need 
                  this recording.  
                     
                  Where are the flies in the ointment, then? Being recorded live 
                  during performances we have to accept a lot of stage noises. 
                  Those of us brought up on studio recordings still haven’t 
                  got used to this. It’s no problem in the opera house, 
                  it isn’t particularly disturbing on DVD either, when we 
                  can locate the source, but here it is a nuisance and diverts 
                  us (OK, me) from the musical enjoyment. The recording is clean 
                  and detailed but it isn’t very atmospheric and the balance 
                  emphasizes the soloists, who are very much up-front with the 
                  orchestra seemingly at some distance. This doesn’t mean 
                  that the orchestra is subdued. There is a lot of body to the 
                  sound and they play superbly.  
                     
                  Antonio Pappano has recorded Werther before almost fifteen 
                  years ago. That recording is certainly one of the most recommendable, 
                  not least thanks to Pappano’s conducting. His reading 
                  has not changed radically, but it seems that there is an extra 
                  surge at Covent Garden. There’s more ebb and flow in the 
                  music, which on a good day is more natural in a live performance 
                  than in lifeless studio sessions. I haven’t made direct 
                  comparison with the earlier recording, but the feeling of a 
                  special event is strong and in the emotional climaxes the intensity 
                  becomes almost unbearable.  
                     
                  That most emotional of tenors, Rolando Villazon makes his long 
                  awaited return to Covent Garden after problems with his vocal 
                  cords. Here, back on form, those climaxes are indeed tremendous. 
                  In the past he had tendencies to overdo the dramatic outbreaks. 
                  Now it seems that he has cooled down a bit - and that is good 
                  - but there is no lack of power. He is just as involved in his 
                  character as he was before. I can’t find any noticeable 
                  deterioration in the quality of the voice, which I complained 
                  about when reviewing his solo disc with Mexican songs. Here 
                  he is fresh in tone and, most important of all, his half-voice 
                  is still in marvellous shape. Few if any present-day tenors 
                  have such an array of nuance. Villazon applies this with the 
                  music and text in mind, not to show off his technically impressive 
                  diminuendo. The emotional and musical high-spot is no doubt 
                  Pourquoi me réveiller in act III (CD 2 tr. 9). 
                  Readers who are not yet convinced that they need this recording 
                  should lend an ear to that aria. Thill, Gedda, Kraus, Domingo, 
                  Carreras, Alagna are all superb in their different ways but 
                  Villazon pulls the heart-strings even more. He is a romantic, 
                  but he isn’t sentimental.  
                     
                  There are other reasons to get this recording. One is Sophie 
                  Koch’s Charlotte. Not since 1931 has there been a native 
                  French-speaking Charlotte on an official recording. Then, Ninon 
                  Vallin sang the role opposite Thill. Admittedly both Victoria 
                  de los Angeles and Frederica von Stade were fluent in French 
                  but there is still a certain thrill to hear Sophie Koch, whom 
                  I have admired for quite some time as a wonderful Lieder singer. 
                  She also brings something of that capacity to her portrayal 
                  of Charlotte. Occasionally she seems a bit too heavy for the 
                  role. I have the same feeling when listening to Tatiana Troyanos 
                  (with Alfredo Kraus). She is a marvellous singer with real ‘face’ 
                  to her singing but slightly matron-like. Sophie Koch’s 
                  is a large voice today, but this pays dividends in for 
                  instance the opening of act III (CD 2 tr. 2-3) where she is 
                  overwhelming. The encounter with Werther later in the act (CD 
                  2 tr. 8) finds both singers in great shape.  
                     
                  The rest of the cast are more or less subordinate to the central 
                  couple but not unimportant. The young Japanese soprano Eri Nakamura 
                  has risen to stardom during the last couple of years. She makes 
                  a fine Sophie, less of a soubrette than many Sophies. Albert, 
                  one of the dullest personalities in the whole opera literature, 
                  is brought to remarkable life by the likewise young Norwegian 
                  baritone Audun Iversen. He is a major find and seems cut out 
                  for a great career. Just listen to him in his first act solo 
                  Elle m’aime! Elle pense à moi! (CD 1 tr. 
                  8). Not even Thomas Allen and Thomas Hampson are better!  
                     
                  Alain Vernhes has been around for more than two decades but 
                  is still in good voice. He makes a sonorous Bailiff. His pals 
                  Schmidt and Johann, impersonated by Stuart Patterson and Darren 
                  Jeffery also contribute to the overall excellence of this issue. 
                   
                     
                  Yes, we do need this recording, but is it a downright first 
                  recommendation? Let me put it this way: I can’t imagine 
                  getting rid of any of the sets I listed at the beginning of 
                  this review, but if I was stranded on that desert island and 
                  had time to bring only six sets of Werther this new DG 
                  recording would be one of them. The other five would be Prêtre 
                  (los Angeles, Gedda), Plasson (Troyanos, Kraus). Davis (von 
                  Stade, Carreras). Pappano (Gheorghiu, Alagna) and Nagano (Hadley, 
                  von Otter). Anyone buying his/her first Werther who chooses 
                  the present one will, I’m convinced, fall in love with 
                  both the work and the artists.  
                     
                  Göran Forsling  
                     
                 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                   
                 
             
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