Andante's new mastering 
                of famous live performances aims to 
                capture what those performances might 
                have felt like. This gives these recordings 
                an automatic cachet of authenticity 
                and a kind of cult status. However, 
                much depends on the quality of the particular 
                performance. The skill is to choose 
                quality performances that really are 
                interesting in themselves, and to remaster 
                them in ways that do them justice. The 
                Andante series comes impressively packaged, 
                with luxuriously bound booklets, beautifully 
                presented. However, in this case the 
                music does not quite match the promise. 
                Worthy as this performance is, and worthy 
                it is indeed, it is not an ideal first 
                choice. Artistically it is good, but 
                best appreciated by those who know Abbado, 
                Boulez, Dohnanyi and even Böhm's 
                later recording. While I'm one who listens 
                for music, not for sound quality, in 
                this case the sound quality is poor 
                enough to distract – not enough to ruin 
                listening, for it would take a lot to 
                deter a genuine listener – but just 
                enough to feel that you're listening 
                through an artificial medium. This may 
                have been recorded live, but it doesn't 
                "feel" live, with the pops, 
                crackles and occluded passages. Ultimately 
                that defeats its own purpose. 
              
 
              
Nonetheless, for a 
                Wozzeck devotee, it's unmissable because 
                it gives an insight into Karl Böhm's 
                conception of the opera. Böhm conducted 
                the opera in 1931 in Darmstadt, when 
                it was fairly unfamiliar and deemed 
                difficult. Berg himself attended and 
                approved of Berg's treatment. Böhm 
                was to champion the opera, performing 
                it several times after the war, in 1951 
                in Salzburg and in other countries. 
                This performance therefore may give 
                a closer idea of what the conductor 
                thought than his later, better known, 
                recording in Berlin. A comparison with 
                the Mitropoulos recording, made in the 
                US in 1951 is also apt. The two are 
                almost contemporary, but what different 
                emotional worlds they inhabit. Mitropoulos 
                manages to coax a suitably confused 
                characterisation from his Wozzeck, Mack 
                Harrell, but the overall impression 
                is that the cast and orchestra were 
                somewhat ill at ease with the strange, 
                subversive message of the opera, hence 
                the muddy, messy performance. No such 
                problems with the Vienna State Opera, 
                performing this explosive opera barely 
                ten years after the defeat of Nazism 
                left Europe in ruins. The concept of 
                a world run by insane authority figures 
                would have been only too relevant. 
              
 
              
This isn't a pretty 
                production. Böhm conducts with 
                an intensity one recognises from his 
                Wagner. It as though he connects the 
                conjunction of love and death in the 
                Liebestod with what happens to Wozzeck 
                and Marie. Marie may not be an enthusiastic 
                victim like Isolde, but there is a self-destructive 
                streak in Christel Göltz's portrayal 
                of Marie: she gives in to the Drum Major 
                with a laconic "Meinetwegen, es 
                ist Alles eins.". However, Böhm 
                leads the orchestra towards a wild crescendo 
                of screaming trumpets, which ends abruptly, 
                with a shock. 
              
 
              
Indeed, it is the orchestra 
                that makes most impact in this production. 
                The passages between scenes, which Berg 
                called, suitably, "Inventions", 
                more than simply mark the raising and 
                lowering of curtain on stage: they are 
                an integral part of the production. 
                Böhm gets the orchestra to comment 
                on the action by evoking the harsher, 
                discordant elements. The orchestra adds 
                a sense of rawness and unease, which 
                must have been particularly unsettling, 
                since the costumes (as shown in the 
                photographs) were somewhat comical, 
                stock figures. This approach "makes" 
                the opera. The Schnellpolka in the village 
                inn, for example, is maniacal, as if 
                all were disintegrating into madness. 
                When Wozzeck falls into the pond, the 
                orchestra rises eerily upwards: you 
                can almost hear the stage directions 
                indicating a red glow of light. The 
                trumpets and horns here are particularly 
                expressive, slightly bent and off-key. 
                The children's chorus is loud and vivid, 
                somewhat too cheerful perhaps but that 
                increases the surrealism of the scene. 
              
 
              
Walter Berry is an 
                excellent Wozzeck, young and fresh-sounding, 
                very convincing in an unflattering, 
                anti-hero role. I was less impressed 
                with Peter Klein as the Captain and 
                Karl Dönch as Doctor. Both are 
                well sung, but lacking that extra edge 
                of barely concealed hysteria we are 
                so used to these days. The minor role 
                of Margret, sung by Polly Batic, is 
                surprisingly well done. 
              
 
              
In all, this is an 
                important addition to the Wozzeck discography, 
                but one for study rather than for its 
                own sake. There are clearer and more 
                acute performances, though many might 
                prefer Böhm's harsher, starker 
                interpretation here to his later version. 
                The booklet looks like great packaging 
                for marketing impact, but is cumbersome 
                to use and the use of large font quotes 
                is distracting. I found myself referring 
                to simpler, more precise librettos. 
                
                
              
 
              
Anne Ozorio 
                
                 
              
  
              
Also of Interest? 
                
              
  
              
BERG Lulu 
                (live from the Vienna State Opera 
                Festival, 16 December 1968): Anja Silja 
                (Lulu), Gerd Nienstedt (Der Tierbandiger), 
                Ernst Gutstein (Dr Schon), Waldemar 
                Kmentt (Alwa Schön), William Blankenship 
                (Der Maler), Hans Brand (Der Medizinalrat), 
                Hans Hotter (Schigolch), Manfred Jungwirth 
                (Der Theaterdirektor), Hilde Konetzni 
                (Garderobiere), Mario Guggia (Der Prinz), 
                Martha Mödl (Grafin Geschwitz), 
                Oskar Czerwenka (Rodrigo, Athlet), Rohangiz 
                Yachmi (Der Gymnasiast), Heinz Zednik 
                (Ein Kammerdiener), Orchestra and Chorus 
                of the Vienna State Opera/Karl Bohm 
                (conductor) ANDANTE AN3050 (2-CD) (mono)