08 December 2007

Barenboim sings again!

Introducting a new guest critic, Giulia Grisi, who blogs regularly for "Il Corriere della Grisi."

La Scala's 2007-8 opera season opened last night (December 7) with a new production of Tristan und Isolde. The Milanese theatre hadn't presented Wagner's masterpiece since 1978, when Carlos Kleiber's masterful interpretation became an instant classic, in spite of a not-so-sensational cast (Wenkoff, Ligendza, Baldani, Moll).

Superintendent Stéphane Lissner must have thought it was time to try it again, counting on the power of the music and the experienced production team, with conductor Daniel Barenboim, director Patrice Chéreau and set designer Richard Peduzzi (of the 1976 Bayreuth Ring). After all, everyone knows that singers aren't really that important in Wagner, nowadays... are they?

The rehearsals period was something less than idyllic because of problems with the unions, yet Barenboim's conducting can be called ideal: a beautiful, clean orchestra, rich in color and atmosphere -- in fact much more "singing" than the singers on stage. we can indeed describe Daniel B. as the true "deus ex machina" and the real protagonist of the night. Conducting from memory, he has led the La Scala orchestra towards a real Wagnerian sound and has made everything he could to help the singers, literally breathing with them, reducing the orchestral volume when they needed it, pumping it up when they could not finish a phrase. Through his conducting have felt the epic, the passion destroying every rule, the magnificent night, the eternal suffering -- in short, the Wagnerian drama we couldn't see on stage, where a great, realistic canal boat, stark grey walls, some staircases and a lot of trench coats were visible. Chéreau and Peduzzi presented their familiar Wagnerian mise en scène, utterly realistic and utterly ugly, with some dramaturgical errors.

This "avant-garde" art is so past and over that only an theater so behind the times as La Scala can appreciate it. Twenty-three years have passed since this team's modern dress Lucio Silla production here -- and even that was not a success.

Waltraud Meier is a brilliant actress, ravishing and sexy. However, her voice is faded in the lower octave (that's quite strange, since she began as a mezzo) and in the upper range she shrieks more than she sings. Often out-of-tune, she was able to sing the role to the end thanks to her experience and to Barenboim, who aided her in every possible way, underlining some beautiful intentions in her interpretation and drawing a veil over some glaring flaws in her singing (especially in the Liebestod).

Ian Storey is more a crooner than a Wagnerian tenor: a small, short voice, with insufficient projection, he was neither a hero nor a lover nor a dying prince. Tristan's love and drama were confined to the orchestral pit. Brangäne, the Wagner "specialist" Michelle De Young, offered the worst vocal performance of the night, with the possible exception of Matti Salminen's superannuated and shouty König Marke. Handsome Gerd Grochowski barked a rather conventional Kurwenal.

To make a long story short, La Scala has presented a Tristan und Isolde for orchestra and conductor. We may be too "addicted to voices", but without Barenboim and his experience in minimizing the singers' problems, this opening night would have been nothing special. -- Giulia Grisi, translated by Antonio Tamburini.

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24 Comments:

Blogger Constantine A. Papas said...

This insightful critique confirms the notion that nowadays, unfortunately, for certain operas there're not strong singers around to do justice to the vocal score. I'm not a Wagnerian per se, but in my mind I have conceptualized Wagner's operas as classical heavy metal symphonic music written
for orcherstra and voices which add to the orchestral drama. And Barenboim, more than anybody else, can extract drama from any orchestra. I hope, vocally, Met's T & I does better. I'll see T & I, live at the movies, hoping for a miracle.

December 09, 2007 12:24 AM  
Anonymous rd said...

I really couldn't understand the choice of Ian Storey for Tristan. I saw him as Ägysth and he was barely hearable.

December 09, 2007 8:32 AM  
Blogger wagneriana said...

I was only able to listen to the first act on Friday and found that Storey was missing cues and Barenboim was somewhat sloppy.

December 09, 2007 10:21 AM  
Anonymous Malcolm Groeme said...

I found the review very interesting and I think it describes truly what the production was.

I saw thi Tristan und Isolde on Arte. I didn't like the production of Chérau, it was lacking of the atmosphere of Love and Death Wagner described in his music. There where nothing new in this production, many others Wagner productions of the past 20 years are similar to this one.

Storey was truly a strange choice, but I heard the Tristan should have been another tenor who cancelled. So he can be a sort of replacement of the last hour.

Meier had many problems with her voice, her high notes were always short and with pitch problems, but she is a great actress and I prefer her Isolde to the ones of Stemme, Schnaut, Voigt. She has (or had) something interesting to say in this role.

I think Barenboim was truly great, he conducted this music very beautifully, as a great conductor like him can do and I hope he will find the right singers for these operas if they exist today.

Very awful was the Brangaene of Michelle De Young, I just couldn't stand her ugly voice and her horrible technique.

Malcolm Groeme.

December 09, 2007 11:09 AM  
Blogger oliviagiovetti said...

What was the bigger drama here, the one onstage or the one amongst the musicians?

http://cultureonthecheap.wordpress.com

December 09, 2007 11:41 AM  
Anonymous Natasha said...

I am just shocked that an Italian opera house would even attempt a sophisticated work such as Tristan. I think Italian houses should stay within their limitations and mount those shlocky post-Puccini operas that don't demand intellectual rigor from the musicians or the audiences. Afterwards they should all drink chianti together and break the bottles over TKLogan's head.

December 09, 2007 12:33 PM  
Blogger scifisci said...

this is a shame about the scala prima...especially since it is going to be broadcast in theaters. It just seems so unwise to open a season with a way-past-her-prime isolde and inaudible tristan. What exactly were they thinking?
and is meier really going to sing sieglinde next year at the MET?

on a completely different note, did anyone see R+J last nite? It was quite a night! Netrebko was quite powerful in the scene where she poisons herself and kaiser wasn't so bad himself! As someone who never heard the greats in their prime, would anyone mind comparing the size, power, and beauty of netrebko's voice to say, price, crespin, sutherland, etc? To my ears, netrebko's voice sounds huge and her high A's, B's, and C's were astounding. Big, beautiful and penetrating. And yes the coloratura is still bad. oh well.
maybe one day she will sing salome?

December 09, 2007 12:43 PM  
Blogger Donna Anna said...

The marvelous Operachic's review has much in common with this one. I can't imagine the difficulties casting this work. In my lifetime I hope to hear a good production.

December 09, 2007 12:50 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Those who find faults in a Tristan with Wenkoff, Ligendza and Moll, do not really deserve even a Ian Storey...

December 09, 2007 1:21 PM  
Anonymous scarlatti said...

I am listening to a taped radio broadcast of 19 Nov 1998 from Bern, Switzerland with tenor Wolfgang Mueller-Lorenz as Tristan and soprano Cheryl Studer as Isolde. The broadcast is of the Act II duet "O sink hernieder, Nacht der Liebe") and let us just say that their singing, especially the soprano's, is simply incandescent, equal part fire and ice. And her Liebestod in this broadcast is another wonder to behold. It has to be heard to be believed. Sadly, mezzo-turned-soprano W Meier didn't rise to the challenge two nights ago in Milan.

December 09, 2007 1:48 PM  
Anonymous Malcolm Groeme said...

For Anonymous :

in Milan 1978 the cast (Wenkoff, Ligendza, Moll) was not well received by the critics who admired Kleiber but not the singers. Ligendza, who sang Arabella before Tristan, never appeared again at La Scala after her Isolde.

December 09, 2007 6:05 PM  
Blogger Constantine A. Papas said...

Do any of you read "Opera Chic," the Milan opera blog? I do every day. It's really funny and smart. The critique of T & I was outrageously funny and accurate. Barenboim conducted part of the opera with no shoes on!

December 09, 2007 7:45 PM  
Blogger Parsifal said...

Yeah...but while OperaChic's excellent review was witty and tactfull (as always), this one made me think "here is someone that hasn't enjoyed opera for years and is never going to anymore". And believe me,i ve followed his blog for months and have read many other reviews...

December 09, 2007 7:55 PM  
Anonymous InsiderKnowledge said...

Meier's voice has always seemed unappealing to me - somehow both matronly and shallow. I saw her do Leonore in Valencia last year and it was on the level of a superannuated house soprano (and she was never a soprano to start with). Her acting on that occasion was cliche-ridden too, although she has a reputation for charisma and commitment. Still, apparently she gives a great blowjob.

December 09, 2007 8:10 PM  
Anonymous Bruce said...

Well, there are not very many people who give great blowjobs...and I think if you look at who is running todays major opera houses...giving any of them a blowjob is a herioc act...except for Peter Gelb. I would give him a blowjob just for the pelasure of doing it. Peter, look me up. I am your "girl."

December 10, 2007 3:30 AM  
Blogger Willym said...

Natasha - if Italian opera houses where to follow your sage advise we would not have had the dynamic and musically exciting Wozzeck we had in Rome in October.

December 10, 2007 6:12 AM  
Blogger Antonio Tamburini said...

Dear Parsifal,

when you have heard live Dame Joan Sutherland and Montserrat Caballé in Lucrezia Borgia, you can hardly enjoy Dimitra Theodossiou's vulgar, screaming interpretation.

Nevertheless, we can still enjoy a good opera night.

December 10, 2007 9:12 AM  
Blogger balabanov11 said...

If you want a reliable critique of Meier's blowjob ability, ask Joe Volpe - lord knows her received enough of them from her.

As for Tristan, so we had a performance notable for the orchestral playing, with the retched singing being negligable - how is this different from most Wagner we hear today, and for that matter, why is Wagner considered opera at all anymore, when it's just one big symphonic concert at this point?

December 10, 2007 12:18 PM  
Blogger DirkVA said...

"Tristan und i Soldi"

George Loomis in the Herald Tribune:

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/12/10/arts/loomis.php

December 10, 2007 1:03 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Judy C. Adanna sez:

I think it's bad form to say that one of the cast is handsome and not have a link to some pictorial proof.
I need to know if he qualifies as strapping.

December 10, 2007 1:10 PM  
Anonymous Mussel Ini said...

So let me get this racist remark from a true bigot, Italian opera houses should just do shlock because they cannot comprehend Wagner? Side splitting humor, Nat. But breaking the bottles over the head of the fat TKlogan, thumbs up on that altho it is a waste of cheap wine.

December 10, 2007 4:27 PM  
Anonymous Hercule said...

Finally, someone describes Michelle de Young accurately. How did this woman get on the map? We heard her in the Met Auditions and when she finished singing we both said, simultaneously: "Comprimaria!" I've heard her in various roles and venues since then and I just can't see why she is considered a viable choice for major roles in major opera houses. Yet when I once expressed this view to a blogger who had written a rave about one of her mediocre performances, he deleted my comment and e-mailed me that I had no right to malign "one of the finest singers of our time..." WTF??

December 10, 2007 5:20 PM  
Blogger DirkVA said...

Hercule:

Put 'er there!

I have watched in amazement for perhaps a dozen years as people (including even Marilyn Horne) assured us that La De Young was the real thing.

I simply don't get it, and I agree with you completely.

In a word: charmless.

December 10, 2007 5:32 PM  
Anonymous O Fremstad said...

According to the NYT review of the Scala Tristan(which was very favorable to the performance) Barenboim, due to the labor problems, conducted shoeless(nothing mentioned about socks). There must be a few possible followups to this interesting tidbit, but since the weather is so bad in the midwest I am stumped on any punchlines re shoeless Daniel. Anyway I thought it was an interesting info bit.

December 11, 2007 3:01 PM  

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