With the death of the 
                enlightened Emperor Joseph II, who had 
                commissioned Cosi fan tutte and 
                is said to have suggested its plot, 
                Mozart’s source of operatic patronage 
                appeared to have dried up. Given his 
                parlous financial state he would doubtless 
                have welcomed Emanuel Schikaneder’s 
                suggestion that Mozart compose a magic 
                opera for his Theater auf der Wieden 
                in Vienna. The two had resumed friendship 
                when Schikaneder returned to Vienna 
                in 1789. They shared the fellowship 
                of the same Masonic Lodge. The Theater 
                auf der Wieden was a popular theatre 
                holding around one thousand and mounted 
                productions featuring elaborate machinery, 
                live animals, spectacular lighting and 
                scenic effects. These were interspersed 
                with topical jokes, in the local patois, 
                and songs to suit an unsophisticated 
                audience. 
              
 
              
Various sources have 
                been suggested for the basis of Schikaneder’s 
                libretto with much discussion of the 
                relationship of the trials undergone 
                by Tamino and Pamina, and the triumph 
                of good over evil, to the Masonic background 
                of composer and librettist. The Masonic 
                influence is also implied by the frequency 
                the number three occurs in the opera 
                as it is said that this number is significant 
                in Freemasonry. Certainly the number 
                occurs with the Three Ladies, Boys, 
                and Doors as well as in the musical 
                structure. What really destroys this 
                argument for the work being a Masonic 
                allegory is that there are only two 
                trials, of fire and water. If there 
                were any Masonic allusions it would 
                be the three steps and trials an initiate 
                has to take and undergo to raise to 
                the sublime degree of Master Mason. 
              
 
              
Die Zauberflöte 
                is surely in the tradition of the 
                Theater auf der Wieden where it was 
                premiered on 30 September 1791 as a 
                popular entertainment with as much spectacle 
                as possible. A performance such as that 
                by Colin Davis (Philips), which seeks 
                a to confer patina of extra gravitas 
                via slow tempi and heavy orchestral 
                colouring, misses the point. At the 
                other end of the scale is the fleet 
                conducting of Mackerras with a smaller 
                chamber orchestra (Telarc, recorded 
                1992 review). 
                Abbado’s speeds on this recording are 
                very similar to those of Mackerras who 
                also seeks to emulate the practice of 
                Mozart’s time: decoration of the vocal 
                line with appoggiaturas and ornaments. 
                In the middle road of tempi between 
                the turgidity of Davis and the fleetness 
                here, come Haitink (EMI, recorded 1981) 
                and Marriner (Philips, recorded 1989). 
                Whilst Haitink abbreviates the extensive 
                dialogue of the original, he does so 
                to a lesser degree than Marriner and 
                Abbado, who as a consequence fit the 
                opera on two CDs and without disturbance 
                to the flow and continuity of the opera. 
              
 
              
It is surprising that 
                Abbado has returned to opera with Mozart 
                after his life-threatening illness and 
                to a work he had not previously conducted. 
                A consummate Verdi and Rossini conductor 
                in the theatre and on record, I have 
                not found his previous sorties into 
                Mozart particularly appealing or revealing. 
                This recording derives from a series 
                of live performances at the Teatro Communale, 
                Modena. This fact is not clearly stated 
                and I did not realise it was so until 
                the applause at the end. What is stated 
                is that the recording was made with 
                a young cast in conjunction with performances 
                in Italy and Germany. I also believe 
                that Abbado will conduct performances 
                at the 2006 Edinburgh International 
                festival. The casts for these various 
                performances have involved changes of 
                personnel. I do not know to what extent 
                DG chose the performances at Modena 
                for the recording because of the presence 
                of two well-known singers in the cast, 
                Dorothea Röschmann as Pamina and 
                René Pape as Sarastro. Certainly 
                these two sing their roles with distinction. 
                Pape’s sonorous tones and expressive 
                phrasing are heard to good effect in 
                his two solos, particularly In diesen 
                heil’gen Hallen (CD 2 tr.6). As 
                Pamina, Dorothea Röschmann benefits 
                from Abbado’s fleetness in Ach, ich 
                fühl’s (CD 2 tr. 10). She has 
                a pleasing lightness of tone without 
                erasing memories of Lucia Popp for Haitink 
                or Kiri Te Kanawa for Marriner. I wonder 
                if she could have sustained the lovely 
                legato and tonal richness they exhibit 
                at the slower speeds adopted by their 
                conductors? 
              
 
              
Of the other soloists, 
                all previously unknown to me, I was 
                particularly impressed by the vocal 
                timbre and expressive characterisation 
                of Christoph Strehl as Tamino. He has 
                something of the tonal warmth of Stuart 
                Burrows, on Solti’s first recording, 
                with the ease and fluency in the German 
                of Siegfried Jerusalem for Haitink. 
                If I dare mention the name, he reminds 
                me of the young Fritz Wunderlich. The 
                German lyric tenor fach badly needs 
                a singer of that quality. Strehl’s legato, 
                diction and caressing of the phrase 
                are heard to good effect in Die Bildnis 
                (CD 1 tr. 5) and his strength of voice 
                in the act one finale (CD 1 trs. 13-16). 
                If not quite on that level the Papageno 
                of Hanno Müller-Brachmann is more 
                than satisfactory. He characterises 
                the role well in the various situations 
                in which the bird-catcher finds himself. 
                Although his diction is good he does 
                force his voice a shade too much in 
                the dialogue. Not as vocally satisfying 
                is Erika Miklósa as the Queen 
                of the Night. Once she gets to the stratospheric 
                heights of Der Hölle Rache 
                (CD 2 tr. 4) she is fine and her coloratura 
                is well articulated. Lower down the 
                scale her middle voice is less steady 
                and she is variable in pitch. 
              
 
              
At the end of the day 
                this is Abbado’s Die Zauberflöte 
                and his presence on the podium is 
                the justification for another recording 
                of the opera. Ones reactions will depend 
                on feelings about his conducting and 
                whether for you he brings any particular 
                and distinctive illumination to the 
                work, whether it be a glorified pantomime 
                or Masonic allegory. Personally, I find 
                no particular magic that would make 
                me want to displace my favourite performance, 
                that by Haitink, the wobbly Sarastro 
                apart, from my shelves. Also the recording, 
                whilst well balanced and clear, lacks 
                something of the ambience and atmosphere 
                of the best studio versions. Whilst 
                it is good to hear Abbado back conducting 
                opera, and to hear a new generation 
                of German-speaking singers, that combination 
                is not enough for me to rank this performance 
                at the top of a very competitive list. 
              
Robert J Farr