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Benjamin BRITTEN (1913-1976) Peter Grimes - Opera in three Acts and a Prologue Op
33 (1945) [144:41]
Peter Grimes – Anthony
Rolfe Johnson (tenor); Ellen Orford – Felicity
Lott (soprano); Captain Balstrode – Thomas Allen (baritone);
Auntie – Patricia Payne (mezzo); Nieces – Maria Bovino and
Gillian Webster (sopranos); Bob Boles – Stuart Kale (tenor);
Swallow – Stafford Dean (bass); Mrs Sedley – Sarah Walker
(mezzo); Rev Horace Adams – Neil Jenkins (tenor); Ned Keene – Simon
Keenlyside (baritone); Hobson – David Wilson-Johnson (bass)
Chorus and Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden/Bernard
Haitink
rec. Watford Town Hall, June 1992
synopsis but no text included EMI CLASSICS
5091562 [72:05
+ 72:36]
Each of the three
complete and one incomplete recordings of Peter Grimes using
the Chorus and Orchestra of the Royal Opera House has strong
merits, not least in terms of an understanding from everyone
involved of the character and idiom of the work. At the same
time, the differences between them are considerable, with
each illuminating different aspects. Put crudely, where the
second complete recording, with Jon Vickers under Sir Colin
Davis, emphasizes the dramatic power of the work, the present
version concentrates much more on the musical drama and character.
That is not to say that it lacks impact but that all the
way through it is the sheer quality of musical invention
and characterisation that mainly strikes the listener.
The sheer beauty
of Anthony Rolfe Johnson’s singing is a great delight in
itself, and somehow he manages to achieve this without losing
sight of the drama or of the more brutal aspects of the character.
Personally I find this no less a convincing portrayal of
the central character than Pears or Vickers. Felicity Lott
and Thomas Allen are also wholly within their parts, and
again, like almost all the large cast, they sing with great
beauty of tone as well as projection of the characters. I
should make particular mention of Neil Jenkins’ very lovable
portrayal of the ineffectual Rev Horace Adams, but all of
the many smaller parts are well taken and well characterised.
I have started
by writing about the soloists, but this is an opera where
the chorus and orchestra are of crucial importance. They
are indeed one of the great assets of the set, together with
Haitink’s superbly clear direction which is always alive
to the both the complexity and the logic of the score. As
a result you find yourself hearing things that you have never
noticed before. Unfortunately the recording engineers partly
undo this in their very distant placing of all the many off-stage
effects. The first scene of Act 2 for instance is set in
the village street outside the church, and Ellen’s solo with
the apprentice and later her duet with Peter are mainly accompanied
by the congregation and organ from inside the church. Clearly
they need to sound more distant than the soloists and in
a different acoustic from them, but the difference here is
so great that if you set the volume loud enough to hear the
words sung by the chorus you feel as though the soloists
are shouting in your ears. This does matter, as the ironic
juxtaposition of the two sets of singers makes this one of
the great scenes not only of this opera but of opera in general.
The village band in Act 3 Scene 1 and similar effects elsewhere
are also much too recessed. This is not a minor complaint
given the number of occasions that Britten employs them.
Apart from this the recording is very clear, with the internal
balance of the orchestra particularly well caught.
The booklet with
the set contains a helpful detailed synopsis, and the diction
of the cast is good, but I imagine that most listeners will
want to follow the libretto in detail. The box states that
this can be obtained on the EMI Classics website but I have
been unable to achieve this – fuller details on how to do
this would be helpful or the claim should be omitted. This
is however not likely to help you to decide whether or not
to buy this set. It must be admitted that it does not have
the sheer impact that any good live performance will have – especially
for instance the recently revived Opera North version – and
that the Jon Vickers/Colin Davis version certainly has, but
it does reveal aspects of the music and drama which are less
obvious but still important.
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