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quote:
Originally posted by graham55:
Tam

As you said earlier, Alan Blyth seems hugely impressed.

A strange decision on Testament's part to release Siegfried first, though. I wonder why?

Graham


Dear Graham and other Wagnerites,

Even I have been impressed with Alan Blyth's judgements, occasionally!

Siegfried first because it is the dullest of the lot. Mind I went off it some time ago, so you can take anything I say about R Wagner with the pinch of salt you no doubt think it deserves. At least I know it, but it will only be as a memory from now on. Once I saw a very funny thing written in our bass part over the begining of the the last Act of Twylight Of The Gods, which made me smile: " And may the Gods bless all who sail in her..." Wagner really wrote the most tedious bass parts in all music, and I believe these are only equalled in dullness by the viola parts!

Actually the dullest bass part I ever played was in the Third Piano Concerto of Rachmaninov, and some wag had written over the final cadence, which take several bars to resolve, "Hey boys, I think we have got the tune!"

Happy hunting through it from Fredrik
 
Posts: 10690 | Location: Worcester, UK | Registered: Sat 09 July 2005Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Tam
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Fredrik,

I didn't know you were a bassist (if that is the correct term), but I like those comments. Mind you, I can sympathise, after all, Rheingold, basically just starts with one long continuous note for the basses doesn't it.

Siegfried, when done well, is far from dull, the Krauss reading is absolutely electric and in Scottish Opera's ring cycle it was perhaps the highlight. But you're right, that'll be why they did it first, if they started with Walkure, people might just get that and nothing else.

regards, Tam
 
Posts: 4307 | Location: Edinburgh, UK | Registered: Sat 05 July 2003Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Yep Tam,

Got to a freelance professional status, but never had the nerve to audition for a contract job. I am TERRIBLY nervous in a one to one situation, and was completely unflappable in the orchestra. Once I was in a smallish paid band (ad hoc) accompanying a Chorus, a Soprano, and a Tenor, and one of the items was Wei lieblich sind deine Wohnungen, the Fourth Section in Brahms' Requiem. Well the Choir did well but the conductor threw the whole band except me. I carried on quite happy, and he obviously thought the others would take heart. We stopped and restarted after death-looks all round! Funny moment though! I did not half get joshed for that afterwards in the pub later. Why didn't you stop, you made us look such bloody fools! Well I used to concentrate like mad, and the conductor completely failed to help the band start, making flapping jestiures at the Choir, so the bandsimply did not understand what he wanted, but I sensed it and just did it. Many were the times when I held things that went a bit rocky because of rotten conducting. It is far more common than most realise. In fact, to be a conductor, the first requirement is a serios over dose of self confidence. Musical talent is rather a long way down the list in all too many cases. I won't mention names, but sometimes these people get all the way to the top!


All the best from Fredrik

PS: I used to teach as well, and one of my pupils wants more lessons which will be nice. I gave up because of arthritis in my left hand, and I had no desire to play less than well. I got the 52 for what I sold the bass for. I think I am going to take up the harpsichord, just for my own fun...
 
Posts: 10690 | Location: Worcester, UK | Registered: Sat 09 July 2005Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Tam
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I think you may be right about what is on the list for good conductors. That's one of the reasons I'm such a fan of Mackerras - his musical ability and scholarship is fantastic. I was at a very interesting talk he gave at last year's Edinburgh festival where he talked about how varied the characteristics of a good conductor - in that what makes for a great conductor is that they inspire the orchestra but the reasons why they do that will be very different indeed.

One of the most exciting concerts I have ever attended was the Cleveland Orchestra at the 2004 festival. Welser-Most had the basses arranged in a row at the back of the orchestra on a raised dais and the way the drove the music forward (particularly given the section's, as the rest of the orchestra's, precision) was phenomenal.

As far as interesting bass parts go, the only thing that springs to mind is, of course, the 3rd movement of Mahler's first symphony which is rather lovely.

regards, Tam

(Perhaps we should move this to another thread!)
 
Posts: 4307 | Location: Edinburgh, UK | Registered: Sat 05 July 2003Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Tam
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Well, to get this thread back on track, I have finished listening to Siegfried, and very enjoyable it was too. Indeed, I'd suggest it's a must for any serious Wagnerian. In particular, I do not believe that Hans Hotter has ever been caught finer on disc. Nor, for that matter Varnay (is there a stereo account of her other than this available?). Whether the same is true of Windgassen, I'm not as sure (see my comments about the Kruass ring further down). The most significant reservation I have is that the voices, right at the end of act 3, do distort a little, particularly Varnay's, and given the quality with which they are captured elsewhere, this is a real shame.

Some general comments first, Act 2 is especially fine, and Fafner is wonderfully played and captured. Keilberth goes at quite a pace and there are no moments whatsoever where the action drags at all, indeed, in one or two places one wishes he might slow down ever so slightly. As suggested above, the strings are a little harsh in places but the brass is very well caught as is percussion and the recording is so fine that you would hardly believe and audience was present (this especially impressive given the quality of the other 50s Bayreuth performances I've heard, and the less said about Furtwangler/Scala in this regard the better!).

One other minor reservation: the included booklet, while including an interesting foreword and essay, biographies of the cast, some nice pictures and a full libretto (in English and German only), does not contain a synopsis. This doesn't matter to me per se - I have plenty and know the plot very well, still it is the kind of oversight one does not expect from testament. I would also have liked a little more detail on how much work the Testament people needed to do on the original tapes. While it is clearly live it is not quite so live as the Krauss (they recorded the second cycle - though they could only patch certain bits since Varnay and others only appeared in the first); they also had the taping of one rehearsal to call upon. The booklet suggests only 21 such edits (which were mainly between the primary and back up tape for the original performance. They've done a good job as I can't detect them (as I can in the Bohm cycle).

So, where does this Siegfried stand in relation to the competition. Clearly I'm not going to compare it to everything, indeed I'm going to use the same three comparisons as Blyth did in his Gramophone review:

The finest 'live' Siegfried' I'd heard before - Krauss at Bayreuth in 1953
The finest 'live' stereo Siegfried - Boehm at Bayreuth in 67
The finest studio recording - Solti and the VPO.

Others may disagree as to whether those truely are the finest in their categories.

So, against Boehm first. Well, the sound on the Keilberth ring, as one might expect is not quite so fine, it is a little harsh in places and there is much more sibilance on the voices. Also, in one or two very loud points there is a little distortion. That said, they've done a remarkable job, especially considering how new stereo was at the time. The singing, overall, is finer for Testament, and one thing, more than anything else, decides it in favour of Keilberth: he has Hans Hotter whereas Boehm only has Theo Adam, and, as a result the opera suffers. Whether you prefer Nilsson or Varnay is probably a personal choice, both are exceptionally fine. Windgassen probably sings better for Testament, though the sibilance and distortion (mentioned above) are issues. Still, if you want a live, stereo Siegfried it is, at the end of the day, a pretty easy choice: Testament.

So, what about Krauss, which, as I've said above, is probably my favourite Siegfried on disc. Well, early on in act one I found Keilberth disappointingly lacking in energy in comparison but as soon as the Wanderer arrived those doubts began to disappear. I would venture to suggest Hotter has never been caught so finely on disc and it is a joy to listen to his scene - you wish he stays longer! Things only get better with Act two as we have the Wotan/Albrich confrontation and some of the most lovely woodbird music I've ever heard. Then Fafner awakes in a superbly characterised performance. I put Krauss back on for comparison and it underscores how significantly improved the Keilberth sound is. Also that the two interpretations aren't too far apart - indeed, according to the liner notes the two shared rehearsals when the shared the ring cycles in '53 and got along very well indeed. I suppose the Krauss is marginally finer musically (save for Hotter who is magical), but I think Keilberth's combination of performance and sound quality makes it the winner. The only thing that makes me think twice, is that I don't think Erda is among the finest performances on disc, that aside, the beginning of act 3 is very fine.

So what of Solti. Well, orchestral playing for Solti is better recording - a live recording will never sound like that, which, perhaps is the point. I wouldn't want to be without either (and the one I would listen to would depend on what I wanted to hear). Keilberth's singers perform better than Solti's and, in many ways the performance is more compelling. Of course, Solti has a critical weakness in the Woodbird (one of my favourite parts of Siegfried - Joan Sutherland's diction is absolutely abysmal), that said, the recording of the Part for Keilberth isn't perfect either and I suspect nothing is ever going to have the magic of the scottish opera staging of that part.

This set should be owned by all serious Wagnerians (along with the likes of Solti, Krauss, and Furtwangler). I think if you're on the studio side of the studio/live set, you'll still prefer Solti, for people like me who sit on the fence, you'll want both, for people wanting it live, this has to be a first choice - if you fall into that category buy these discs, buy them now! Put another way, at the moment I have both Solti and Krauss on my ipod, if the rest of the cycle is as good, it will be Solti and Keilberth.

I cannot wait to hear the rest of the releases: HURRY UP PLEASE TESTAMENT!

regards, Tam
 
Posts: 4307 | Location: Edinburgh, UK | Registered: Sat 05 July 2003Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Tam

Thanks for that.

I'd venture to suggest that anyone seriously interested in the music will, in future, have to own four Ring cycles: Furtwaengler (RAI, which still doesn't seem to be available on the new Gebhardt pressing); Keilberth (once they're all out); Krauss (but will his grossly inferior sound as against Keilberth put him out of the running, paricularly as Keilberth has many of the same singers caught in better sound?); and Solti, with his extraordinary sound and (maybe slightly lesser extraordinary?) cast.

Graham
 
Posts: 2122 | Location: Rural. | Registered: Tue 26 October 2004Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Tam
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Graham, I'd agree with that almost entirely. I think, if Keilberth is as consistently good, then he will put Krauss out of the running.

As far as the Furtwangler/Rome ring, I do wonder if it's the top Furtwangler recommendation. I should caveat that, though I picked it up a little before the Keilberth ring (incidentally, is the Gebhardt pressing vinyl?; I have it on EMI on CD). However, from what I have listened to, the orchestral playing is decidedly second rate, especially when compared to his Scala ring which has the added bonus of Flagstad as Brunhilde and can be had for under £20 if you shop around.

regards, Tam
 
Posts: 4307 | Location: Edinburgh, UK | Registered: Sat 05 July 2003Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Tam

I must confess to being a bit in the dark over which Furtwaengler recording. I only have his VPO EMI recording of Valkyrie, made a couple of weeks before his death. So I can't really comment on Rome or Scala, but rather assume that one has to have one or other (or both).

Scandalously, I have to confess that the one I listen to most is Solti (which I have on highly prized Teldec DMM LPs and Decca's most recent CD transfers). The sound, the sound!!!!!!

That said, I'm listening at the moment to the Krauss CDs of the end of Rheingold. Nobody will ever beat the Solti for the end of that!

Graham
 
Posts: 2122 | Location: Rural. | Registered: Tue 26 October 2004Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Tam
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Graham,

You should really pick up the Furtwangler/Scala. I picked up my copy new for £18.99 from an ebay seller and while the sound is poor (poorer than Krauss) it is wonderful. I'll post my thoughts on the Furtwangler/Rome set when I've got round to listening to it, but it's next up.

As to whether Keilberth replaces Krauss, it is worth noting that the cost of the entire Krauss cycle is roughly equal to the Keilberth Siegfried, so as a budget choice it must still reign.

Agree with you about the sound of Solti, and in particular Rheingold - that was the first bit of Wagner I ever listened to and it hooked me right in. Mind you, Rheingold is one of the highlights of the Krauss cycle. I am a little worried in that regard for Keilberth since the Knappertsbusch cycle of '56 has some very odd sounding effects during the descent into Nibelheim.

regards, Tam
 
Posts: 4307 | Location: Edinburgh, UK | Registered: Sat 05 July 2003Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Dear Graham,

For what it is worth I have the last release on LP of The Rome Ring, under Furtwangler. If you want it, it's yours for nothing if you fetch it from Hereford.

Only a thought, but the set in very fine condition.

Fredrik
 
Posts: 10690 | Location: Worcester, UK | Registered: Sat 09 July 2005Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Fredrik

What a kind offer and I'm sorry to have been so tardy in replying (I do have a sort of a life away from this Forum).

I'm going to decline, though.

First, I'm not likely to be in Hereford at any time in the near future.

Second, and much more to the point, I hardly ever listen to opera on LPs any more, when CD is just so much better. Most operatic Acts can now play uninterrupted over a CD side, which avoids breaking concentration as you jump up to change over discs. Not quite the case for all Wagner, I agree (although in this respect the latest DG C Kleiber Tristan is such a huge leap forward over all previous incarnations - on the original LPs Tristan actually died twice!).

I fully understand that you're not looking to profit from this, but why not put the set on eBay? If it's in good condition, I'm sure that there would be interest. A few more £££ towards that pair of DBLs!

All best wishes.

Graham
 
Posts: 2122 | Location: Rural. | Registered: Tue 26 October 2004Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Dear Graham,

Thanks for your reply. I have been looking for a keen Wagnerite who wants them, but none has shewn! I quite agree about opera working far better on CD, simple because of the distractions, and also because voices seem to be far more prone to mistracking (due to fluff, ware or whatever) than instruments.

I can know donate them to Oxfam, where I have been lucky enough to buy splendid things as well as giving them cast offs!

All the best from Fredrik
 
Posts: 10690 | Location: Worcester, UK | Registered: Sat 09 July 2005Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Dear Fredrik

It's awfully high-minded of you to donate the set when you are saving up for a purchase that will stretch you!

I'm a bit surprised to see that Testament are releasing their "new" 1955 Ring on LPs as well as CDs. I'd be interested to hear in due course of the respective sales. Perhaps the Japanese market alone accounts for the commercial viability of 6LP opera sets.

I'm sure that someone in Japan would buy your Ring set.

All the best

Graham
 
Posts: 2122 | Location: Rural. | Registered: Tue 26 October 2004Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Dear Graham,

I am hopeless at selling things. So once I have thing it stays till it worn out! I am a bit shy, and get nervous letting unknown entities have my address and so on! So I could never take the eBay monster on! I have some rather valuable 78s I would sell if I had the nerve, but I don't! Neither would I buy that way. But then I am just old fashioned and a bit quiet. There was a time when one did not have to be quite so defensive, but times change, and faster than me! You should have seen the shambles of me try to sell my five string bass! Me in tears, and refusing to move on price have set a price of only two thirds what it was worth! I said that if the lady liked it, put a cheque on the kitchen table, or otherwise please lets drop the subject and I'd brew some nice coffee. She put the cheque on the table and then we had a coffee, so a fine compromise really.

So it's not really altroism, just shyness. Fredrik
 
Posts: 10690 | Location: Worcester, UK | Registered: Sat 09 July 2005Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Fredrik

What an extremely honest (and, if I may say so, brave) thing to post here.

May I make a suggestion?

As you have an unwanted Ring cycle which you don't feel able to putting up for auction, I'd venture to suggest that you may have quite a bit of other potentially saleworthy music related items. Why not ask someone else whom you trust to sell these things on your behalf (thereby setting up a float from which to fund future purchases)? The dealer from whom you hope to buy those amazingly expensive loudspeakers would appear the obvious place to start. Just a thought - and please forgive my presumption.

Best wishes.

Graham
 
Posts: 2122 | Location: Rural. | Registered: Tue 26 October 2004Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Dear Graham,

We have drifted a long way from Tam's topic, but I think I'll have a word with a good friend from Worcester, who is quite happy to do eBay. If I agreed to share the profit, then no doubt I could put these things on ether-auction.

Thanks for the thought provoking reply! Fredrik
 
Posts: 10690 | Location: Worcester, UK | Registered: Sat 09 July 2005Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Tam
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Fredrik,

I have diverted enough of your topics from their course - so you needn't worry.

I would be very interested in the Wagner, sadly my system is currently, for reasons of extremely limited space, sans vinyl..... Frown

regards, Tam

p.s. Incidentally, if anyone can give a good home to the Domingo/Solti Lohengrin (CD), I currently have a spare copy...
 
Posts: 4307 | Location: Edinburgh, UK | Registered: Sat 05 July 2003Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Tam,

I would be very happy to give your Lohengrin a good home. Fredrik has my email, and I think he has yours too - perhaps he would be happy to pass my address to you??

Regards

Kevin
 
Posts: 202 | Location: Perth WA | Registered: Wed 28 April 2004Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Fredrik

Forgive me for going off topic one last time. A couple of observations, then I'll shut up well and truly.

First, if the friend in Worcester is any sort of friend, then he/she won't be looking for too much of a slice of the profit.

Second, get him/her to list these things under your name (or alias). In that way, you'll build up a positive rating under your own name/alias, in case you should ever wish to enter on the online auction scene yourself.

Tam

I'm afraid that I just can't take Placido Domingo seriously as a Wagnerian. His Spanish-inflected German diction has always sounded comical to my ears - a bit like Manuel in Fawlty Towers. Controversial? I'm sure, but I'd be interested to know what native German speakers think of his recent Tristan (which I haven't heard).

Graham
 
Posts: 2122 | Location: Rural. | Registered: Tue 26 October 2004Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Tam
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Ring in a day anyone?

http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/news/story/0,,1719624,00.html?gusrc=rss



Kevin - sorry, didn't see this before. If you're still want it I shall as Fredrik to pass you on my e-mail address.

regards, Tam
 
Posts: 4307 | Location: Edinburgh, UK | Registered: Sat 05 July 2003Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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