Metropolitan Opera, Ken Howard

[La Cieca is delighted to introduce a new reviewer, @scazzasofija.]

I found Rosenkavalier (Met, Oct. 13) to be mostly sublime. My quibbles come from a preference for Kleiber’s tempos. I found that de Waart was waving his arms as fast as he could for the beginning, but I think the prelude and up until the Marschallin’s monologue were too slow, not enough contrasts for the end of the act. I think this is the conservative American take on this opera, so I think it wasn’t a “problem.” However I felt that the Marschallin and Sophie lacked amusement and a real bright perkiness respectively partially due to the tempos.

Fleming looked a bit like Tatyana in bed, the wig basically the same and a similar nightgown. The relationship seemed troubled from the start. Her Marschallin was very relaxed in bed, no coyness or nervousness. However she was very affected by Octavian’s outbursts, exasperated rather than standing above and amused at her lover. She also did not seem in love with him, she looked more unhappy and besieged. Her lines “you’re like all men” and its like that run through the opera, stood out.

It came off that they were bickering and so the natural flow of the first act to their unhappy parting seemed natural, and more like a breakup, and I found myself thinking that she’s better off without him. The dramatic choices made a lot of sense, and at no point did I get the impression that the Marschallin was anything more than tolerant of her life and duties.

Vargas did not sound good in the house. I thought he had a cold. He lacked core, easy power, it felt pushed. Not like Onegin. He looked to be struggling.

Act 2 also lacked a fast enough tempo in the fast parts and Persson does lack enough perkiness to make Sophie really stand out in charm against the Marschallin. Also Persson’s voice has a darker color & round quality than what we’ve come to expect from Sophie (Damrau, Bonney, Battle) that some people might have a problem with. It was an interesting match with Graham in the duets; there were times when I couldn’t tell who was talking. I think the tempo, her acting, and the color of her voice did drain Sophie of her uniqueness a bit. Not enough contrast for me though. I found that the “Rosenkavalier” costume aged Graham and I had to focus on her acting to see her as the 17 year old boy. She was very amusing in the tavern scene.

Both Graham and Fleming sounded good. Fleming sounded lovely, none of her crazy habits, and nice low notes (though a bit inconsistent, but I’m really picking here). You really wanted to hear more. Fleming really shone in the third act The intervening time gave her voice a nice, relieving contrast from what we’d heard: silvery, narrow beauty. I’d never heard her like that.

The entire night she did well to emphasize the conversational-quality of the language and dialogue, and she seemed very naturally fluent (demonstrating how she is fluent) in her German conversation. This was especially in the beginning of the trio where she took a less reverent stance for “Hab mir’s gelobt” then that she was continuing a train of thought that she had been having throughout the opera. She wasn’t even turned to the audience yet. I found it very effective and real.

Ochs was good. He cracked once in Act 2 and seemed to struggle with his lowest notes. But he had verve, fit the bill. The production was unoffending, traditional, with occasional touches of the sublime with the Marschallin’s opulent lavender and silver, Schwarzkopf-like costume, complete with white wig and aigrette, contrasting with the brown and dark colors of the tavern. The music was consistent, singing lovely, and really a wonderful package overall for the Met.

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