(Gulp) Wagner Questions

Posted by: Todd A on 26 November 2002

Even though I have tried some Wagner before and have been left cold, I decided that since so many ostensibly intelligent and cultivated people seem to like him, he must have written something good. So I have decided to borrow an entire Ring cycle for the upcoming holiday weekend - the Solti; it was either that or the Karajan. Depending on my response to it, I may or may not buy a cycle. I saw a budget Sawallisch set that might do.

My questions, however, have to do with two other operas: Lohengrin and Tristan und Isolde. I first borrowed Solti's set of Lohengrin and was so impressed that I bought a used copy of Kubelik's far superior recording. Are there any better to consider, or should I stay put?

As for Tristan, I again tried the Solti set and was both impressed and disappointed. The sound was not to my taste, and the conducting was clearly not up to snuff. But still there was, and is, something there. So what is a good alternative? I'm thinking perhaps Bohm or Kleiber, or maybe even Furtwangler, though I have reservations about how Furty might do with the music.
Posted on: 26 November 2002 by herm
Hi Todd,

have you thought of logging in under a new name and identity? This is getting serious!

What happened? Are Pac North West days suddenly extended to 36 hrs for you to get into opera - in different versions? Where do you get the time?

For a complete Ring and certainly for Tristan I'd go for Böhm. See Wagner / Parsifal thread maybe two months back.

http://forums.naim-audio.com/eve/forums?q=Y&a=tpc&s=67019385&f=38019385&m=5581942145&p=1

http://forums.naim-audio.com/eve/forums?q=Y&a=tpc&s=67019385&f=38019385&m=5071950185&p=1

Herman
Posted on: 27 November 2002 by Todd A
Thanks for the suggestions. It looks like Bohm receives a number of nods for both The Ring and Tristan, so I'll see if I can find them. The Sawallisch Ring is intriguing for the cheap price ($84 new) so I may not be able to pass it up. And I can get the Kempe mentions pretty cheaply, too, so who knows. (And thanks for the Strauss recommendations, Ross. Looks like I'll have to buy some Karajan there.)

I want to make it clear that I am not buying the versions I listen to, but rather am borrowing them from the local libraries. That accounts for the Solti-heavy accounts. I have some trepidation about buying opera recordings without at least hearing what they might be like. (I would have tried Kleiber's Tristan, for instance, but some asshole has had it out for over a month.)

Why not buy first and take a chance? Take John Adams's Nixon in China, as an example. This work is a piece of shit, plain and simple. And that's after about 30 minutes. I could not waste my time with the rest. I would have been pissed had I bought it new or even used.

And I can only wish that days were 36 hours, but if one dispenses with television completely and ignores other music for a couple of months, one can listen to many operas.
Posted on: 27 November 2002 by herm
I was wondering how come the Wagner thread had suddenly grown so big...

I can't recall ever having expressed 'contempt' for Wagner, but why debate a non-issue? Ross's reply just about covers it all.

About Böhm I'd say, as many others have said, it is probably the best choice for a single box. The other route is having five different sets, so as to have a favorite recording of every single episode. I'm not sure Todd is looking for that.

Herman
Posted on: 28 November 2002 by DJH
I'm not sure why this forum doesn't like the Solti - so far I have found it to be consistently more satisfying than Barenboim and Furtwangler. However I've recently managed to get hold of the Boulez DVD's ; I've only sat through Das Rheingold so far, but it's pretty good

When it comes to Tristan, I have yet to find a really good version. I couldn't honestly recommend the Bohm and Karajan.

No-one's mentioned Parsifal in this thread yet. IMHO, Karajan is first choice.
Posted on: 28 November 2002 by DJH
And I forgot to mention Domingo's "bleeding chunks" from Tristan, Siegfried and Gotterdammerung - these are really excellent, and I will be looking forward to Pappano doing a full Ring cycle.

Cheers
Posted on: 28 November 2002 by herm
Parsifal is for me Wagner's crowning work (and one hell of a piece about the fear of the feminine wink ).

We pretty much covered it in the upper thread I linked in my first post here.

Actually in some respects Vuk's attitude in matters Wagnerian (and Brucknerian) is kinda cute.

I suspect back in the old days when these composers lived and had to fight for their status there were folks who talked about their heroes this way, feeling the constant need to attack some enemy who neglected to show appropiate veneration etc, and for whom Bruckner was way better than Brahms because Bruckner ate an Entire Roast Chicken (or maybe two) before starting the Eighth!

So perhaps we get a peek into period practice this way.

Herman

I know, it's nothing but Ersatz Wit but it's the best I can do...
Posted on: 29 November 2002 by David Hobbs-Mallyon
I'm also not sure I think of Tristan as Wagner's greatest opera - the most harmonically advanced yes - but also the one where words and music seem most at odds. Not sure which I'd vote for Gotterdammerung, Meistersinger and Parsifal are all worth considering.

Vuk, seeing as you would admit that most of your introduction to Wagner was through Solti, recommending something in good sound like Bohm to a newcomer seems reasonable to me.

I've been trying to get my hands on the Krauss set, but it seems to have been deleted frown

David
Posted on: 29 November 2002 by Todd A
Such vitriol when discussing one of the big Dicks.

Which set of The Ring? Bohm causes some nastiness, I see. But after having listened now to the first three operas of the exalted set, with a second attempt at Gotterdammerung coming tonight (after my miserable experience with Karajan a few months back), and I can say with some confidence that I may very well like the Bohm set if for no other reason than he may lighten Wagner's operas a bit. The scoring and orchestration are a wee-bit heavy at times, and can tend towards opacity and dullness, though Solti's conducting is to blame here. (Is the opening to Act 3 of Die Walkure really supposed to be that heavy, slow, and choppy? I even know it's not.) Yes, a more sensitive, articulate baton is needed. Fortunately, there is that cheap Sawallisch set that keeps coming up in my mind. And then all these mentions of Boulez; now there's a conductor who might help this work. One or perhaps two sets will have to do.

I must confess that even if I did not like The Ring, I would have to buy a set, for, you see, my six-year-old son came ambling in near the beginning of Das Rheingold wondering what it was. As I explained the story of the opera and the cycle to him he sat with his mouth slightly agape and his eyes tranfixed at the mention of giants, dwarves, Gods, warrior-maidens, a magical Ring and Helmut, dragon-slaying, and the whole bit. Thus far he has listened to about 4-5 hours of the cycle with me and paid so much attention that he could even tell when Wotan or Siegfried were singing. Not that that is really hard given the motifs assigned to the characters and the voices involved. I believe his favorite part so far was when Siegfried killed Fafner. He's (sort of) hooked.

Now for the bad news about Wagner: while his music is inspired, his poetry is less so. Am I the only one who finds some or much of the libretti for these operas pretentious, boring (at times), and sometimes downright silly? It seems that Wagner had too high an opinion of himself. Really, better writers were around. At least Strauss was wise enough to rely on people like Wilde and Hofmannsthal. And while I cannot condone Ross's previous labeling of Siegfried as retarded, he is not the most inspiring musical hero.

I must respond to the outrageous and silly denunciation of Debussy. As a composer I find Debussy to be at least the equal of Wagner. One of my favorite operas is Pelleas et Melisande (the Abbado recording), which I think eclipses Wagner's works in a number of ways, though I can clearly hear the influence of Tristan. And could Wagner have ever written piano music worth repeated hearings? I don't think so.

[This message was edited by Todd Arola on FRIDAY 29 November 2002 at 18:56.]
Posted on: 29 November 2002 by herm
Wagner's words

I would not agree with your friends Ross. I'm glad I can hear what Wagner is talking about, even if it's boring or bullshit occasionally.

Wagner's libretti (I'm not sure he would agree with a Italian term like that) are very different from each other, I'd say. Tristan, with all that short alliterative verse is completely stultifying. You don't notice when you're listening, but try and look at the page... The Ring is OK, and (again) the way Parsifal is written is pretty neato, seriously.

And as far as narrative structure goes Wagner is way up there. The way he welded disparate stories into single, completely compelling narratives is absolutely astounding.

Herman
Posted on: 30 November 2002 by DJH
quote:
I can say with some confidence that I may very well like the Bohm set if for no other reason than he may lighten Wagner's operas a bit. The scoring and orchestration are a wee-bit heavy at times, and can tend towards opacity and dullness, though Solti's conducting is to blame here. (Is the opening to Act 3 of _Die Walkure_ really supposed to be that heavy, slow, and choppy? I even know it's not.)


I've just listened to the third act of
Die Walkuere under Solti to try to understand this, and I cannot. And how can a comparison be made to a recording that you haven't heard yet?
Posted on: 30 November 2002 by herm
Mostly you're right David (or was it Duncan?), but one can speculate based on one's experience with the conductor in other composers.

If you're familiar with the way Kubelik 'does' Dvorak, for example, you can have some kind of expectation as to what his Brahms or Beethoven would be like.

And then you go and listen.

Herman
Posted on: 02 December 2002 by David Hobbs-Mallyon
quote:
Is the opening to Act 3 of _Die Walkure_ really supposed to be that heavy, slow, and choppy?
No it isn't. I certainly pity the orchestral players who had to sit in front of the brass section.

David
Posted on: 02 December 2002 by Todd A
quote:
Originally posted by DJH:
And how can a comparison be made to a recording that you haven't heard yet?


I was not necessarily comparing the Solti recording to the Bohm, or any other; rather, I was comparing it to how the flow of the music felt or should feel, and more importantly to other versions of the music that I have heard, all of which were quicker and more flowing. (My local classical station plays complete operas every Saturday and regularly plays those unhappy bleeding chunks from long operas - I got to hear a disappointing The Gods Entering Valhalla conducted by Ormandy about the time I started listening to Wagner, for instance.)

After having finished Solti's Ring, I can state that I will buy at least one set, but I will do my best to avoid hearing his recordings again. To his credit, his Gotterdammerung rather easily outdoes Karajan's hideous set, but that's not saying much. Solti's set is finely engineered and has some good singing, but there are better Wagnerians out there. Hell, just comparing his Lohengrin to Kubelik's showed that much better can be had.
Posted on: 02 December 2002 by DJH
Oh, I see now.

confused