My curiosity about this opera was fired when I noticed a number of references
	to it scattered through the life of Erich Wolfgang Korngold in Brendan Carroll's
	biography, The Last
	Prodigy. When Korngold was only nine years old he composed a cantata
	for solo singers, chorus and piano entitled Gold, the opening of which
	showed the influence of Tiefland. Then, Korngold resigned his professorship
	at the State Academy in Vienna, in 1931, because his perfectionism would
	not allow him to tolerate a particularly embarrassingly poor orchestral rehearsal
	of Tiefland by the institution's indolent pupils. Finally we learn
	that Hollywood exile, Rudolf Lothar, the librettist of d'Albert's Tiefland
	contributed to the story for Korngold's Die stumme Serenade (The Silent
	Serenade) first performed in March 1951. So, thinking that whatever
	influenced the opulent Romantic style of Korngold was worth pursuing and
	having been impressed with D'Albert's Piano and Cello Concertos, I invested
	in this super-budget Arts release. I was not disappointed.
	
	Eugen D'Albert was born in Glasgow in 1864. He bore a French name of Italian
	origin, was German by adoption and died a Swiss citizen in 1932 in Riga!
	His parents moved south to Newcastle when he was very young and he was drilled
	as a public pianist at a very early age. He hated England and after several
	years in London made his way to Vienna at the age of 17. He composed 22 operas
	taking in every "problem" story ever tackled in opera from Wagner to Krenek's
	"Johnny spiel auf". Tiefland (1903), in the Italian 'verismo' style, shows
	influences of Wagner and Richard Strauss and there is much use of Viennese
	waltz forms. D'Albert's orchestration is sumptuous. It is set in Spain; partly
	on an isolated mountain slope in the Pyrenees and partly in a lowland valley
	in Catalonia. D'Albert always keen to soak up local colour and atmosphere,
	went on a walking tour of the region and had a musical scholar obtain Spanish
	dance tunes and shepherd's call s for him. For D'Albert, authenticity was
	an integral part of naturalism.
	
	The drawback with this 2 CD set is that although there is a substantial enough
	booklet with good notes in English, French and German, the libretto is only
	in German so unless the listener is fluent in that language, it is impossible
	to appreciate all of D'Albert's subtleties and nuances. Briefly, the story
	concerns a rather naive and lonely young shepherd, Pedro who is persuaded
	by landowner, Sebastiano to descend from his mountain home to the plains
	below and to marry the lovely Marta.
	
	Marta is Sebastiano's young ward and mistress. Sebastiano has an ulterior
	motive because he wants to make a good profitable marriage to bolster his
	dwindling assets - but he also wants to keep Marta as his mistress. At first
	Marta is repulsed by the guileless Pedro who she thinks is a rogue but when
	she realises that he is innocent and really loves her, she falls in love
	with him when she discovers Sebastiano's deception. Pedro and Marta confront
	Sebastiano with their love but he will not let Marta go particularly as he
	knows that he has now lost everything because his intended bride has also
	been told of his duplicity. In the ensuing fight between Pedro and Sebastiano,
	Sebastiano is killed and Pedro and Marta flee for the purer atmosphere of
	the mountains.
	
	The cast is impressive in this 1983 recording. René Kollo is as
	magnificent as he was as Walther in the 1971 Karajan recording of the Die
	Meistersinger as he ranges from incredulous innocent, to ardent lover,
	to vicious avenger. Bernd Weikl is also excellent as Sebastiano, the scheming
	villain with a heart. Eva Marton also impresses as Marta but curiously the
	important role of Nuri is not credited in the booklet's cast list (although
	more minor characters are!). The best material is given to the men. Highlights
	include: the evocative orchestral opening vividly portraying life in the
	high mountains; the Act I scene when the village maidens make fun of what
	they perceive as the boorish naivety of Pedro and Marta's anxiety about being
	separated from Sebastiano against lively Richard Strauss/Viennese-like material
	followed by Sebastiano's Ochs-like reassuring serenading of Marta to similar
	material found in Der Rosenkavalier but with more passion and irony
	(the orchestral accompaniment at the end of this scene is positively ravishing).
	Act II highlights include Pedro's big aria the wolf song in which he tells
	Marta of the wolf he had killed on the mountains to protect his sheep (serving
	as an allegory for the situation between Marta, Sebastiano [the human wolf]
	and himself); this is followed by the glorious love duet between Marta and
	Pedro as Marta realises the truth of the situation.
	
	Janowski leads his his choir, orchestra and soloists in a passionate and
	moving performance of this much negelected opera - little wonder that it
	had such an effect on Korngold! At such a bargain price this is an operatic
	set that everyone who loves full blooded late Romantic music should snap
	up without hesitation.
	
	Reviewer
	
	Ian Lace
	
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