Gramophone – September 2019

(singke) #1

108 GRAMOPHONE SEPTEMBER 2019 gramophone.co.uk


OPERA REVIEWS

This is really
rather good. Styled
a chamber opera,
As One (2014) is also
a sequence of 15 songs (with instrumental
introduction), scored for two solo singers
and string quartet, giving it – as here on
disc – the feel of an integrated song-cycle.
It succeeds as both forms equally well but its
dramatic nature justifies the several notable,
acclaimed stagings it has received in the US.
Unsurprisingly, it is As One’s subject
matter that has received the most attention,
relating the journey of the transgender
Hannah, born a boy, to womanhood in
the teeth of familial, educational and social
opposition. The two singers represent
Hannah’s inner monologue, the baritone
her birth self – ‘Hannah Before’ – the
mezzo the finally reconciled ‘Hannah
After’. Both sing throughout, representing
the contrasting sides of Hannah’s
personality, though – as one might expect –
dominance subtly shifts from male to
female as the work progresses.
Part 1, comprising the Introduction
and first six songs, deals with Hannah’s
childhood, the recognition of her nature
and her efforts to keep it secret. In Part 2
(songs 7-14), emergent adulthood brings
both deeper joy and greater conflict,
culminating with a ‘harrowing assault’:
here, the mezzo recounts the incident
counterpointed by the baritone’s listing a
string of victims of even more horrendous
attacks around the world. The third and
concluding part is a single, extended aria,
‘Norway’ (prefigured by a snatch of Grieg
in the preceding song), the refuge where
Hannah finds a degree of peace.
Laura Kaminsky’s mostly luminous score
elicits a radiant performance from the six
performers. Sasha Cooke and Kelly
Markgraf are beautifully balanced as the
voices in Hannah’s head, at times inward-
looking, at times reflecting the outside
world, but concluding ‘as one’. The Fry
Street Quartet accompany with elegance
and subtlety. A remarkable achievement.
Guy Rickards


Lehár


Die lustige Witwe
Marlis Petersen sop ....................................Hanna Glawari
Iurii Samoilov bar ..................Graf Danilo Danilowitsch
Barnaby Rea bass....................................Baron Mirko Zeta
Kateryna Kasper sop ......................................Valencienne
Martin Mitterrutzner ten ................Camille de Rosillon
Theo Lebow ten ......................................Vicomte Cascada
Michael Porter ten ............................Raoul de St Brioche
Klaus Haderer sngr ......................................................Njegus


Chorus of Frankfurt Opera; Frankfurt Opera and
Museum Orchestra / Joana Mallwitz
Oehms F b OC983 (97’ • DDD)
Recorded live, May & June 2018
Includes synopsis

The Merry Widow
wasn’t born a
billionairess, and
before Lehár’s
masterpiece was a worldwide smash – and
long before it became the stuff of superstar
casts and Metropolitan Opera galas – it
was simply a potboiler by an unproven
composer, rushed onstage with minimal
rehearsal and second-hand sets to fill a gap
in the Theater an der Wien’s New Year
schedule. Which is by way of saying that
while it’s always nice to have Schwarzkopf,
Terfel or the Vienna Philharmonic, it’s
possible to stage an enjoyable, idiomatic
Widow that’s entirely in the spirit of the
piece without a single big name in sight.
Perhaps that sounds like I’m managing
expectations for this new recording, taken
from live performances at the Frankfurt
Opera in May and June 2018. But this is a
perfectly enjoyable account, possibly closer
in spirit to the piece’s light-footed, popular
theatre roots than the more sumptuous
classic recordings. It certainly conveys the
atmosphere of a live performance, complete
with audience laughter, applause, onstage
thuds, a recessed and sometimes splashy
chorus and some of the most raucous
grisettes I’ve heard on disc.
All part of the fun, of course, and
there’s only one really serious oddity. The
Frankfurt director Claus Guth reassigns
Camille and Valencienne’s Act 1
Hauslichkeit duet to Danilo and Hanna,
and repositions it – incomprehensibly, in
the absence of any printed libretto – before
Danilo’s usual entrance. Don’t expect any
help from the booklet note, either; a word-
perfect parody of Teutonic academese
which references Adorno and (I’m not
joking) Samuel Beckett.
Those provisos apart, there’s plenty
to enjoy, starting with bright and buoyant
conducting from Joana Mallwitz. She takes
care of details without overindulging them,
whether Lehár’s swirling woodwind
countermelodies or the quiet string
slides and little splashes of harp that
accompany the Vilja-Lied. As Camille
and Valencienne, Martin Mitterutzner and
Kateryna Kasper make a likeable couple,
and if you might have hoped for a little
more shine to Mitterutzner’s top notes,
Kasper’s soprano has a smiling quality that
gives the Pavilion duet the requisite glow.

Iurii Samoilov is perhaps a slightly
woolly-sounding Danilo – which makes
perfect sense in his hungover early scenes.
He does smarten up a little as the story
progresses, without ever cutting what you
might call a dash. But he blends nicely with
Marlis Petersen’s singing as Hanna; and
while it’s not fair to the rest of the cast to
say that she carries the show, her soft-
centred tone and graceful, light-touch
phrasing certainly give this performance its
heart. Her Vilja has a poise and a youthful
freshness that I found utterly beguiling.
Hanna Glawari might be a widow but she’s
no moping Marschallin, and (musically, at
least) this performance never forgets to be
merry. Richard Bratby

Marschner
Hans Heiling
Heiko Trinsinger bar ......................................Hans Heiling
Jessica Muirhead sop ....................................................Anna
Jerey Dowd ten ..........................................................Konrad
Rebecca Teem sop ..............Queen of the Earth Spirits
Bettina Ranch mez ..................................................Gertrude
Karel Martin Ludvik bass-bar...............................Stephan
Hans-Günter Papirnik bar ..........................................Niklas
Chorus of Aalto Theatre; Bergwerksorchester
Consolidation; Essen Philharmonic Orchestra /
Frank Beermann
Oehms F b OC976 (140’ • DDD)
Recorded, February 2024, 2018
Includes synopsis and German libretto

A spot of research –
but not in the regular
catalogues – should
uncover around half a
dozen recordings of Heinrich Marschner’s
1833 Schauerromantik (‘horror romance’)
opera. They include the live DVD from
Cagliari which I reviewed in December
2005 and a 1960s broadcast from Cologne
under Joseph Keilberth with a strong-
looking cast including Hermann Prey
in the title-role. If you’ve looked into the
early history of German Romantic opera,
especially its connections with Wagner,
the names of both composer and work will
be familiar. But you’ll only find excerpts
from the score – especially ‘An jenem
Tag, da du mir Treue versprochen’,
Heiling’s declaration of love to the mortal
village girl Anna – on recital discs of pre-
1950s singers.
The very title of that aria will
remind you of Erik pleading with Senta
in Der fliegende Holländer and indeed it’s
Wagner’s borrowings from every aspect
of Marschner’s opera (libretto by its star
singer and Wagner colleague-to-be Eduard
Devrient) that have helped keep at least its
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