Fidelio 
                  is technically a Singspiel: with spoken dialogue linking the 
                  musical numbers. This should make it  easier to highlight than 
                  many operas of later date with more or less continuous music. 
                  Certainly it avoids forcing producers sometimes to fade the 
                  music. As usual with highlights discs one loses the development 
                  of the story but to some extent this is rectified through a 
                  cued synopsis. The end result on this occasion is more a collection 
                  of numbers. For this reason it’s the quality of the singing 
                  more than the conductor’s overriding view that matters the most. 
                  With such a strong personality as Herbert von Karajan at the 
                  helm there are still some distinctive stamps of his individuality. 
                  These are most obvious in the extreme dynamics. The greatest 
                  problem for the domestic listener is to find a suitable setting 
                  of the volume control. As a matter of fact, in the fairly small 
                  room where I listen, I need to adjust the volume continuously 
                  if I want to hear the pianissimos and yet avoid contracting 
                  tinnitus when the Berlin Philharmonic are let loose in thundering 
                  fortissimos. The risk is imminent in the powerfully dramatic 
                  overture, which is gloriously played here. With the responsive 
                  voices of the Deutsche Oper Karajan builds up the prisoners’ 
                  chorus in one long arc. Here it is interesting to find Werner 
                  Hollweg, one of the foremost German-speaking lyrical tenors 
                  for a number of years, in the small role as First Prisoner.
                
The 
                  principals – and I suppose most collectors buy a highlights 
                  disc for their sake – are primarily from Karajan’s regular stable. 
                  From the late 1960s and onwards he often chose lighter voices 
                  than usual for dramatic roles; sometimes with good results, 
                  sometimes less so. Karl Ridderbusch, Karajan’s Fafner and Hagen 
                  in his complete Ring cycle, has little of the blackness 
                  of, say, Gottlob Frick, but he sings Rocco with great warmth. 
                  I wish there had been more of him. The other bass, Zoltán Kelemen, 
                  who was Karajan’s Alberich, is a ferocious Pizarro, making this 
                  evil governor of the prison an even more formidable character 
                  than on most recordings. Helga Dernesch, Brünnhilde in the last 
                  two parts of the Ring, is an excellent Leonore, singing 
                  with both venom and warmth in her aria. Jon Vickers, who was 
                  Siegmund for Karajan and a couple of years later sang Otello 
                  in Karajan’s remake, is his inimitable self with intense dramatic 
                  outbreaks and extreme pianissimos. His big scene, opening act 
                  II, is exceptional in its contrasting emotions – slightly wayward 
                  but enormously gripping.
                
The 
                  young Helen Donath is a bright and charming Marzelline, singing 
                  well in her aria and in the quartet where we also get a glimpse 
                  of the tenor Horst R. Laubenthal. José Van Dam, another Karajan 
                  regular, is only heard in unison with the others in the final 
                  ensemble.
                
There 
                  is very little negative to be said about this issue; the only 
                  drawback – as with highlights discs in general – is that once 
                  heard one almost certainly would like the complete opera. Readers 
                  who are well stocked with complete Fidelios already but 
                  with a special interest in one or more of the soloists here, 
                  shouldn’t hesitate. Others are better advised to save up for 
                  the complete recording, when/if it appears again – a search 
                  on EMI’s catalogue gave only this highlights disc. Since I haven’t 
                  heard the complete set I don’t know how eccentric Karajan 
                  is here so a safer recommendation would be Klemperer – also 
                  EMI, now in the GROC series. You could also try the wholly admirable 
                  super-budget Naxos set with Michael Halasz conducting and a 
                  star line-up of singers including Alan Titus, Gösta Winbergh, 
                  Inga Nielsen and Kurt Moll.
                
              
Göran 
                Forsling