Wagner, Moser, Holl Wagner: Tristan und Isolde Genre:Classical Originally released in May 2004, this is Christian Thielemann's first complete opera recording on Deutsche Grammophon. Live recording from the Vienna State Opera house. Complete libretto included. Deborah Voigt, one of the... more » world's most celebrated Wagnerian sopranos, undertakes the iconic role of Isolde for the first time at the Metropolitan Opera beginning in March 2008, in New York.« less
Originally released in May 2004, this is Christian Thielemann's first complete opera recording on Deutsche Grammophon. Live recording from the Vienna State Opera house. Complete libretto included. Deborah Voigt, one of the world's most celebrated Wagnerian sopranos, undertakes the iconic role of Isolde for the first time at the Metropolitan Opera beginning in March 2008, in New York.
CD Reviews
A Triumph
Charles Richards | Los Angeles, CA | 06/27/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This recording has been much anticipated in the press, and I'm happy to say that it was worth the wait. Although I have had a tendency to be effusive in praise in the past, I am heartfelt in my statement (and prediction) that this will be recognized in years to come as one of the great, classic recordings of the 21st century. In short,this is the most successful, exciting and satisfying recording of a Wagner opera that I have heard in a long time.
The first order of praise must, of course, go to Christian Thielemann, who here proves himself to be the great Wagner conductor of our time, and a true successor to Karajan, Bohm, and Solti in his understanding of not only the letter of Wagner's score, but the emotion behind it. From the opening notes of the prelude, Thielemann immerses us in Wagner's world, and the famous "Tristan Chord" seemed as remarkable and astonishing to me in this hearing as it did when I first encountered it almost twenty years ago. Although Thielemann has been praised by the press time and time again, it has surprised me how slow he has been in gaining a larger "fan base" (others in this catagory would include Welser-Most and Adam Fischer, both exceptional conductors with almost no name recognition for the general classical-buying public), but I think this new recording might change that in no time.
The performance continuous at a luxurious, yet always dramatic pace, gaining strength as he first act continues; rapturous in the love music of the second, and devestating in the haunting despair and transfiguration of the third. The sound of the Wiener Staatsoper Orchestra is, of course, top rate (as it should be). They sound truly inspired under Thielemann's baton.
And now to the cast! With one stroke, Deborah Voigt has proven to this listener beyond all doubt that she is the great Wagner soprano of our time. Her performance here is a tour-de-force; ravishingly beautiful without ever showing a sign of strain, exciting, dramatic, and heartfelt. When she rages against Tristan in the famous "curse" of the first act, we truly believe in her fury, yet she has the proper insight to give us a sneak peek at the ambivelant emotions that lie underneath. The radiant love music of the second act it sung effortlessly, and by the time we reach her transfiguration in the "liebestod", it is hard for the listener to say to himself, "this is Deborah Voigt interpreting the role of Isolde" so much has she become one with this woman. And the "Liebestod" is, of course, amazingly delivered, even better than her recording of it on her recently released recital album on EMI, and that's high praise, indeed.
Thomas Moser is perfectly partnered as her Tristan. He has a glowing tone with a firmness required for this taxing role (only recall that the role's first interpreter died shortly after the opera's initial performances, and his death was blamed on Wagner's music!). Like Voigt, he changes vocal tactics with the growth of his character, from stalwart sailor and loyal servent in the first act, standing up to Voigt's formidable Isolde; to ardent lover in the second. It is in the third act that he truly triumphs, lending pathos and heartbreaking intensity to Tristan's death.
At first I found Petra Lang a weak link in the cast, thinking her Brangane slightly characterless in the beginning of the first act. I soon changed my mind, however, and she won me over in no time. Hers is an unusual voice, not immediatly pleasing to the ear (some may find it slightly "hooty"), and in this way it slightly reminded me of the instrument of Mara Zampieri, a contraversial soprano who, with time, I have grown to love. So was it with Lang; I did not care for the voice at the first, but by the middle of the second act I was in love.
Robert Holl's commanding King Mark, Peter Weber's lovely and loving Kurwenal, and Markus Niemann's truly nasty Melot round out a superb cast.
"Tristan", as those who are familiar with the work know, is a long opera, and can grow tedious when in the wrong hands, but I was spellbound throughout all 3 3/4 hours of this amazing new performance. Up until now, my favorite digital recording of the opera was Bernstein's (also on DG, issued in the late 80's), but (and I was not expecting this) it has been surpassed by Thielemann's effort. To conclude, and at the risk of putting myself out on a limb, I can only say that this is the greatest modern recording of this opera that I have heard."
THE FINAL VOTE IS NOT IN !!
William C. Norvell, Jr. | Houston, Texas | 08/23/2004
(3 out of 5 stars)
"Something very strange about all the reviews for this set. They either love it or hate it. I for one, am undecided. There IS something missing, here, but I find it hard to put my finger on it. First, the conducting is wonderful. The orchestra plays only as they do in Vienna: excellent ! So far, so good. The third act is absolutely brilliant, with the Tristan here finally doing his job ! The second act left me feeling a little stoic, where, in truly "great" performances of Tristan, one should be pulling one's hair out in in an emotional fit of empathy with the protagonists, at about this point in the opera. The first act just doesn't fire up at all. I think the real problem is Voit. She has a very, very powerful and beautiful voice, but, alas, one cannot just "sing" Isolde ( or even "Tristan", for that matter). One must live the role, and act the role and go way, way beyong just the notes. It is no wonder that this opera had well over 70 rehersals before it was finally performed ( I am thinking it was closer to 100). Wagner insisted that the singers be "taught" the roles, just as he taught the role of "Siegfried". The point is that Voit "sings" the role beautifully, but the result is an extremely shallow impression upon the listener. The impact of this opera upon the listener also depends a great deal upon the listener himself. The mood, location, environment, time of day, physical condition and many other factors enter into play as to how one receives this complex art statement during any particular performance. So, for any given performance, a great deal of the success depends on the listener himself. This is why I go from recording to recording in my opinion as to which is the "greatest" at any particular time.I think Voit will some day be a fine Isolde, but she needs to study the "innards" of the role, and its interaction with other characters. Most of all, a much better understanding of what Wagner was trying to accomplish is needed. This is not an opera that can tolerate a modereate, or even good performance. It mandates a "great" performance to really appreciate it, one that leaves the listener in a total spell for days. It takes great singing, great acting, great conducting, and a great performance from the orchestra, all working together in concert to pull it off. Unfortunately,this set lacks such results."
Which modern Tristan to buy?
Santa Fe Listener | Santa Fe, NM USA | 10/05/2007
(3 out of 5 stars)
"Since Thielemann's live Tristan and EMI's studio version with Placido Domingo both received decidedly mixed reviews, I thought it would be interesting to consider the leading available choices for this great opera. By some accounts, all are so uneven that there is no clear winner, but at least you can consider which elements of the work are most important to you and make your selection that way.
Condcutor: If all that mattered were the conductor, the situation would be golden. Wilhelm Furtwangler heads the list in 1952 with his much-acclaimed mono set on EMI, but at almost exactly the same time Karajan was conducting a live performance at Bayreuth, now issued in good broadcast mono by Orfeo, that gives Furtwangler a serious rival -- I prefer it, in fact. Twenty years later, this time in stereo, Karajan was magnificent with the Berlin Phil. in a studio set for EMI, despite some engineering quirks. Finally, there is Carlos Kleiber's dstreamlined modern view on DG. These four sets give us a conductor-dominated perspective of a score whose orchestral part alone would cause it to rank as a pinnacle of Western music. They encompass such diverse musical intelligence, insight, and virtuosity that I couldn't imagine wanting more. Other notable Wagner conductors -- Bohm, Solti, Knappertsbusch, and now (I suppose) Thielemann -- have also had their say in the modern era and have gained a clutch of enthusiastic fans, although I am not among them. Antonio Pappano, conducting on the EMI set with Domingo, gives a fresh reading with lots of virtues, although he seems consciously to steer away from Wagner style, perhaps too much so. Thielemann's great flaw is inconsistency; he is apt to go slack and lose focus, yet there are many moments of skill and beauty.
Orchestra: I wouldn't pick a favorite Tristan based upon the orcheswtra alone, but three glorious ensembles have recorded the work in top form: the Philharmonia for Furtwangler (not captured in the best mono sound, however), the Berlin Phil. for Karajan, the Vienna Phil. for Thirelemann, and the Bayreuth Festival Orch. for the eearlier Karajan, Bohm, and Barenboim (in case you consider him a major Wagner conductor -- I don't, but there's no doubt that the orchestra plays very well for him in a live performance on Teldec). In the opera house I don't think the Covent Garden orchestra could remotely keep up, but on Domingo's EMI recording they sound quite beautiful.
Tristan: For fifty years the long shadow of Melchior was so deep that every future Tristan was considered a make-do. However, Melchior made no commerical recording of the role, and those that exist from radio air-checks are a strain to listen to. Today only the old-timers mention Melchior's name, opening up the field for musical singers who have almost but not quite enough voice to rank as heldentenors. Windgassen gives an exemplary account for Bohm on DG, even though his leathery voice wasn't beautiful and he tires badly before the end -- the musicality is undoubtedly there. Even better is Domingo for Pappano on EMI, a studio effort that finds the aging superstar in tremendous voice, delivering one of his best Wagner roles. The thrilling high notes and bright tone are a huge plus. At the same level I would put Ramon Vinay singing for Karajan in his Bayreuth rendition. Vinay traveled back and forth between heroic tenor and baritone, giving tremendous animal magnetism and visceral impact to his portrayals. Both he and Domingo come from a Spanish-Italian tradition, so neither can be classed as a true German singer, yet they make convincing, moving Tristans. Siegfried Jerusalem, another intelligent artist, lags behind them on the Barenboim set becasue the role is three sizes too large for him rather than one or two; the same goes for Thomas Moser under Thielemann on DG -- obvious vocal strain makes both too hard to listen to. At the back of the pack comes Rene Kollo for Kleiber -- he is so overparted that you feel like you're watching a marathon runner trying to cross the finish line before he collapses from exhaustion. On Furtwangler's set Suthaus has a dry voice with medium heft, and the conductor's slow tempos quickly wear him out. I'm not sure why his dull Tristan has become a silk purse in the eyes of modern critics. If only the better-voiced and more musical Set Svanholm had stepped in to take his place.
The best news among Tirstans is that two tenors come as close as possible to being a match for Melchior, after conceding that no one ever will completely. The first, Jon Vickers, gives a risky, committed, emotionally intense performance on Karajan's stereo account. If no one else in the modern era had sung the role on disc, I would be satisfied, pace those critics who find Vickers too personal, even eccentric in his decidedly non-German approach. Sheer power, intelligence, and vocal gleam make up for whatever lack of authenticity one detects. The other "real" Tristan is Ben Heppner, who may fall a fraction short of being a heldentenor (he's more naturally suited to Walther in Meistesinger and the title role in Lohengrin), but who overcomes sall objections through sheer beuaty of voice, thrilling high notes, and emotional intenisty. Sadly, his Tristan can only be heard on a DVD of a live Met performance under James Levine. One hopes that a record company will capture him on disc before he gets too old -- I believe Sony BMG has announced plans of the sort.
Isolde: Conventional wisdom has it that two singers have owned the role, Kirsten Flagstad and Birgit Nilsson. That seems to leave little room for other dramatic sopranos, yet the case isn't quite so simple. It may offend true believers, but Flagstad sounds matronly and unexciting in her famous stuido recording under Furtwangler, and although she sings with great authority, I for one don't hear much dramatic diversity -- she keeps pouring out the same steady, huge sound without telling us much about Isolde's emotional changes. Brigit Nilsson, criticized in her day for the same reason, strikes me as a fierce Isolde in her live Bayreuth account under Bohm, yet nothing overshadows the fact that her assumption was stupendous. The gleaming voice conveys enormous intenisty and power, and the character stands before you in all her rage, passion, and eventual transcendence. To me, it's unthinkable to say you know the opera unless you have heard Nilsson. For a younger, somewhat softer version, she is the Isolde for Solti on Decca, too, caught a few years earlier. I find both portrayals incomparable.
Things get muddled after the big two. On Karajan's mono set we have Martha Modl, a powerful, intensely dramatic Isolde whose great flaw is that her voice was striking rahter than beautiful -- it's almost curdled at times -- yet for anyone who can listen beyond beauty of tone, Modl is very satisfying and a real risk-taker. On Karajan's stereo set the role goes to Helga Dernesch, a great Karajan discovery whose voice was supposedly ruined by taking on Brunnhilde and Isolde too early -- or perhaps she was never destined to be a true Wagnerian soprano, a hindrane that didn't stop Hildegard Behrens (heard to distressing effect on Bernstein's star-crossed version for Philips), Deborah Voigt (for Thielemann), Margaret Price (for Kleiber), Nina Stemme (for Pappano) or Waltraud Meier (for Barenboim), who isn't even a soprano.
Among all these contenders who don't quite fit the role, Dernesch comes closest. She had the misfortune to walk in Nilsson's shadow (not only here but as Karajan's Brunnhilde in Siegfried and Gotterdammerung on DG). I have never understood the criticism of her Isolde, which strikes me as beautiful, dramatic, and intense. Critics invariably praise Margasret Price, on the other hand, whose lyric soprano suited Mozart in youth and later grew into Verdi (sort of), but to me her Isolde is purely a gimmick of the microphone. Yes, she's youthful and fresh, but there's no real Isolde there in terms of stature and authority. Nina Stemme could turn into a convincing Isolde with time -- the young Sweish soprano shows great promise -- but she was out of her depth on the Domingo set, where her agreeable vocalism is undercut by dramatic blandness. Meier is too obviously a make-do, pinching out her high noes and hanging on for dear life the rest of the time, which brings us to Voigt. Her ventures into Wagner make sense in vocal terms, and she has the courage to do the role of Isolde live for Thielemann, exposing herself to cruel demands and inevitable exhaustion.
The probelm with Voigt is that, like Behrens, she possesses only half a Wagner voicce -- the gleaming top -- and where Behrens made up for lack of vocal weight through thrilling characterization, Voigt is a dull singing actress. She pushes the notes with sufficient intensity, yet you never feel Isolde's emotional power -- at every moment a soprano with a big, beautiful voice is just pouring out sound. Make the voice twice as large and you get Jane Eaglen, the dominant Wagner soprano of the day. Her strength lies in her top notes, too, but she can give a credible rendition of the entire role. Eaglen succeeds through sheer power, being able to carry over the orchestra without benefit of enhancement from the engineers. In the opera house she can be vocally stunning, but Eaglen isn't much for acting, so her portrayal on the same Met DVD as Heppner lacks dramatic interest. (I don't believe she will be paired with Heppner on his proposed recording, but there are resonable sounding pirate versions of their partnership from the Chicago Lyric Opera, easily fuond online. Be prepared for distortion and odd blanaces; clearly someone sneaked a portable tape recorder into the house)
I've tried to give a fair assessment of the Tristan recordings that impress me personally. In the end, of course, each listener must decide which elements of this vast opera are most critical. Since I put conducting first and foremost, followed by dramatic believability, my preferred sets are as follows:
Karajan -- EMI (stereo)
Karajan -- Orfeo (mono)
Bohm -- DG
Pappano -- EMI
Furtwangler -- EMI
C. Kleiber -- DG
Demoting Furtwangler from his legendary status is enough to earn a hail of disdain at Amazon, but for overall enjoyment my top three versions are the ones I have returned to for several decades.
P.S. -- for yars the Met has suppressed live recordings from its stage, but under the new management, many have suddenly appeared online at Real Rhapsody. They include a Dec., 1999 Tristan under James Levine with Hepner and Eaglen as the leads. It's a formidable performance, one of the very best since the Nilsson era. Unfortunately, Heppner's voice gives out three times in the final act, to painful effect. He and Eaglen are in fine voice otherwise, at least as good as in than on their DVD issue.
"
A reassessment of this Tristan
The Cultural Observer | 07/13/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I had reviewed this Tristan once and gave it three stars, but after giving it a second listen, I am beginning to find more and more insights to Christian Thielemann's conducting that I have never heard in the renditions of other conductors. In several ways, he has the gravitas of Furtwängler, the energy of Böhm, the lyricism and colour of Karajan, the clarity of Kleiber, and a unique Straussian insight to the score that makes this Tristan uniquely his own. When I first heard it, I heard a recording with a conductor who didn't have a voice in the recording, as if he were taking all the great interpretations of the past and meshing it into one evening at the opera. Now, I have seen another aspect of Tristan which has never amazed me so much that I would call this recording a great Tristan. In Thielemann's conducting, you are able to hear every leitmotif, every orchestral dimension and detail, and a unique tragic color that makes his Wagner so special in a day and age where conductors are becoming more incompetent in the operatic realm.
The cast is definitely another plus to this already great production. Deborah Voigt, the greatest Wagner and Strauss soprano of our day, brings her lush, creamy voice to a passionate Isolde. While she lacks the column of sound of a Nilsson or a Flagstad, she definitely outsings several of the sopranos who came before her. She absolutely has an advantage over singers like Margaret Price and Catarina Ligenza, and in some ways she blows Johanna Meier, Gwyneth Jones, and Martha Mödl out of the water. It is not yet the Isolde of our dreams, but she definitely has some ideas about the role that would in time mature into a great interpretation that would hold for the ages. Together with Christine Brewer and Nina Stemme, Deborah Voigt is perhaps part of the great tryptych of Isoldes that were once held by Mödl, Varnay, and Nilsson.
Thomas Moser is not a mind-blowing Tristan, but his beautiful timbre and his somewhat dark, lyric tenor is a callback to the Tristans of tenors like Windgassen and Kollo. While he doesn't have the delirious rantings of Windgassen, his third act is sensitively sung. He partners Voigt effectively in the second act duet, matching every luxurious vat of cream coming out of her mouth with his own brand of Viennese chocolate...call it a food analogy, but it works! I wouldn't compare him with Vickers, Melchior, Windgassen, or Suthaus, but he is a great Tristan in his own respect. One would wish that his voice were only a size bigger.
Petra Lang is a forceful, urgent Brangäne with plenty of artistic insight about her character. She is perhaps the recording's best supporting character. Peter Weber is a rightly gruff Kurwenal, although I wished he were a bit more honeyed like Wächter or intelligent like Fischer Dieskau. The drawback to this recording is Robert Holl's Marke, who isn't that bad, but where was Rene Pape when this performance was taking place?
All in all, I think this is a great Tristan that you should listen to. In fact, I recommend it to listeners once you've blocked Nilsson and Windgassen out of your minds."