Siegfried WAGNER (1869-1930)
Scenes and Arias.
Bruder Lustig Act 1: Transformation Music; Bleibt auf den Stufen!;
Act 3: Da bin ich schon! Seht!. Herzog Wildfang Ich grüss dich,
liebes Kind!. Schwarzschwanenreich Das ist g¹rad! Wer sie entlarvte!.
Die heilige Linde Trauriger Miene steht ihr um mich vereint. Der
Friedensengel Act 3: Interlude; Act 1: Jetzt Licht gemacht. Rainulf
und Adelasia Wohlan denn! So sei es!; Das Feuer lebt der Erde Tod.
Der Schmied von Marienburg Still, Sohn! Nicht freveln!.
Iris Vermillion (mezzo);
Cologne West German Symphony Chorus and Orchestra/Werner Andreas Albert.
CPO CPO999 651-2
(full price, 1 hour 7 minutes). [DDD]
[66'53]
Crotchet
An unusual and fascinating insight into the world of one of Richard Wagner's
sons, this disc acts as a fascinating taster of an obviously highly talented
composer who, like his father, had a penchant for acting as his own librettist.
This is the Siegfried of Siegfried Idyll, by the way. He conducted
part of the 1896 Ring, and his first production was
Holländer in 1906.
The link with Wagner père is immediately made explicit by the
first track, the 'Transformation Music' of Bruder Lustig. Interestingly,
however, the musical language is more akin to that of Schoenberg's
Erwartung than to the more monolithic processes of Parsifal,
wedded to the late Romanticism of Alexander von Zemlinsky. Urme's Scene,
which follows, is immersed in witchcraft (a less impassioned magic than Isolde's
invocations in Tristan, however). The scoring is darkly shifting:
in fact, throughout the disc one is consistently struck by Siegfried Wagner's
mastery of the orchestra.
The most Wagnerian excerpts are those from Schwarzschwanenreich and
Die heilige Linde, the latter sung by the Ring-like named character
of Gundelind. The instrumental Interlude from Der Friedensengel is
stormy in the best Walküre Act One tradition. Vermillion clearly
relishes the chromatically-inflected lines, and her commitment to this composer's
cause is never called into doubt throughout. The more advanced, trance-like
language of the Rainulf und Adelasia excerpt provides the greatest
challenge for Vermillion's lower registers, a test she passes with flying
colours.
Full marks all round, then: to CPO for their imaginative programming, and
to the musicians for their obvious belief in this music. Only the occasional
roughness of ensemble reveals less than perfect rehearsal time. This disc
will repay much study and should be regarded as much more than a mere curiosity.
Please note, however, that the dates for this composer given in the booklet
would make him even longer than one of his father's music dramas: 261 years,
to be precise.
Reviewer
Colin Clarke
Performance
Recording