Strauss Arabella
An engrossing account of the opera is crowned by a superb Four Last Songs
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Richard Strauss
Genre:
Opera
Label: Orfeo d'or
Magazine Review Date: 1/2006
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 178
Mastering:
Mono
ADD
Catalogue Number: C651053D
![](https://music-reviews.markallengroup.com/gramophone/media-thumbnails/4011790651323.jpg)
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Arabella |
Richard Strauss, Composer
Anneliese Rothenberger, Zdenka, Soprano Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Mandryka, Baritone Eta Köhrer, Fiakermilli, Soprano Georg Stern, Count Dominik, Baritone Helmut Melchert, Count Elemer, Tenor Ira Malaniuk, Adelaide, Mezzo soprano Joseph Keilberth, Conductor Karl Weber, Count Lamoral, Bass Kerstin Meyer, Fortune-Teller, Soprano Kurt Ruesche, Matteo, Tenor Lisa della Casa, Arabella, Soprano Otto Edelmann, Count Waldner, Bass Richard Strauss, Composer Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra Vienna State Opera Chorus Wilhelm Lenninger, Welko, Speaker |
(4) Letzte Lieder, '(4) Last Songs' |
Richard Strauss, Composer
Anna Reynolds, Magdalene, Mezzo soprano Gerd Nienstedt, Kothner, Bass Gerd Nienstedt, Donner, Baritone Gerd Nienstedt, Donner, Baritone Gerd Nienstedt, Kothner, Baritone Gerd Nienstedt, Donner, Baritone Gerd Nienstedt, Kothner, Baritone Gustav Neidlinger, Alberich, Bass Hans Sotin, Pogner, Bass Hans Sotin, Pogner, Bass Hans Sotin, Pogner, Bass Hans Stricker, David, Tenor Hermin Esser, Froh, Tenor James King, Siegmund, Tenor Jean Cox, Walther, Tenor Karl Böhm, Conductor Karl Ridderbusch, Hans Sachs, Bass Klaus Hirte, Beckmesser, Bass Lisa della Casa, Soprano Richard Strauss, Composer Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra Wolfgang Windgassen, Loge, Tenor Wolfgang Windgassen, Loge, Tenor Wolfgang Windgassen, Loge, Tenor |
Author: Alan Blyth
A performance recorded in Munich in 1963 had the same Arabella, Mandryka and conductor (DG, 11/95 – nla). That production originated in 1958 at the Salzburg Festival and it is a broadcast ofits auspicious first night that appears for the first time on disc. That was also the year Decca recorded the work with Della Casa under Solti, so there are interesting comparisons.
What cannot be in dispute is that the part of Arabella might have been written for Della Casa. Excellent as some of her successors may have been, she remains supreme. In 1958 she was at her vocal and interpretative peak: everything she does ravishes the senses. To an even greater extent than in the studio, she inhabits the character from start to finish. Haughty and off-hand with previous lovers, she aurally melts when coming across ‘Der Richtige’, the right man for her, in the person of Mandryka. The softness and glow of her singing at the end of Act 1 and the start of Act 2 is balm to the ear, as are her ravishing pianissimi throughout. Then, when Mandryka unjustly accuses her of infidelity, the tremble suggests all the hurt he is causing her. That’s banished when all is cleared up in the ineffably beautiful finale; a memorable climax to a great portrayal.
Fischer-Dieskau, as I recall on the stage, was the rough-hewn, impulsive Mandryka to the life. His performance has enormous presence and vitality but he is rather inclined to go into his hectoring mode, with line-breaking over-emphases. George London on Decca may be preferred. The Adelaide and Waldner are common to Orfeo and Decca, both admirable in depicting the Viennese bourgeoisie. As Zdenka, Hilde Gueden (Decca) is slightly preferable to Rothenberger on Orfeo and DG because of her greater ease on high. Anton Dermota (Decca) is a more fluent Matteo than Karl Ruesche, a tenor unknown to me.
Keilberth lays a lighter, more lyrical hand on the score than Solti but unfortunately makes the common and disfiguring cuts in Act 3. The Decca set enjoys early stereo against Orfeo’s mono. But Della Casa, caught on the wing and in freshest voice, is not be missed.
A clinching factor may be the inclusion of the Four Last Songs, recorded at Salzburg the night after the Arabella. Here she, Böhm and the VPO renew their famous alliance in this work from their classic 1953 recording on Decca, though that’s out of the catalogue at the time of writing. Unlike other interpreters they still start with ‘Beim Schlafengehen’. In other respects there are improvements. Speeds overall are a little slower, allowing for subtler shades of colouring, more intensity of feeling, and the voice itself is more rounded. It seems a version that fulfils every one of the work’s exigent demands, and surpasses even those by Schwarzkopf, Popp and Janowitz for sheer tonal beauty and sheen, placing it in my book as the most favoured reading, although it has to be said that the orchestral palette is restricted by modern standards.
What cannot be in dispute is that the part of Arabella might have been written for Della Casa. Excellent as some of her successors may have been, she remains supreme. In 1958 she was at her vocal and interpretative peak: everything she does ravishes the senses. To an even greater extent than in the studio, she inhabits the character from start to finish. Haughty and off-hand with previous lovers, she aurally melts when coming across ‘Der Richtige’, the right man for her, in the person of Mandryka. The softness and glow of her singing at the end of Act 1 and the start of Act 2 is balm to the ear, as are her ravishing pianissimi throughout. Then, when Mandryka unjustly accuses her of infidelity, the tremble suggests all the hurt he is causing her. That’s banished when all is cleared up in the ineffably beautiful finale; a memorable climax to a great portrayal.
Fischer-Dieskau, as I recall on the stage, was the rough-hewn, impulsive Mandryka to the life. His performance has enormous presence and vitality but he is rather inclined to go into his hectoring mode, with line-breaking over-emphases. George London on Decca may be preferred. The Adelaide and Waldner are common to Orfeo and Decca, both admirable in depicting the Viennese bourgeoisie. As Zdenka, Hilde Gueden (Decca) is slightly preferable to Rothenberger on Orfeo and DG because of her greater ease on high. Anton Dermota (Decca) is a more fluent Matteo than Karl Ruesche, a tenor unknown to me.
Keilberth lays a lighter, more lyrical hand on the score than Solti but unfortunately makes the common and disfiguring cuts in Act 3. The Decca set enjoys early stereo against Orfeo’s mono. But Della Casa, caught on the wing and in freshest voice, is not be missed.
A clinching factor may be the inclusion of the Four Last Songs, recorded at Salzburg the night after the Arabella. Here she, Böhm and the VPO renew their famous alliance in this work from their classic 1953 recording on Decca, though that’s out of the catalogue at the time of writing. Unlike other interpreters they still start with ‘Beim Schlafengehen’. In other respects there are improvements. Speeds overall are a little slower, allowing for subtler shades of colouring, more intensity of feeling, and the voice itself is more rounded. It seems a version that fulfils every one of the work’s exigent demands, and surpasses even those by Schwarzkopf, Popp and Janowitz for sheer tonal beauty and sheen, placing it in my book as the most favoured reading, although it has to be said that the orchestral palette is restricted by modern standards.
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