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Alban BERG (1885-1935)
Wozzeck (1922) [1:35:45]
Lulu-Suite (1935) [34:00]
Wozzeck – Bo Skovhus (baritone)
Drum Major – Jan Blinkhof (tenor)
Andres - Jürgen Sacher (tenor)
Captain – Chris Merritt (tenor)
Doctor – Frode Olsen (bass)
Marie – Angela Denoke (soprano)
Konrad Rupf (bass), Kay Stiefermann (tenor), Frieder Stricker (tenor), Renate Spingler (soprano), Findlay A. Johnstone (baritone)
Hamburg State Opera Chorus and Philharmonic Orchestra/Ingo Metzmacher (Wozzeck)
Arleen Auger (soprano); City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra/Simon Rattle (Lulu-Suite)
rec. live, September-October 1998, Hamburg State Opera (Wozzeck); December 1987, Butterworth Hall, University of Warwick, UK (Lulu-Suite)
EMI CLASSICS 6406622 [72:11 + 58:08 + CD ROM]
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In the five scenes that make up Act 1 of this extraordinary
opera we meet each of the main protagonists. The Captain is
suitably manic in Scene 1, quite free with the notes as is often
the case in a live stage performance. Is his portrayal rather
one-sided? There’s not much opportunity for character development
as yet, but is there not more to the captain than this constant
hectoring? And Wozzeck himself seems already well on the way
to mental breakdown. How much further can he go? The pacing
is superb and the orchestra plays magnificently. In Scene 2,
Wozzeck’s friend Andres might be a calming influence, but he
will have his work cut out as Wozzeck is by now clearly deranged.
Andres himself seems far from normal in this opera where few
are normal, but the sublime Fritz Wunderlich, in the old DG
recording conducted by Karl Böhm, also made something simple
and childlike of him. The stage acoustic at the beginning of
Scene 3 gives some strange perspectives to the voices of Marie
– who is meant to be singing from an upstairs window – and her
disgusting friend Margret, who is in the street. The offstage
band, though, is just right. Marie sings most beautifully the
lullaby to the child she and Wozzeck have produced together,
though the preceding exchange with Margret lacks some ferocity.
The similarity between the voices of Wozzeck and Frode Olsen
as the Doctor leads to some confusion in Scene 4, where you
need to know the opera pretty well to be sure who is speaking.
The fact that each character seems as disjointed as the other
doesn’t help, nor does the absurd decision to make the libretto
available only on a third CD. In the fifth scene, the shortest
of the five, Marie submits to the Drum Major. Once again the
orchestra shines, the concluding postlude leaving us in no doubt
that as she leads him into her house she is sealing her fate.
The closing orchestral gesture, though, gradually turning into
a trill, is strangely weak.
Sprechgesang is difficult to bring off convincingly, and it
always seems to me that those performances where the singers
stick closer to Berg’s written notes are the ones in which the
characters are most subtly drawn and complex. Reaching the furthest
points in the house is easier when singing than when speaking,
and rather too much of the time the performers here lapse into
effortful ranting, a characteristic also of Leif Erikson’s live
performance on Naxos.
The impressions gained in Act 1 are confirmed in Act 2. The
orchestra is superbly eloquent at the touching moment when Wozzeck
gives Marie some money in the first scene, and the second, when
the Captain and the Doctor meet in the street and discuss the
state of the Captain’s health is biting and dramatic, the very
essence of what live performance should be, though many of Berg’s
notes go by the board. In the third scene we realise that amongst
the confusion of his feelings for Marie, there is no room for
tenderness in the mind of this particular Wozzeck. Perhaps he
is too far gone, and already was before the opera began. Curiously,
for a live performance, the atmosphere of the inn in Scene 4
is not particularly potent, as it certainly is in Dohnányi’s
studio performance, though the moment when the Idiot smells
blood must have been hair-raising on the night. I have vivid
memories of Sir Geraint Evans as Wozzeck at Covent Garden, singing
in English. His final words in this second act, after his fight
with his rival the Drum Major, “One after the other”, were a
heartbreaking mixture of resignation and defeat. Bo Skovhus
sounds brusque and irritated.
The tragedy is dramatically played out in Act 3. Angela Denoke
is most affecting as Marie reads from the Bible at the beginning
of the act. In the second scene, where Wozzeck is usually portrayed
as teetering on the brink of madness, Skovhus plays him saner
than at any moment hitherto, his allusions and veiled threats
to Marie – and indeed the ensuing murder – seemingly calculated.
The famous long crescendo on the note B is superbly sustained
by Metzmacher and the orchestra. When Wozzeck returns to the
lake to search for the knife the hectoring quality of Skovhus’
delivery makes for a less moving dénouement than usual. One
simply feels less sorry for him. The Doctor and Captain overact
wildly as they pass by, and the amplification of the children’s
voices diminishes the horror of the extraordinary final scene.
Wozzeck is a masterpiece, but even now the public are more willing
to flock to another Trovatore. This is a very fine performance
indeed, but its super-charged energy, combined with a free approach
to Sprechgesang, make for a version which is less likely than
some to convert newcomers to the cause. Claudio Abbado’s live
performance on DG is very refined, but the balance between voices
and orchestra is less than perfect and there is a fair amount
of stage noise. In the present set, unwanted noise is almost
entirely absent. Like Abbado, Christoph von Dohnányi (Decca)
has the Vienna Philharmonic in front of him, so there’s little
surprise at the sheer beauty of the sound. I find Eberhard Waechter
a rather monochrome Wozzeck, but overall this is a better bet
for those who don’t already know the opera. I’d like to make
a plea, though, for one of the earliest versions, conducted
by Karl Böhm (review).
On disc this is only available in tandem with the same conductor’s
reading of the unfinished version of Lulu, though downloaders
will find it available separately. I don’t think any other reading
places Berg’s music so firmly in the line following Mahler,
so some of the shock value is downplayed. Wozzeck is played
by Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, more sympathetic, even noble, than
in any other reading. This may not be authentic, but it is certainly
very compelling.
This performance of Wozzeck was first issued without a coupling,
but now comes in harness with the five extracts from Lulu that
Berg arranged into a suite the year before his death. The performance
by the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra with Arleen Auger
and Simon Rattle, is masterly. The booklet contains a track-list,
a cast list and a synopsis in three languages. Then you have
the “bonus disc”, a third CD containing what appears to be the
original CD booklet in pdf form, in other words, trilingual
essays, synopses and libretti – but no mention of the coupling
– all available on your computer screen.
William Hedley
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