Two-and-a-half years ago, in a post of April 14, 2014, we promised a continuation of the discussion of Richard Strauss' Arabella, a promise we keep belatedly for operaphiles of all stripes and for Straussians in particular (please see Arabella 1: Angels in Vienna in our blog archive in the right-hand column).
No retrospective of Arabella, however selective, can fail to acknowledge Viorica Ursuleac and Lotte Lehmann, favorites of the composer. Bitter rivals, they each coveted the 1933 Dresden world premiere. Strauss wanted Clemens Krauss to conduct; Ursuleac, Frau Krauss, was part of the deal. Lehmann had to settle for introducing this Viennese opera to Vienna. Both singers had voices more hefty than the lyric and spinto sopranos who have taken on the role since the 1950s. Despite their heroic sound, Ursuleac and Lehmann connect deeply to the modern Arabella, a young woman who exercises her courage not on mythological mountaintops but in the habitats of 19th-century society. Ursuleac, with the first Mandryka, Alfred Jerger, and her husband-conductor, recorded the end of Act III at the time of the premiere. Through the awful sonics you can hear her resplendent top and her expressive diminuendo.
Also at that time, Lotte Lehmann recorded the Act I monologue, “Mein Elemer”; here she displays her uniquely passionate tone and crystalline diction.
We cannot end this post without putting in a word for the often neglected Josef Metternich. The Met was rich in great baritones in the mid-1950s: Leonard Warren, Robert Merrill, Ettore Bastianini, George London. Metternich was there as well, but for just three seasons—twenty-three performances between 1953 and 1956, predominantly in Verdi roles. Although he received generally excellent notices, he never approached the popularity of his superstar colleagues. Metternich sang Mandryka to Elisabeth Schwarzkopf’s Arabella in the album referenced in our 2014 post. In Mandryka’s semi-solo scene in Act I (Theodor Schlott sings the few lines allotted to Arabella’s father), Metternich is master of the shifting rhetoric of the piece; his splendid, bright instrument deftly navigates this difficult test of rhythm and range with propulsive energy.
New York never heard Metternich in Arabella, perhaps because the opera was sung in English, and not in the original German, when he was with the company. He shows off his Italianate legato in this 1953 German-language rendition of the "Prologo" of Pagliacci.
Showing posts with label Josef Metternich. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Josef Metternich. Show all posts
Thursday, December 1, 2016
Monday, April 14, 2014
Arabella 1: Angels in Vienna
The
Met’s 2014 revival of Arabella comes a
decade after its last. This latest edition reminds us of the beauties of Strauss’s
opera, once dismissed as a pale derivative of Der Rosenkavalier. Malin Byström’s substantial voice prevailed (I attended the April 7
performance) over the sometimes unfriendly orchestration and in spite of conductor
Philippe Auguin’s heavy baton. In Act I, the soprano’s volume came at the
expense of the float she happily found for the lyric passages of Acts II and
III. Michael Volle’s attractive voice betrayed his years of service, yet not so
much as to compromise his compelling enactment of Mandryka. At every turn, in
posture and phrase, Volle conveyed the character’s idealism, his confusion, his
sense of being out of place, his belief in the power of love.
Opera is full of love
at first sight. No coup de foudre is
more persuasive than the encounter of Arabella and Mandryka, The meeting of
these soulmates emerges in contrast to the comedy of manners and the farcical critique
of materialism inscribed in Hugo von Hofmannstahl’s scenario. Prior to Act II,
Mandryka becomes obsessed by a photograph of Arabella; she is intrigued by the
stranger just outside her hotel who looks at her with “large, serious, steady
eyes.” The first words of Act II are Mandryka’s as Arabella descends the stairs
to the ballroom: “This is an angel, come down from Heaven.” Arabella, who has
been courted by the most eligible bachelors of 1860s Vienna, understands at
once that this is “the right man,” “der Richtige.” He brings far more than
wealth—he brings his aura. Only minutes
later, in one of the score’s most moving passages, the widower Mandryka evokes
his dead wife, an angel for whom, he says, he was too young and not good enough.
At the opera’s end, he rejoices in having found his new angel.
A recording of the ecstatic
Act II duet of Elisabeth Schwarzkopf and Josef Metternich won many converts to Arabella. The soprano never sang the opera
in the theatre, reportedly because she found the role uninteresting. You would
never know it from this excerpt.
In the mid-1950s, Arabella was in the air. Aside from the
Schwarzkopf album of highlights, there were two compilations that featured Lisa
Della Casa. More than twenty years after its Dresden world premiere, the Met
presented the U.S. premiere in February 1955. I saw it there a few weeks later.
I expect I will never hear the Act II duet performed with more heart than I did
that night. If you wish to judge for yourself, the matinee broadcast of the
1955 Arabella is available on Amazon.
The betrothed couple is played by Eleanor Steber and George London, artists
matched in their fervor and, so rare, in the weight of tone suited to the text.
They are both at their peak, Steber having acquired great warmth in the middle
register to go along with a phenomenal top by turns silvery and expansive. The
massive voice of London, more bass than the lyric baritone to which we have become
accustomed, reaches the top notes with adequate ease. As they fill out the most
taxing, long-breathed phrases, Steber and London conjure the illusion of holding
nothing back, all the while holding much more in reserve. Hilde Güden’s unrivaled
Zdenka caps the Act I duet of the sisters with the high C of yet another angel.
The opera is given in English translation, as it would be in three subsequent
revivals. Conductor Rudolf Kempe abets intelligibility, applying his supple,
light manner to Strauss’s sometimes raucous orchestral barrage.
Two years after its
1955 Met premiere, when Arabella returned
to the Met, George London was joined by Lisa Della Casa. Della Casa was already
widely known for her interpretation of the title role. With a voice somewhat
less dense than that of Steber, she infused the score with her distinctively
cool/warm timbre and personality and made for a particularly alluring “Queen of
the Coachman’s Ball.” Here she is with Annaliese Rothenberger, a Met Zdenka on
twelve occasions, in a 1963 performance from Munich.
More on the performance history of Arabella in my next post.
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