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Strauss, R: Salome
 
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Strauss, R: Salome [Box set] [Original recording remastered]

~ Sir Georg Solti, Brigit Nilsson, Wiener Philharmoniker
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Audio CD (15 May 2006)
  • SPARS Code: ADD
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Format: Box set, Original recording remastered
  • Label: Decca (UMO)
  • ASIN: B000E6EH04
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 26,529 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

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Disc: 1
1. "Wie schön ist die Prinzessin Salome heute Nacht!" - Josephine Veasey, Waldemar Kmentt, Zenon Kosnowski, Heinz Holecek, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
2. "Nach mir wird Einer kommen" - Josephine Veasey, Eberhard Wächter, Waldemar Kmentt, Zenon Kosnowski, Theodor Kirschbichler, Heinz Holecek, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
3. "Ich will nicht bleiben" - Birgit Nilsson, Josephine Veasey, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
4. "Siehe, der Herr ist gekommen" - Birgit Nilsson, Eberhard Wächter, Liselotte Maickl, Waldemar Kmentt, Zenon Kosnowski, Heinz Holecek, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
5. "Jauchze nicht, du Land Palästina" - Birgit Nilsson, Eberhard Wächter, Josephine Veasey, Waldemar Kmentt, Zenon Kosnowski, Heinz Holecek, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
6. "Du wirst das für mich tun" - Birgit Nilsson, Waldemar Kmentt, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
7. "Wo ist er, dessen Sündenbecher jetzt voll ist?" - Birgit Nilsson, Eberhard Wächter, Waldemar Kmentt, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
8. "Jochanaan! Ich bin verliebt in deinen Leib" - Birgit Nilsson, Eberhard Wächter, Waldemar Kmentt, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
9. "Wird dir nicht bange, Tochter der Herodias?" - Birgit Nilsson, Eberhard Wächter, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
10. "Wo ist Salome?" - Grace Hoffman, Gerhard Stolze, Zenon Kosnowski, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
See all 15 tracks on this disc
Disc: 2
1. "Eine Menge Menschen wird sich gegen sie sammeln" - Grace Hoffman, Eberhard Wächter, Gerhard Stolze, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
2. "Tanz für Mich, Salome" - Birgit Nilsson, Eberhard Wächter, Grace Hoffman, Gerhard Stolze, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
3. Salome's Dance of the Seven Veils - Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
4. "Ah! Herrlich! Wundervoll, wundervoll!" - Birgit Nilsson, Grace Hoffman, Gerhard Stolze, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
5. Still, sprich nicht zu mir! - Birgit Nilsson, Grace Hoffman, Gerhard Stolze, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
6. "Salome, bedenk, was du tun willst" - Birgit Nilsson, Gerhard Stolze, Paul Kuentz, Stefan Schwer, Kurt Equiluz, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
7. "Man soll ihr geben, was sie verlangt!" - Grace Hoffman, Gerhard Stolze, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
8. "Es ist kein Laut zu vernehmen" - Birgit Nilsson, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
9. "Ah! Du wolltest mich nicht deinen Mund" - Birgit Nilsson, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
10. "Sie ist ein Ungeheuer, deine Tochter" - Grace Hoffman, Gerhard Stolze, Wiener Philharmoniker, Georg Solti
See all 11 tracks on this disc

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Customer Reviews

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Spectacular, 12 May 2009
By Mondoro (United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
The previous reviewer has provided a useful synopsis of the opera, so I will comment on the virtues of this particular performance. Solti's recording has become legendary in the nearly half century that has elapsed since its first appearance on LP, and has kept its place at the head of the catalogue. Its cast is headed by Birgit Nilsson, to many at that time the supreme exponent of Wagner's and Strauss's dramatic soprano roles. Her powerful voice soars effortlessly into the stratosphere, yet she shades it down to kittenish proportions when she seeks to persuade the lovestruck captain Narraboth to bring forth the prophet for her inspection. There are fine perfomances from Waechter (exceeded only by Bryn Terfel for Sinopoli) as the prophet Jokanaan; from Grace Hoffmann, a very down-to-earth Herodias, impatient with her husband's flights of fancy, who injects one of the few moments of sanity in this intensely neurotic atmosphere. Gerhart Stoltze's Herod is a marvel: he cajoles, pleads, implores his implacable step-daughter not to proceed with her grotesque demand - anything, anything, but not the prophet's head. Culshaw's production skilfully tracks Herod's increasing desperation, with his premonition of disaster turning to nightmare and trauma, one of the great moments in opera recording history.

Strauss's operatic version of Oscar Wilde's original play is replete with unsettling sounds and images: Jokanaan's prophecies and imprecations thundering out of the pit in which he is being held, the unbearable tension when the executioner descends to kill him, just to mention two instances. The recording captures the seedy decadence of the court, the superstitious fears of Herod, and Salome's unhealthy and rampant sexual obsession with Jokanaan, culminating in the necrophilia of the final scene which so angered censors when it was premiered in 1905. However, to modern audiences, the 'moralistic' despatch of Salome by the disgusted Herod at the end of the opera is the one false note in the overall dramaturgy.

One of the great opera recordings of the last century
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8 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars When the Bible becomes cosmic, 28 Nov 2007
By Jacques COULARDEAU "A soul doctor, so to say" (OLLIERGUES France) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
No overture. Straight into the first scene. The Jews are rowdy in the back. John the Baptist is the cause of it. He is preaching from the cistern where he is kept a prisoner. It is forbidden to look at him or have any contact with him. But Salome comes and she wants to see him, speak to him. She goes down into the cistern and finally forces the soldiers to bring John out. The music replaces words. A volcanic eruption of dark and particularly strong sounds that are chaotic in their organization to lead to a cool moment of violins that evoke the sanctity of the man coming out of the cistern. And the horns introduce John's first prophecy of the coming of Jesus and of his public death. Then he accuses Salome's mother of having betrayed her Jewish blood by marrying the king. Salome is mesmerized and starts seeing visions of dark countries and dragons. Then she discovers his body and transmutes it into an ivory statue. John rejects Salome's eyes and looking. Salome introduces herself. He rejects her, sends her back to the Babylon she represents, to Sodom whose daughter she is. And back to his prophecy about the Son of Man. Salome has fallen into total love and she wants to touch him and asks for permission. John rejects her in the name of Babylon and as a woman who brought evil on earth. Salome then describes John's body as the nest of all kinds of snakes and scorpions. She shifts her interest to his hair and becomes lyrical in the most powerful tradition of Solomon's Song of Songs. She begs for his permission to touch his hair. He refuses. Then Salome describes his hair as a crown of thorns and moves to his mouth that she compares to roses and pomegranates, concentrating on its red color. She wants to kiss him. Total rejection. She becomes hysterical. The music and singing are so abysmally chaotic that we have reached the primeval mess before creation. Third prophecy about Jesus in front of whom she should kneel and beg for forgiveness. But she persists in her desire. This time John curses her to damnation and the music takes us down into the innerest circle of hell. A long musical transition to the fourth last and longest scene. Here are Herod and Herodias. Herod reveals himself as very unstable, afraid and dependent on his daughter. She refuses to drink wine, eat a fruit, sit on the throne. John sings his prophecy again. Herod and Herodias have an argument about Herod's fear in front of John. The Jews enter and assails Herod with a long discussion among them on God, his coming back and what has to be done to escape from his anger, to obey and follow his rule. John brings his prophecy forward again about the Savior of the world. Some Nazarene tells the story of that Savior who is to come to save the world. Herod thinks John and the Nazarene are resuscitating dead people. John amplifies the prophecy with the description of the death of the Savior and all the plagues that will befall the world. Herod wants Salome to dance for him and with John's voice in the background, he promises her anything she wants. A harsh debate takes place between Herodias who does not want her daughter to dance and Herod who wants her to do so. Herod is losing his mind's clarity. John's voice and some more prophecy about Jesus' passion. Salome finally accepts to dance. The music then is an exotic mixture of various styles from oriental music to Slavonic vast sweeping movements and some western elements including some waltz measures and castanets. It sounds like music from the world where only pleasure, i.e. whimsical desires, reign ahigh. Salome ends at Herod's feet. She asks for a silver platter and for John's head on it. Herod refuses and Herodias supports her daughter. Herod must be thinking of the Jews. Herodias wants her vengeance against John who called her a whore. Salome wants to punish John who rejected her. Herod is also afraid of John being moved by God. She refuses anything else. Herod is then convinced something absolutely catastrophic is going to happen. Salome describes the beheading. And there appears the head on a silver platter. She wants to kiss him now and she is disturbed by his closed eyes and his silent tongue. She finds out to possess his body in sexual domination has not been satisfied by the beheading since the voice and the look are gone. She comes to the strange conclusion that love is stronger than the mystery of death. Salome kisses the dead head and finds nothing except the pleasure of having kissed these lips that were refusing her. But at this moment Herod is maybe caught up by one moment of sanity and has Salome killed by the soldiers. This opera is remarkable by the way the subject is treated but also by the strange absolute merging of music and voices. The voices carry a semantic meaning but are integrated in the music as pure sound, they are part of the music and they add a supplementary level of meaning and the meaning becomes part of the music. We reach the highest level of music we can think of when plot and semantic content are also part of the music as music. The harmony of the plot appears fully in the end. The harmony of each piece of text appears fully as part of the blended music and sounds in each scene. And that is a choice. No overture, no real closing piece that is not integrating the voices of the characters, Salome and Herod and the action itself. The last measure is Salome's death cry.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, University Paris Dauphine, University Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne & University Versailles Saint Quentin en Yvelines
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