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Richard STRAUSS
(1864-1949)
Befreit, Op. 39, No. 4 [5.25]
Winterliebe, Op. 48, No. 5 [1.29]
Traum durch die Dämmerung, Op. 29, No. 1 [2.37]
Gesang der Apollopriesterin, Op. 33, No. 2 [6.49]
Arabella: “Mein Elemer!” [10.13]
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64 [52.00]
Renée Fleming (soprano)
Wiener Philharmoniker/Christian Thielemann
rec. live, Festspielhaus, Salzburg, 7-8 August 2011
Booklet: English, French, German
Picture format: NTSC 16:9; Sound format: LPCM 2.0 / DTS 5.0
Region code: 0 (worldwide)
Subtitles: English, French, German, Spanish
OPUS ARTE/UNITEL CLASSICA OA1069D
[84.52]
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It is a thrilling experience to watch Renée
Fléming sing Richard Strauss accompanied by the Vienna
Philharmonic. Recorded live in front of a large, enthusiastic
audience, the orchestra and Fleming are riveting. One can’t
help but come away from these performances believing that there
are no finer performers for the music of Strauss. If only the
same sentiment held true for the performance of Eine Alpensinfonie
- but sadly, it does not.
The opening song, Befreit, sets a Richard Dehmel love
poem, which the liner-notes describe as a “deathbed declaration
of lovefrom man to wife”. Winterliebe uses
a text by Otto Julius Bieberbaum describing the "nature and
necessity” of marriage. Traum durch die Dämmerung
also turns to Bieberbaum. Here a man walks towards his beloved,
the “loveliest of women” to whom he is eternally
connected by a velvet thread. All three songs feature the lush
orchestration and voluptuous vocal lines of Strauss at his finest.
In Befreit Fleming finds just the right vocal colour
to convey the opposing moods of love’s joy and of impending
mortality. In the third song she constantly modifies her sound
to express the complex web of emotions. Here the orchestration
- by conductor Robert Heger with the approval of Strauss - fully
conveys the atmosphere of the opening line, “Broad meadows
in the grey twilight”. Winterliebe is Strauss at
his most ebullient, a perfect musical depiction of abundant
elation, and I was actually disappointed that the audience did
not applaud at its conclusion. Decorum before enthusiasm, I
suppose.
As pointed out by Stephen Jay-Taylor in his excellent notes,
the final song of the four is really a “full-blown operatic
scene”. Emanuel von Bodman’s text calls Apollo’s
followers to forget every sorrow because the Holy one (Apollo)
is near. They “wander in nakedness; they happily drink
in the scents and sounds of their meadows,” gazing “up
into the blue heights”. Strauss sets this vivid imagery
with music of overt passion and sensuality, performed here with
incredible virtuosity and emotional abandon. Fleming’s
final selection, the aria “Mein Elemer!” from Arabella,
is also similarly gorgeous. She convincingly communicates her
character’s struggle to decide who she should marry, eventually
setting this question aside in giddy anticipation of attending
a Viennese ball.
It is a genuine pleasure to watch Fleming, acting with voice
and body fully to inhabit the mood and meaning of each song.
It is also enjoyable to observe how much the orchestra watch
and engage with her. They obviously admire and appreciate her
and respond with playing of the highest order. Thielemann proves
to be a master accompanist, following Fleming every step of
the way. Their enjoyment at making music together is readily
apparent in their eye contact during the songs, as well as the
smiles at one another in between. The applause following “Mein
Elemer!” is lengthy and wholehearted. A genuine rapport
between orchestra, soloist, and conductor is obvious to all.
Sadly, the second half of the programme does not reach the exalted
level of the first. When Christian Thielemann came onto the
international scene in the early 1990s, he was boldly proclaimed
as Herbert von Karajan’s successor by Deutsche Grammophon,
his (and Karajan’s) record label. Yet several artistically
questionable recordings of symphonies by Beethoven, Brahms and
Schumann proved that claim to be foolhardy. I owned many of
those recordings and found Thielemann’s interpretive ideas
to be generally unconvincing and often dead wrong. He has already
recorded Eine Alpensinfonie with this orchestra, a recording
I used to own but have since given away. I found his interpretation
wilful and micro-managed, without any sense of the work’s
overall architecture. The recording itself was congested, lacking
in any warmth, and presented a flat, two-dimensional sound-stage.
I hoped that this new performance would correct some of these
issues, and, to some extent, it does. The DVD recording is vastly
superior and Thielemann displays a better sense of the work’s
overall structure, with the various sections flowing into one
another more organically than the earlier performance. However,
the micro-managed phrasing is just as evident. In fact seems
worse than ever because we can watch Thielemann manipulate
phrasing in his conducting. This certainly works for some sections:
the buildup to “Sunrise” is masterly, and the “Waterfall”
is vividly pictorial. Yet the “Calm before the Storm”
passage is lacking in atmosphere, and the storm music itself
is so overly manicured - perhaps to clarify the dense counterpoint
- that the music never sounds threatening! Compare this passage
to Solti’s rather frantic performance with the Bavarian
Radio Symphony Orchestra, where Solti and the Bavarians conjure
up a Category 4 Hurricane! Is the counterpoint as clearly laid
out as in Thielemann’s performance? Absolutely not. Is
Strauss’s cinematic storm music more compellingly realized?
Absolutely!
The greatest disappointment comes in the “Sunset”
passage, where Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic are in a
class of their own. Karajan described Eine Alpensinfonie
as a metaphor for a person’s life, and in particular he
felt that the “Sunset” section was, in some sense,
a leave-taking at the end of life. By this point in his life,
Karajan was somewhat frail. His back pain had become a constant
in his life, and he had to struggle walking to the podium where
he had a special ledge built that would support him as he stood.
His conducting was therefore far less physically involved, though
just as intense. Yet, in the DVD performance there is a thrilling
moment when the Berliner’s begin the long-breathed melody
that winds through “Sunset”. Karajan grasps the
railing of the conductor’s podium and swings his body
around to the violins, encouraging them to transcend the notes
on the page and express the regret, the remembrance, the resignation
in this achingly chromatic music. They respond with a level
of incandescent playing that has never been matched. In comparison,
Thielemann’s rendering of the same music is unconvincing
and meaningless. The playing is unquestionably beautiful, but
soulless. Thielemann and Vienna show us a stunningly beautiful
picture of the Alps. Karajan and Berlin actually make us climb
the mountain.
Nevertheless, the first half of this DVD is incredible. On the
evidence of this recording, Thielemann is excellent at accompanying
and supporting the interpretative ideas of other performers,
but problems arise when he is responsible for the interpretation.
I am very glad to have this for the songs, but cannot imagine
I will ever watch the Eine Alpensinfonie again. For that,
I always turn to the Karajan performance, which remains in a
class of its own.
David A. McConnell
Masterwork Index: Eine
Alpensinfonie
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