SOMMER Rübezahl und der Sackpfeifer von Neiße
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Hans Sommer
Genre:
Opera
Label: Pan
Magazine Review Date: 03/2017
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 157
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: PC10367
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Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Rübezahl und der Sackpfeifer von Neiße |
Hans Sommer, Composer
Alexander Voigt, Hieronymus Stäblein, Tenor Anne Preuß, Gertrud, Soprano Hans Sommer, Composer Hans-Georg Priese, Wido, Tenor Johannes Beck, Herr Buko, Baritone Jueun Jeon, Bernhard Kraft, Tenor Kai Wefer, Otto Kettner, Baritone Laurent Wagner, Conductor Magnus Piontek, Rübezahl, Bass Philharmonisches Orchester Altenburg-Gera Thüringen Theatre Opera Choir |
Author: Hugo Shirley
There’s arguably an echo of Strauss’s Feuersnot, too, in the waltzes that dance into the texture as Rübezahl takes on the guise of the piper Ruprecht (the title is misleading in this respect, since Rübezahl is the Sackpfeifer von Neisse, so far as I can tell). But it’s difficult not to agree with Strauss’s own assessment of the work, which he conducted in 1905. ‘[It] brought the decorous older gentleman much respectable success’, he wrote to his parents, but ‘generally speaking the music is too dry and lacks a certain inspiration.’ He didn’t predict it would last on the stage beyond the standard dutiful first runs, and he was right.
Still, it has its charms. We get a nice sense of Humperdinck-like folksy atmosphere, and Sommer rises to the key moments impressively. There’s some colourful gothic character to the final graveyard scene, which eventually sees the demise of the evil Buko – Governer of Neisse, father of the beautiful Gertrud and imprisoner of the wise (and innocent) Bernhard. Wido, who probably counts as the opera’s hero, vows revenge, but is in love with Gertrud. About halfway through, matters are taken out of his hands as Rübezahl/Ruprecht himself starts to steer events.
It’s a muddled plot, which Sommer’s score, not especially adept at offering consistent musical characterisations, does little to help clarify. Overall it’s one of those post-Wagnerian works that seems to look back rather than forwards, taking us down the fairy-tale path that would soon prove to be a dead end.
On this enterprising release from Pan Classics, Laurent Wagner’s cast do what they can to bring it to life, though some are unsurprisingly stretched by Sommer’s demands – Wagnerian stamina is required, but without the pay-off. The sound is decent and the orchestral playing, a few scratchy moments notwithstanding, perfectly fine.
Don’t expect a masterpiece; but, as with any first recording of a long-lost work, this is a valuable addition to a dusty corner of the catalogue. Be warned, though, we have the text only in German, and the translations of the in-depth booklet essays are hardly idiomatic.
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