  | 
            | 
         
         
          |  
               
            
   
            
 alternatively 
              MDT 
              AmazonUK 
              AmazonUS
            | 
           
             Claudio MONTEVERDI (1567-1643) 
              L'Incoronazione di Poppea 
                
              Poppea – Birgitte Christensen; Nero – Jacek Laszczkowski; Ottone 
              – Tim Mead; Virtu/Drusilla - Marita Solberg; Ottavia - Patricia 
              Bardon; Amore - Amelie Aldenheim 
              Orchestra of the Norwegian National Opera/Alessandro De Marchi 
              rec. live, Norwegian National Opera, 2010 
              Director: Ole Anders Tandberg 
              TV and Video Director: Anja Stabell, Stein-Roger Bull 
              Sound: PCM Stereo 
              Picture: NTSC/16:9 
              Region: 0 (worldwide) 
              Subtitle languages: Italian, English, German, French, Japanese, 
              Norwegian 
                
              EUROARTS   
              2058928 [180:00] 
           | 
         
         
          |  
            
           | 
         
         
           
            
              
Monteverdi's last opera, L'Incoronazione 
                  di Poppea has in recent times become his most frequently 
                  staged dramatic work. In particular it has become a favourite 
                  with a certain breed of 'controversial' director, 
                  intent on playing up the latent moral ambiguity of the libretto. 
                  This production, staged in Oslo in 2010, is no exception. The 
                  blood-spattered box cover gives a good indication of what to 
                  expect within, and the blurb ticks all the expected boxes – 
                  director Ole Anders Tandberg is described as 'controversial' 
                  and 'challen(g)ing the usual operatic conventions'. 
                  Unfortunately this production is nowhere near as edgy as it 
                  would like to be. Far from 'defiance of usual operatic 
                  convention', what we have instead is a checklist run-through 
                  of the tropes of 'edgy' modern theatre delivered 
                  with little real panache. Showering everything in sight with 
                  blood and having the singers roll around in it half-naked simulating 
                  anal pleasure is not enough, I would argue, if it doesn't 
                  mean anything. 
                    
                  What is more original about this DVD is that, whilst based on 
                  a filmed production, it's been adapted and edited in 
                  post-production, and, most notably, colour-treated. All colours 
                  have been drained from the palette except red – roses, lips, 
                  but most often lashings of ketchup-y blood. The camera angles 
                  too are quite original, with the occasional top-down perspective, 
                  showing off the production's intriguing bent-sheet stage. 
                  The visual style is a sort of 'grind-house' homage 
                  to the Quentin Tarantino of films like Sin City. 
                    
                  The back of the box notes that this recording is merely based 
                  on a live performance. It soon becomes clear that what we see 
                  has only a tangential relation to what was performed for the 
                  audience. Many singers appear to be performing direct to camera 
                  at some points, and there are moments when the audience seems 
                  to be conspicuously absent, for example in the more comedic 
                  scenes where one might expect some reaction. The singers are 
                  wearing microphones, a fact more obvious at some points than 
                  others. Whilst this has obviously been done to facilitate recording 
                  - or to alleviate issues of balance - it has the effect of rendering 
                  most of the voices very 'close', too much so for 
                  my taste. The more resonant voices, Patricia Bardon's 
                  Ottavia especially, come across as overworked on screen in a 
                  way that one imagines was less pronounced in the house. It only 
                  serves to contribute to an effect somewhere between staged opera 
                  and MTV music video. 
                    
                  Lack of depth becomes something of a theme in the direction 
                  – in the desperate rush to be aggressive and controversial, 
                  the characters are stripped of nuance and left as unsympathetic 
                  maniacs. The production claims to stress the much-heralded 'moral 
                  ambiguity' of the piece, but most of the directorial 
                  decisions work against any ambiguity. Nero is unquestionably 
                  evil, Poppea unshadedly complicit. In the original, Ottone is 
                  banished, not shot as here, and Ottavia similarly does not slit 
                  her own throat. Nero's sudden clemency is an example 
                  of his capriciousness, something to keep the audience unsure 
                  about him – in removing it, Tandberg has cheapened the character. 
                    
                  The singers mostly do a fine job. Tim Mead confirms his position 
                  as one of this generation's great Ottones, singing with 
                  muscle and musicality. Birgitte Christensen's Poppea, 
                  whilst perhaps not hugely convincing in the role of the conniving 
                  consort, sings with good technique and understanding of the 
                  style, with some sensitive ornamentation. The role of Nero is 
                  more problematic – a male character written in the soprano range, 
                  he is most often portrayed by a woman in a trouser role, or 
                  transposed down the octave for a tenor. This production, however, 
                  elects to cast a male soprano, Jacek Laszczkowski. Whilst this 
                  may solve problems of gender or pitch, few convincing performances 
                  have so far been given by such a singer in this role, and unfortunately 
                  this occasion is no different. With a strange, breathy sound 
                  and frequent unhealthy-sounding dips into the chest register, 
                  Laszczkowski certainly conveyed the ugliness in the character 
                  of Nero, but little more. 
                    
                  The musical accompaniment is largely excellent, with the orchestra 
                  of the Norwegian National Opera proving themselves more than 
                  up to the task of accompanying baroque music stylishly. Not 
                  all musical decisions are a success, though. Musical director 
                  Alessandro De Marchi is credited as 'conductor and music 
                  elaboration', and indeed any conductor confronting Monteverdi's 
                  score is required to make a number of decisions about what form 
                  the music should take. De Marchi's elaboration takes 
                  some surprising forms, however. At Ottavia's entrance, 
                  for example, we have anachronistic, jabbed chords for which 
                  there is perhaps, at a push, dramatic justification, but certainly 
                  not a musical one. There's also a lot of additional percussion 
                  which sometimes sits uncomfortably with the rest of the opera's 
                  music. 
                    
                  This is a bold release from Norwegian National Opera, nicely 
                  presented, and an interesting experiment in new forms for displaying 
                  and preserving opera productions. Though this production is 
                  far from perfect, suffering more than a little from 'style 
                  over substance', releases in this form should be encouraged; 
                  they provide an experience in many ways more involving than 
                  a typical filmed opera DVD. 
                    
                  James Potter 
                 
                
                  
                
                 
                 
                  
                 
                 
                 
             
           | 
         
       
     
     |