Mozart Die Zauberflöte

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Genre:

Opera

Label: DG

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 143

Mastering:

Mono
ADD

Catalogue Number: 435 741-2GDO2

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
(Die) Zauberflöte, '(The) Magic Flute' Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer
Berlin RIAS Chamber Choir
Berlin RIAS Orchestra
Diana Eustrati, Third Boy, Mezzo soprano
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Papageno, Baritone
Ernst Haefliger, Tamino, Tenor
Ferenc Fricsay, Conductor
Howard Vandenburg, First Armed Man; Priest, Tenor
Josef Greindl, Sarastro, Bass
Kim Borg, Speaker; Second Armed Man, Bass
Lisa Otto, Papagena, Soprano
Liselotte Losch, Second Lady, Soprano
Margarete Klose, Third Lady, Mezzo soprano
Margot Guilleaume, First Boy, Soprano
Maria Reith, Second Boy, Soprano
Maria Stader, Pamina, Soprano
Marianne Schech, First Lady, Soprano
Martin Vantin, Monostatos, Tenor
Rita Streich, Queen of Night, Soprano
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer
This recording, made in 1954, and now coming up for the third time (as it were), has something of a 'classic' status in Germany—it is issued here in the Dokumente series—and of course it has its admirers here too; but I cannot imagine many buyers preferring it to several of the others now available, particularly as it is of course in mono. One attraction is certainly the Papageno of the younger Fischer-Dieskau, fresh and intelligent singing, if a little on the stiff side, the voice much slenderer than it was soon to become. But there is also a gently eloquent, slightly understated Tamino in Haefliger, a pointed and dramatic Queen of Night in Streich and a capable if unexciting Pamina in Stader (the booklet describes her as girlish but I would not really endorse that; it's a matter of what one is used to and in the 1950s she probably seemed so). Greindl's Sarastro is reasonably impressive; so certainly is Borg's Speaker.
Ferenc Fricsay's direction, in particular, has won praise, and his lucid textures, his coolly flowing tempos and his command of structure are all strong points here. The ensemble work is excellent and the orchestral playing is polished. Spoken dialogue, considerably edited from Schikaneder's original, is included, with a different cast (this was the first recording to offer it). The recording has the perspective characteristic of DG at this period. In all, an estimable set, one that readers might well enjoy, but not for many, I think, a top choice among those to be had.'

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