Rating: Summary: A very impressive Rheingold Review: First and foremost...Jerusalem's Loge is the best out there. The part is perfect for him. He does very well in the Met's Siegfried as Siegfried, but it's a bit too heavy of a role for him at times (which is understandable of course...what a role!). Loge suits him pefectly in manner and signing.As for the rest, Morris is an excellent Wotan has all the command usually exhibited by great Wotans. H does a wonderful job. I was also impressed by whoever sang Fasolt, he just gave an extremely sturdy peformance. Great tone and a very reasonable Riese (giant). The first scene (Rhine Maiden's scene) was a bit awkward but to be honest, I've yet to see a production of that scene that I actually did like. Maybe it's just an awkward scene in general. Anyway, the next scene more than makes up for that as the stage becomes littered with talent and most of the characters of the opera show up. The third scene down in Nibelheim is almost as good as the second scene except that I would've have liked to see more out of the other Nieblungs (besides Alberich and Mime) to give more of a sense of dread of Alberich's rule. I'm not a huge fan of the fourth scene in general (I guess I find it kinda slow) but this is of course in keeping with the rest of the production an extremely admirable scene. Espescially in the staging of Froh's rainbow bridge. It is a fairly amaizing special effect for the opera stage. To sum it all up, this production is certainly worth what you'll pay for it. Levine's direction and the cast are almost impeccable so the distraction are minimized about as far as they could be. You'll certaily enjoy the Ring at the Met.
Rating: Summary: A very impressive Rheingold Review: First and foremost...Jerusalem's Loge is the best out there. The part is perfect for him. He does very well in the Met's Siegfried as Siegfried, but it's a bit too heavy of a role for him at times (which is understandable of course...what a role!). Loge suits him pefectly in manner and signing. As for the rest, Morris is an excellent Wotan has all the command usually exhibited by great Wotans. H does a wonderful job. I was also impressed by whoever sang Fasolt, he just gave an extremely sturdy peformance. Great tone and a very reasonable Riese (giant). The first scene (Rhine Maiden's scene) was a bit awkward but to be honest, I've yet to see a production of that scene that I actually did like. Maybe it's just an awkward scene in general. Anyway, the next scene more than makes up for that as the stage becomes littered with talent and most of the characters of the opera show up. The third scene down in Nibelheim is almost as good as the second scene except that I would've have liked to see more out of the other Nieblungs (besides Alberich and Mime) to give more of a sense of dread of Alberich's rule. I'm not a huge fan of the fourth scene in general (I guess I find it kinda slow) but this is of course in keeping with the rest of the production an extremely admirable scene. Espescially in the staging of Froh's rainbow bridge. It is a fairly amaizing special effect for the opera stage. To sum it all up, this production is certainly worth what you'll pay for it. Levine's direction and the cast are almost impeccable so the distraction are minimized about as far as they could be. You'll certaily enjoy the Ring at the Met.
Rating: Summary: JUSTICE HAS BEEN SERVED Review: First of all,let me put it out flat in a simple question:Do you want to watch a performance of DAS RHEINGOLD and of the whole tetralogy DER RING DES NIBELUNGEN which adheres quite verbatim
as much as it is possible to do so to what the author/composer
wrote? If the answer is no,you'll do well with the alternative
video versions by Patrice Chereau,Harry Kupfer and Nikolaus Lehnhoff,also in the market.I'm not even gonna mention the newest Stuttgart one under Zagrosek because it really deserves no attention.You can read my full review of that poorly bleak interpretation of the cycle,perhaps written by a bunch of prankster kids in adults'clothings.That is definitely not what
Wagner wanted.This MET cycle is not laid out in a naturalistic fashion...It is simply produced THE WAY THE COMPOSER WANTED IT
PRODUCED...An that is more than good enough for me.
Excellent singing by James Morris's Wotan paired up with veteran
Christa Ludwig,one of the finest singers of the past century.
A grouchy Alberich by Ekkehard Wlaschiha(who has made the role one of his specialties)and a great Mime brought about by viennese character tenor Hans Zednik.
How much more into place falls the voice of bass Jan-Hendrik Rootering here as Fasolt compared to that shameful shot taken at
Wotan in the Stuttgart cycle!(And I said I wasn't gonna talk about it...Sometimes anger management is a real need!)We also have an illustrious Fafner by finnish bass Matti Salminen,who will return as one of the most diabolical Hagens I've ever seen
in GOTTERDAMMERUNG.
Jerusalem's Loge is a real treat indeed.This fine Oberhausen-born german tenor who started his career as a bassoonist and later on as a baritone,finally becoming a full tenor portrays the trickster god with a natural approach which will also be repeated in his both Siegfrieds.We can't obviously compare with
the "ancient generation",but what a luxury this great artist,who has already retired was! Wish we had a Jerusalem or a Peter Hofmann(another victim of that lousy Parkinson disease!)nowadays!
Recap:Otto Schenk's stage production is the ONLY TRUE ONE to the musician's intentions.If you want to know exactly what he wanted to convey,well this is the ticket, and no other,I repeat
NO OTHER video nor DVD will give you this.
Need I talk about the MET's orchestra under Levine? Just draw your own conclusions...
RATE:EXCELLENT-Compared to this one,no other video version exists,believe you me-I kid you not.
There's also an excellent digital transfer to DVD to be acknowledged upon which I'm basing this humble opinion,although I also own the videotapes.
Buy it without even stopping to think twice!
Rating: Summary: Disappointing production and performances Review: I'm disappointed by the production and the performances. While it's a good idea to stage this opera in a naturalistic manner, the stage direction is disappointing, as can be witnessed from the comical episodes involving the Rhinemaidens and the various transformations by Alberich. The cast fails to do justice to Wagner's score. Morris is hampered by bad stage direction all the way and he is less than dramatically vivid. Ludwig is well past her prime, as is the Alberich. In fact, the other roles are not that well taken, too, with the single exception of Jerusalem's Loge. But a good Loge cannot rescue the entire opera. Levine's slow tempo is also a liability even though the orchestra performed well.
Rating: Summary: The art and the artist Review: It is gratifying and most helpful that a prominent Jewish conductor has presided over one of the best interpretations of the Ring I have ever seen. Helpful, because on the heels of Jean Shinoda Bolen's Jungian interpretation of the Ring mythology, Levine has helped all Wagner fans move further away from the Nazi stereotype that has always dogged the operas. For too long, the Wagner fan has been seen as a caricature Lone Nutter, who listens to Wagner at full blast while easing back into his armchair with a copy of Mein Kampf and a stein of lager, with a huge swastika draped across the wall in front of him. Levine and other Jewish Wagner fans have been able to, as Dimitri Drobatschewsky put it, separate art from the artist. It's not as if Wagner was alone in his anti-semitism, anyway. It was primarily Hitler's adoption of Wagner for his own ends that created the Evil Composer tag. The Rheingold sets the standard for the rest of the Cycle, this being the prelude to the trilogy. Levine is both inspired and inspiring and delivers at every level throughout. Morris is an impressive, if at times, a little under powered Wotan, his passing resemblance to Barry Gibb of the Bee Gees notwithstanding. Behrens consistently proves why she has long been considered the ultimate Brunnhilde. The only visual blip being that, through no fault of her own, she is rather too close in age to Morris to be a credible daughter. The sets are generally adequate, and at times, excellent, although other productions have slaughtered this version, especially in the Rheingold - the controversial, yet visionary 1983 Bayreuth production (The English Ring) above all. In the Bayreuth '83 Ring (which also featured the superb Behrens), the Rhinemaidens were sylph-like and naked against a stunningly original backdrop, which gave the production a pagan and elemental flavour that is somewhat lacking in the Levine version. However, this remains a top notch production and one of the few versions to be currently available. At the prices Amazon are offering, you simply can't go wrong. Having just received my copy of Gotterdammerung, I now have the entire Ring and I certainly take my hat off to James Levine and his superb cast and crew. Get it while you can, people. These things have a way of becoming unavailable rather quickly.
Rating: Summary: James Morris is the best! Review: James Morris is generally accepted as the best Wotan in the world today. I had the pleasure of seeing his San Francisco Opera performance 4 times in 1999. This production is very enjoyable. You can count on The Met for a great performance.
Rating: Summary: "All you gods I'll grip...in my golden grasp!" Review: There is more to like...and less to be somewhat dissatisfied with...in this Metropolitan Opera Television Production of -Das Rheingold-. In the order of my preferences, from best to lesser, are the visual effects, the sets, the music and conducting, the costumes, and some of the singing. But even the singing which is less pleasing is only unequal in certain parts, such as parts of the opening Rhine scene and with the giants and the gods in their first encounter. But this was a live production, and the mircrophones were placed as a distance, not right in front of the singers, as they might be in a recorded version. So some of the singing by Alberich in the first scene seems not quite loud and forceful enough, but then he is clamboring over the rocks. The singing of the giants is also less than a bit loud enough...and forceful. But then, things change...and Alberich's singing in Nibelheim is very good. The visual effects are very captivating to me... the mists...clouds...that rise from the blue watery murkiness of the Rhine up to the god- haven...as the camera pulls back, there is a wondrous castle in the background...and Fricka and Wotan are somewhat "dwarfed" by it as they recline on a spiral, slanted set -- meant to represent some sort of gigantic saucer-shaped rock or cliff top...but which has wondrous similarity to a textured, rough, rocky spiral galaxy. Then there is the red mist...cloud...on the descent into Nibelheim...and the passing shot in the background of small dwarves at work in their cave compartments with shining gleams cast off here and there...the Nibelheim section is the best part, as far as I am concerned...the set is wondrous...a circular cave opening in the back with the red background...it looks like some eternal eye...or a gigantic worm-hole into a fated eternity... Also what should be mentioned is the English translation of the libretto which can be added by clicking on the opening bars...the translation is very tough...elemental...pagan...not poetic or lyrical. It gives a very real, ominous...compelling... forceful...underpinning to the visuals and the German singing going on in the visuals. The style of the production is of the Wagnerian Romantic late 1800s style...the costumes have that "period" look, but the sets are timeless and elemental, not weirdly modern and anachronistic. I much prefer the look of this production over the descriptions given by some of the posters of the Bayreuth production conducted by Boulez where the opening Rhine scene, apparently, is set under the shadow of a hydro-electric dam! And the Rhine Maidens appear to be "call girls." The viewer should also consider several levels of meaning and awareness as he or she watches this production...and relates the meaning of what is being said...thoughts about gold, and wealth, and power, and greed, and revenge...and renouncing love in order to gain power. There is definite social...and psychological critique going on here. Alberich's critique of the pleasure lives of the gods sounds as if it might be from the lips of a Platonist contemplating the fate of the Atlanteans... or of a 19th century socialist...or of a transcendental critic/rebuker like Thoreau. The giants' warnings to Wotan about the sacredness of contracts and the bond of one's word, sound like thoughts to think about in relation to government and governing... and law...their talk of how Wotan used the pledge- power of his spear to wield their compliance, sounds like something out of Thomas Hobbes, and the whole idea of the social contract. The more one watches and listens...and lets several levels of possible meaning come together, the richer and more powerful and gripping the genius of bringing so much myth/psychology/and inspired alienation and passion together in a work of art, and drama, and music becomes... If you think an opera can't be overwhelming and stun you...watch the giant Fafner kill the other giant Fasolt...and watch the stunned, horrified looks on the gods' faces...and Wotan's shocked, chastened, brooding look as he realizes what is happening as a result of the ring's curse. The scene is powerful...and gripping... and moving in a profoundly deep and elemental way... you are truly "within the spell" of the cycle to come...and its relentless unfolding possibilties...moving ever slowly but enigmatically...and sadly... toward fatal fated conclusion...
Rating: Summary: "All you gods I'll grip...in my golden grasp!" Review: There is more to like...and less to be somewhat dissatisfied with...in this Metropolitan Opera Television Production of -Das Rheingold-. In the order of my preferences, from best to lesser, are the visual effects, the sets, the music and conducting, the costumes, and some of the singing. But even the singing which is less pleasing is only unequal in certain parts, such as parts of the opening Rhine scene and with the giants and the gods in their first encounter. But this was a live production, and the mircrophones were placed as a distance, not right in front of the singers, as they might be in a recorded version. So some of the singing by Alberich in the first scene seems not quite loud and forceful enough, but then he is clamboring over the rocks. The singing of the giants is also less than a bit loud enough...and forceful. But then, things change...and Alberich's singing in Nibelheim is very good. The visual effects are very captivating to me... the mists...clouds...that rise from the blue watery murkiness of the Rhine up to the god- haven...as the camera pulls back, there is a wondrous castle in the background...and Fricka and Wotan are somewhat "dwarfed" by it as they recline on a spiral, slanted set -- meant to represent some sort of gigantic saucer-shaped rock or cliff top...but which has wondrous similarity to a textured, rough, rocky spiral galaxy. Then there is the red mist...cloud...on the descent into Nibelheim...and the passing shot in the background of small dwarves at work in their cave compartments with shining gleams cast off here and there...the Nibelheim section is the best part, as far as I am concerned...the set is wondrous...a circular cave opening in the back with the red background...it looks like some eternal eye...or a gigantic worm-hole into a fated eternity... Also what should be mentioned is the English translation of the libretto which can be added by clicking on the opening bars...the translation is very tough...elemental...pagan...not poetic or lyrical. It gives a very real, ominous...compelling... forceful...underpinning to the visuals and the German singing going on in the visuals. The style of the production is of the Wagnerian Romantic late 1800s style...the costumes have that "period" look, but the sets are timeless and elemental, not weirdly modern and anachronistic. I much prefer the look of this production over the descriptions given by some of the posters of the Bayreuth production conducted by Boulez where the opening Rhine scene, apparently, is set under the shadow of a hydro-electric dam! And the Rhine Maidens appear to be "call girls." The viewer should also consider several levels of meaning and awareness as he or she watches this production...and relates the meaning of what is being said...thoughts about gold, and wealth, and power, and greed, and revenge...and renouncing love in order to gain power. There is definite social...and psychological critique going on here. Alberich's critique of the pleasure lives of the gods sounds as if it might be from the lips of a Platonist contemplating the fate of the Atlanteans... or of a 19th century socialist...or of a transcendental critic/rebuker like Thoreau. The giants' warnings to Wotan about the sacredness of contracts and the bond of one's word, sound like thoughts to think about in relation to government and governing... and law...their talk of how Wotan used the pledge- power of his spear to wield their compliance, sounds like something out of Thomas Hobbes, and the whole idea of the social contract. The more one watches and listens...and lets several levels of possible meaning come together, the richer and more powerful and gripping the genius of bringing so much myth/psychology/and inspired alienation and passion together in a work of art, and drama, and music becomes... If you think an opera can't be overwhelming and stun you...watch the giant Fafner kill the other giant Fasolt...and watch the stunned, horrified looks on the gods' faces...and Wotan's shocked, chastened, brooding look as he realizes what is happening as a result of the ring's curse. The scene is powerful...and gripping... and moving in a profoundly deep and elemental way... you are truly "within the spell" of the cycle to come...and its relentless unfolding possibilties...moving ever slowly but enigmatically...and sadly... toward fatal fated conclusion...
Rating: Summary: Wonderful!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Review: This is a Rheingold done in the romantic style and close as anyone is going to get these days to a truly 'realistic' production. The costumes are beautiful to say the least; and the sets are outstanding, ( though the 1st scene looks a bit odd, it looks as if it was set on the moon instead of the bed of the Rhine) The cast is top-notch, without a weak link anywhere. Truly a must buy!!!
Rating: Summary: Best version of Das Rheingold I have ever seen. Review: This is one of a four-part set of the Ring Cycle done at the Met. It is beautifully done with the costumes, scenery, music and voices all doing great credit to the score. This Ring cycle was the first opera I ever liked, and led me into enjoying opera.
|