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             Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791) 
               
              Idomeneo - a music drama in three acts K366 (1781) 
               
                
              Idomeneo, King of Crete - John Mark Ainsley (tenor); Idamante, his 
              son - Pavol Breslik (tenor); Ilia, Trojan princess, daughter of 
              Priam - Juliane Banse (soprano); Electra, princess, daughter of 
              Agamemnon, king of Argos - Annette Dasch (soprano); Arbace, confidante 
              of the king - Rainer Trost (tenor); High Priest of Neptune - Guy 
              de Mey (tenor)  
              Chorus and Orchestra of the Bavarian State Opera/Kent Nagano  
              Stage Director: Dieter Dorn; Stage and Costume Design: Jürgen 
              Rose  
              rec. live, Cuvilliés Theatre, Munich, 11, 14 June 2008  
              Directed for TV: Brian Large  
              TV format: 1080i; Full HD, 16:9. Sound format: PCM stereo. DTS-HD 
              Master Audio surround sound  
                
              EUROARTS   
              2072444 [176:00]   
             
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                  In 1780 Mozart was greatly frustrated by the lack of opportunities 
                  to stage his new singspiel - the one we now know as Zaide. 
                  However, the summer brought news for which the composer had 
                  longed. It was a commission to write a serious opera for Munich, 
                  the new base of the Court previously at Mannheim. The new work 
                  was to be presented in the Carnival Season of 1780-1781. The 
                  subject chosen was Idomeneo. The composer sought leave 
                  from the Archbishop with the Chaplain of the Archbishop’s 
                  Court being chosen to write the libretto, much of which was 
                  written whilst Mozart was in Salzburg.   
                   
                  The plot of Idomeneo tells the story of the eponymous 
                  King of Crete and is set against the backdrop of the aftermath 
                  of the Trojan Wars. The Trojan princess Ilia is held captive 
                  on Crete, where she has fallen in love with Idamante, the son 
                  of her country's long-standing enemy, Idomeneo. However, to 
                  complete the love triangle Idamante is promised in marriage 
                  to the Mycenaean princess Electra. On his return from Troy, 
                  Idomeneo is caught up in a violent storm. In order to save his 
                  life he vows to sacrifice to Neptune, the sea God, the first 
                  living creature he encounters on land; this turns out to be 
                  none other than Idamante, his son. Idomeneo, along with his 
                  confidante Arbace, who is the only other person to know about 
                  his terrible vow, tries to circumvent the sacrifice by sending 
                  Idamante and Electra to Mycenae. Neptune is up to this and prevents 
                  the boat from leaving by creating a storm followed by the invasion 
                  of a sea monster that threatens Crete. In despair at his father's 
                  behaviour towards him, Idamante decides to seek death in battle 
                  with the monster and in that way to escape from the crisis of 
                  conscience caused by his love for Ilia. The sea monster terrifies 
                  the whole of Crete. In order to reassure his people Idomeneo 
                  finally reveals the reason for Neptune's anger. To general dismay, 
                  Idamante is led to the sacrificial altar, but at the very last 
                  moment is saved by the voice of the High Priest of Neptune who 
                  states that Idomeneo must abdicate and hand over power to Idamante 
                  and Ilia.  
                     
                  In style Idomeneo is firmly an opera seria with recitative 
                  and set arias and ensembles easily becoming rather static vocal 
                  showpieces. It was a genre that Mozart did not return to again 
                  until his last staged work, La Clemenza di Tito, ten 
                  years later. By which time, vastly more experienced, he was 
                  able to bend the traditional form of the genre to better encompass 
                  the dramatic thrust of the work. In Idomeneo this ability 
                  is less evident and whilst some claim it to be equal to Tito, 
                  the great Da Ponte trilogy of the 1780s and the singspiels Die 
                  Entführung aus dem Serail and Die Zauberflöte, 
                  it is perhaps better considered as being the first of Mozart’s 
                  truly great stage works. Mozart did make revisions for performances 
                  in Vienna in 1786 and which involved the casting of the role 
                  of Idamante for tenor instead of the castrato of the original. 
                  This change is compounded here with the roles of Arbace and, 
                  unusually, the High Priest of Neptune also being sung by tenors.  
                   
                  The work was premiered on 29 January 1781 in the small Court 
                  Theatre in Munich. That theatre now bears to name of the Cuvilliés 
                  Theatre after its builder. It is in this small delightful rococo 
                  restored venue that this performance was recorded, the staging 
                  presented to celebrate its re-opening after three years of restoration. 
                  Seating just over five hundred it is, economically, unlikely 
                  to be staged in such a small venue again. In the circumstances 
                  it is a pity that the Bavarian State Opera did not follow the 
                  example of the Maryinsky Theatre in 1998 who for their performances 
                  of the 1862 original version of Verdi’s La forza del 
                  destino reconstructed the original sets (see review). 
                  The designer here, Jürgen Rose, follows something of the 
                  current trend of minimalism with a stage workshop set with contemporary 
                  accoutrements. His costumes are something of a mishmash of styles 
                  and periods that are no aid whatsoever in helping to determine 
                  who is who when the chorus perform.  
                     
                  The name part has drawn many famous tenors to the recording 
                  studio including those not noted in Mozart in the theatre, including 
                  Pavarotti and Domingo. John Mark Ainsley’s tenor is not 
                  of the same mellifluous character or vocal grace as those famous 
                  names. There are some dry patches in his voice and it lacks 
                  a free heroic ring. Nonetheless, his act two Fuor del mar 
                  (CH.24) is a histrionic tour de force. What he brings 
                  to the whole performance is a dramatic commitment and involvement 
                  that overcomes the restricted setting and vocal as well as costume 
                  limitations. Vital for any dramatic realisation to escape this 
                  tawdry staging is that Ainsley’s strengths are matched 
                  by the soft-grained eloquent tenor singing of Pavol Breslik 
                  as Idamante. The duet between father and son is the particular 
                  and most significant highlight of this performance (CHs.31). 
                   
                     
                  Apart from the singers mentioned the general standard is mediocre. 
                  Rainer Trost as Arbace, gets both his arias (CHs.20 and 42) 
                  but now has significant raw patches in his tone and is unable 
                  to make any impact in this production. He looks foppish and 
                  plain silly carrying Electra’s suitcases around! Of the 
                  ladies, Juliane Banse as Ilia starts better than she finishes 
                  whilst the tall and imposing scarlet-gowned Electra of Annette 
                  Dasch barely whips up a tantrum as she is left alone from the 
                  festivities (CH.51). In the pit Kent Nagano does not come over 
                  as particularly adept in this music which at times not only 
                  fails to sparkle but sounds positively turgid. This turgidity 
                  would be fatal but for the committed histrionic performances 
                  of John Mark Ainsley and Pavol Breslik.  
                     
                  Robert J Farr  
                     
                   
                 
                   
                 
             
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