SMETANA The Bartered Bride
Harnoncourt at the fair for German Bartered Bride
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Genre:
Opera
Label: Styriarte Festival Edition
Magazine Review Date: 09/2012
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 171
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 004 2012
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(The) Bartered Bride |
Bedřich Smetana, Composer
Anton Scharinger, Krusina, Baritone Arnold Schoenberg Chorus Bibiana Nwobilo, Esmeralda, Soprano Chamber Orchestra of Europe Dorothea Röschmann, Marenka, Soprano Elisabeth Kulman, Ludmila, Mezzo soprano Elisabeth von Magnus, Háta, Mezzo soprano Heinz Zednik, Circus Master, Tenor Kurt Streit, Jeník, Tenor Markus Schäfer, Vasek, Tenor Nenad Marinkovic, Indian, Tenor Ruben Drole, Kecal, Bass Yasushi Hirano, Micha, Bass |
Author: Richard Lawrence
Any German version on CD comes straight up against the peerless account under Rudolf Kempe. Nikolaus Harnoncourt starts promisingly with a lively Overture, the double-bass entry in the fugue being particularly powerful. The dances and the drinking chorus, too, go with a swing, and Harnoncourt provides good support for Marie’s heartfelt arias. There’s a beautiful pianissimo in the orchestra in the Act 3 trio (disc 3, tr 15, 1'14"). But elsewhere, Harnoncourt seeks to impose on this charming descendant of Zar und Zimmermann and Martha a weight it cannot bear. Where is the lightness in the Allegro moderato of the duet between Marie and the stammering Vašek? Where is the sense of fun in the duet between Jeník and Kecal, a number that takes Harnoncourt 10 and a half minutes against Kempe’s eight?
These ponderous speeds affect the singers. Kurt Streit is a personable-sounding Jeník but his Act 2 aria (disc 2, tr 9) is so slow as to draw attention to the beat in his voice. Ruben Drole doesn’t make much of Kecal, the marriage-broker, and he struggles with the low notes. Dorothea Röschmann’s Marie, though, is first-rate: a rounded, impassioned portrayal. But stick to the Kempe, or seek it out as a matter of urgency. If you need persuading, listen to ‘Komm, mein Söhnchen, auf ein Wort’: Fritz Wunderlich and Gottlob Frick at the top of their game, relishing every syllable, the Bamberg Symphony Orchestra bouncing along with them.
The DVD is a semi-staging on part of an old fairground ride. The characters sing without scores but of course movement is restricted. Verisimilitude flies out of the window with a male romantic lead who is 20 years older than the marriage-broker – and, I’m afraid, looks it. Markus Schäfer, a Boris Johnson in shorts and bow tie, is touching as the hapless Vašek, and the veteran Heinz Zednik nearly steals the show as the Circus Master. The discs come in a handsome hardback with articles, photos and a dreadful English translation of the libretto from 1909.
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