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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
'Such Songs To Enchant Us!', 6 Oct 2004
We have reached an era where we not only have classic audio performances transferred to the digital medium of CDs, we also are now beginning to get digitized videos (DVDs) of classic stage and concert performances as captured on film. This film of Strauss's 'Ariadne auf Naxos' comes from a live 1965 telecast (in B&W, be it added for those who might be expecting color!) by Austrian Television from the Kleines Festspielhaus at the Salzburg Festival. [ORF broadcast one production a season from Salzburg in those days; one only hopes others will become available on DVD.] It features stellar singers and instrumentalists from top to bottom. Musical direction is by Karl Böhm, then in his late prime at 71 and surely one of the leading Strauss opera conductors of that era, and in the pit is a chamber orchestra drawn from the Vienna Philharmonic. The singers were among the most experienced Strauss performers of the day. Christa Ludwig was scheduled to sing Ariadne (and the Diva in the Prologue) but was indisposed; her last-minute replacement is Hildegard Hillebrecht, herself a redoubtable Straussian (as well as an Isolde to Jess Thomas's Tristan in major houses). Jess Thomas, the American heldentenor with movie-idol looks, sings a heroic Bacchus (and the Tenor in the Prologue). Reri Grist, of the silvery coloratura (and extensive vocal dubbing for movie stars in American films) sings the killer part of Zerbinetta. Sena Jurinac is an ardent and musical Composer in the Prologue. Others in the cast include the always dependable singer/actors Paul Schöffler as the Music Master and Jon van Kesteren as the Dancing Master. The non-singing part of the self-important Major Domo is played with icy hauteur and droll comic timing by Erik Frey. The commedia dell'arte comedians are Gerd Feldhoff (Harlekin), David Thaw (Scaramuccio), Georg Stern (Truffaldin) and David Unger (Brighella). (Unger has always been my ideal David in 'Die Meistersinger' as heard in the Karajan and Kubelik recordings.) The (literally) Greek chorus on the isle of Naxos are Lotte Schädle (Naiad), Claudia Hellmann (Dryad), and Lisa Otto (Echo). I have rarely heard such beautiful performances of this trio. Their pianissimo singing is ravishing. The stage director was the legendary Günther Rennert. Thank goodness he worked before the Eurotrash-style productions that came later. This is an uncluttered, traditional production with some wonderful comic bits in both the Prologue and the Opera. Stage and costume design, realistic and effective, are by Ita Maximowa. I want to point out two highlights of this performance. From Bacchus's appearance ('Circe, Circe, kannst du mich hören?') to the very end of the opera the music, the singing, and the acting are at an exalted level rarely experienced. Thomas and Hillebrecht make a wonderful pair of lovers (after Ariadne finally gets it through her head that Bacchus is not Theseus come to take her to the Land of the Dead), and the final scene against the backdrop of a starry sky is stunning. But even more thrilling is Grist's big scena (from 'Grossmächtige Prinzessin' to 'Stumm ... stumm'), twelve minutes of coloratura fireworks of the highest order. At its finish the audience goes nuts and, breaking with tradition, Grist has to come out and take three solo bows before the ovation ends. I thought they were never going to let the opera proceed, and I agreed with their enthusiasm. This is a performance to treasure and I am so glad it was captured on video. Obviously one drawback is that the performance is in black and white. Another is that the sound is in mono, very good mono but mono nonetheless. There is rare audio clipping at high volume levels, presumably a much more likely occurrence forty years ago. It is not, however, much of a bother and easily overlooked in the drama of the moment. This clearly would not be anyone's primary or only video of this fabulous opera. I can certainly recommend the one from the Met with James Levine conducting a performance starring Kathleen Battle, Jessye Norman and the late lamented Tatiana Troyanos as the Composer. But for anyone like me who loves this opera and can't be satisfied with just one version, this classic is a must-have. Heartily recommended (with the aforementioned caveats). TT=130 mins; subtitles in English, German, Spanish and Italian Scott Morrison
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