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OPERA
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Buitenlandse recensies Richard Wagner - Tannhäuser Baden-Baden; July 29, 2008 By: José Antonio Rodríguez-Priego
Soloists, Festspielhaus Chor Baden-Baden and Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester BerlinConductor: Philippe Jordan Director: Nikolaus Lehnhoff Sets: Raimund Bauer Costumes: Andrea Schmidt-Futterer Lighting: Duane Schuler Cast: Tannhäuser: Frank van AkenElisabeth: Solveig Kringelborn Venus: Waltraud Meier Wolfram von Eschenbach: Roman Trekel Landgraf: Stephen Milling Walther von der Vogelweide: Marcel Reijans Biterolf: Tom Fox For this year’s Festspiele, Baden-Baden has selected the 1875 Viennese version of ‘Tannhäuser’ by Richard Wagner (1813 – 1883). Once more the city in the Black Forest has become an alternative to Bayreuth, after ‘Parsifal’ in 2004 and ‘Lohengrin’ in 2006, and with the quality of their performances and glamour of the place, Baden-Baden can stand up to its neighbour. And for this year’s ‘Tannhäuser’ there are other resemblances with Bayreuth: its director Nikolaus Lehnhoff once was Wieland Wagner’s assistant and this year’s Tannhäuser Dutch tenor Frank van Aken was last summer’s Tannhäuser in Bayreuth.
Van Aken is an outstanding Tannhäuser, a heroic tenor with strong lyric and dramatic qualities, who can stand up to the fullest orchestrations. Surprisingly, Van Aken sings in this co-production of the Festspielhaus Baden-Baden and the Nederlandse Opera Amsterdam, but didn’t perform it in the Dutch theatre. Solveig Kringelborn is a brilliant Elisabeth with clean high notes and a beautiful sound. Waltraud Meier is a glowing Venus with an amazing vocal transition from the lines where she adulates Tannhäuser to the point where she curses. The German baritone Roman Trekel as Wolfram has an elegant voice and surely left nobody unmoved with his Abendstern song. Strong, gentle and sonorous was Stephen Millings as Landgraf.
The young conductor
Philippe Jordan provided an excellent and dramatic Wagnerian sound: romantic and
lyrical, sublime and pathetic, dark and threatening where needed. The
Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin playing impeccably and also the great
acoustics of the Festspielhaus contributed to this excellent performance. A great
and well deserved ovation followed after each act and even a standing ovation
(yes, in Germany!) at the end. |
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