Das Rheingold ‎

Richard Wagner Das Rheingold ‎ to libretto by the composer. Directed 2008 by Michael Schulz at the Deutsches Nationaltheater Weimar. Stars Mario Hoff (Wotan), Alexander Günther (Donner), Jean-Noël Briend (Froh), Erin Caves (Loge), Tomas Möwes (Alberich), Frieder Aurich (Mime), Renatus Mészár (Fasolt), Hidekazu Tsumaya (Fafner), Christine Hansmann (Fricka), Marietta Zumbült (Freia), Nadine Weissmann (Erda), Silona Michel (Woglinde), Susann Günther-Dissmeier (Wellgunde),  Christiane Bassek (Floßhilde), Luise Grabolle, Marie-Louise Winde, and Luisa Wöllner (Norns).  Carl St. Clair conducts the Staatskapelle Weimar. Set design by Dirk Becker; costumes by Renée Listerdal; dramaturgy by Wolfgang Willaschek. Directed for TV by Brooks Riley. Sung in German. Released 2009 and then re-released 2019 with new cover artwork showing the gold ring. Disc has 5.1 dts-HD Master Audio sound. Grade: C+

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Seiji Ozawa 75th Anniversary Box Set

Seiji Ozawa 75th Anniversary Box Set. This set has 5 Blu-ray jewel boxes:

1. Brahms Symphony No. 2 & Shostakovich Symphony No. 5. This is a superb HDVD that you can buy separately. We graded both titles A+ elsewhere on this site.

2. Janáček Cunning Little Vixen. This is a nice HDVD that you can buy separately. We graded it B+ elsewhere on this site.

3. The Last Don Quixote. Mstislav Rostropovich and Seiji Ozawa playing Strauss's Don Quixote. This is a complicated two disc set. Disc 2 is the main show---a performance (43 minutes) of Don Quixote from 2002 with the Saito Kinen Orchestra. This performance has decent video and was recorded with 5.0 PCM 96 kHz/24 bit surround sound. Disc 1 is a strange mixed bag. It has a 1 hour, 15 minute documentary, with good video and 5.0 PCM 96 kHz/24 bit surround sound, about the Don Quixote recording. The documentary includes rehearsal video with a lot of personal information about Rostropovich. The documentary also has a fanciful Don Quixote movie (43 minutes) that illustrates the Cervantes story as told by Strauss in the tone poem. Then follows a 1995 concert with Rostropovich and the NHK Orchestra playing the Dvořák Concerto for Cello. This performance has remarkable good video but there is only stereo sound (which is quite good).

4. Beethoven Symphony No. 7/Mahler Symphony No. 9. This disc has material shot in 1989 & 2002 and does not meet our standards for an HDVD.

5. Extras Disc. This disc doesn't have an NSBS catalog number like the other disc packages because its just extras, including two short tutorials about western music from Ozawa & trailers for NHK HDVDs. This is all in Japanese with no subtitles. Some material is in SD & stereo. The value of this part of the set is nil for Japanese speakers and 0 for westerners.

So we can sum up the boxed set as follows: it has two fine titles (1 & 2 above) you can buy separately and an odd title (3 above) with a lot of material about the  Strauss Don Quixote plus a recording of the Dvořák Concerto for Cello. Then there are two jewel boxes (4 & 5 above) you can throw away. 

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The Passenger

Mieczysław Weinberg The Passenger opera to libretto by Alexander Medvedev after a novel by Auschwitz survivor Zofia Posmysz. (The title in German is Die Passagierin.) Directed 2010 by David Pountney at the Bregenz Festival. Stars singers Michelle Breedt (Lisa), Roberto Saccà (Walter), Elena Kelessidi (Wartha), Artur Rucinski (Tadeusz), Svetlana Doneva (Katja), Angelica Voje (Krzystina), Elżbieta Wróblewska (Vlasta), Agnieszka Rehlis (Hannah), Talia Or (Ivette), Helen Field (Alte), Liuba Sokolova (Bronka), Tobias Hächler (1st SS Officer), Wilfried Staber (2nd SS Officer), David Danholt (3rd SS Officer), Richard Angas (Elderly Passenger/Steward), Heide Capovilla (Senior Overseer/Capo), David Gabl, Michael Koch, Juliusz Kubiak, and Anton Schwärzler (4 Soldiers), Michelle Lau and Matthias Zuggal (Soldiers on watchtowers), and violinist Andreas Semlitsch (Double for Tadeusz in violin scene). Also stars stage musicians Raphael Brunner, Stefan Mikic, Roger Szedalik, Dominik Neunteufel, and Michael Schatzmann. Teodor Currentzis conducts the Weiner Symphoniker and the Prague Philharmonic Choir (Choirmaster Lukáš Vasilek). Set design by Johan Engels; costume design by Marie-Jeanne Lecca; lighting design by Fabrice Kebour; video direction by Felix Breisach. Because this is a world premiere recording, a special keepcase book is provided with an introduction by Shostakovich and the libretto in German, English, French, and Polish as well as other background information. The opera is sung in German, English, French, Russian and Yiddish. Multi language subtitles are provided as well as translations in German, English, French, Polish, and Russian. There is also a documentary film "In der Fremde" in German with English subtitles. It appears this is the first opera video to be released in HDVD (Blu-ray) only. Released  2010, disc has 5.0 dts-HD Master Audio sound and the documentary and extras are in stereo. Grade: A


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Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg

Wagner Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg opera to a libretto by the composer. Directed 2008 by Katharina Wagner at the Bayreuth Festspiele. Stars Franz Hawlata (Hans Sachs), Artur Korn (Veit Pogner), Charles Reid (Kunz Vogelgesang), Rainer Zaun (Konrad Nachtigal), Michael Volle (Sixtus Beckmesser), Markus Eiche (Fritz Kothner), Edward Randall (Balthasar Zorn), Hans-Jürgen Lazar (Ulrich Eisslinger), Stefan Heibach (Augustin Moser), Martin Snell (Hermann Ortel), Andreas Macco (Hans Schwarz), Diogenes Randes (Hans Foltz), Klaus Florian Vogt (Walther von Stolzing), Norbert Ernst (David), Michaela Kaune (Eva), Carola Guber (Magdalene), and Friedemann Röhlig (A nightwatchman). Sebastian Weigle conducts the Bayreuther Festspiele Orchestra and the Beyreuther Festspiele Chorus (Chorus Master Eberhard Friedrich; Music Supervisor Christoph Ulrich Meier). Stage design by Tilo Steffens; costume design by Michaela Barth and Tilo Steffens; lighting by Andreas Grüter; dramaturgy by Robert Sollich. Directed for TV by Andreas Morell. Released 2010, disc has 5.1 dts-HD Master Audio sound. Grade: B


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Medea

Aribert Reimann Medea opera to a libretto by the composer. Directed 2010 by Marco Arturo Marelli at the Wiener Staatsoper. Stars Marlis Petersen (Medea), Michaela Selinger (Kreusa), Elisabeth Kulman (Gora), Michael Roider (Kreon), Adrian Eröd (Jason), and Max Emanuel Cenic (Herold). Michael Boder conducts the Orchestra of the Wiener Staatsoper. Set & lighting design by Marco Arturo Marelli; costume design by Dagmar Niefind. Directed for TV by Peter Schröder. Released in 2011, has 5.1 dts-HD Master Audio sound. Grade: B-

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Martha Argerich & Mischa Maisky

Martha Argerich & Mischa Maisky concert. Argerich, Maisky, and the Lucerne Symphony perform:

  •  Dvořák Scherzo capriccioso in D flat major

  • Shchedrin Romantic Offering (world premiere)

  •  Franck Sonata for Cello and Piano in A Major

  •  Shostakovich Symphony No. 9

Neeme Jarvi conducts the Luzerner Sinfonieorchester. Directed for TV by Michael Beyer. Released 2011, disc has 5.1 dts-HD Master Audio sound. Grade: B+


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Marriage of Figaro

Mozart Marriage of Figaro (Le nozze di Figaro) opera to libretto by Lorenzo Da Ponte. Although titled in English, opera is sung in Italian. Directed  2010 by Neil Armfield (with Associate Director Roger Press) at the Sydney Opera House. Stars Teddy Tahu Rhodes (Figaro), Taryn Feibig (Susanna), Warwick Fyfe (Dr. Bartolo), Jacqueline Dark (Marcellina), Sian Pendry (Cherubino), Peter Coleman-Wright (Count Almaviva), Kanen Breen (Don Basilio), Rachelle Durkin (Countess Almaviva), Clifford Plumpton (Antonio), Claire Lyon (Barbarina), as well as Katherine Wiles and Margaret Plummer (Bridesmaids). Patrick Summers conducts the Australian Opera and Ballet Orchestra (Concertmaster Aubrey Murphy) and the Opera Australia Chorus (Chorus Master  Michael Black with Assistant Anthony Hunt). Designs by Dale Ferguson; lighting by Rory Dempster. Directed for TV by Cameran Kirkpatrick. Released  2011, disc has 5.1 dts-HD Master Audio sound. Grade: NA


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Marco Polo

Tan Dun Marco Polo opera to libretto by Paul Griffiths. Directed 2008 by Pierre Audi at Het Muziektheater Amsterdam. Stars Charles Workman (Polo), Sarah Castle (Marco), Stephen Richardson (Kublai Khan), Nancy Allen Lundy (Water), Zhang Jun (Shadow 1/Rustichello/Li Po), Tania Kross (Shadow 2/Sheherazada/Mahler/Queen), Stephen Bryant (Shadow 3/Dante/Shakespeare), and Mu Na (Chinese/Arabian Dancer). Tan Dun himself conducts the Netherlands Chamber Orchestra and the Cappella Amsterdam (Chorus Master Daniel Reuss). Ya Dong plays pipa; Siddharth Kishna, sitar; Rupak Kumar Pandit, tabla.  Set and lighting by Jean Kalman; costumes by Angelo Figus; choreography by Nanine Linning. Directed for TV by Misjel Vermerien. Released  2009, disc has 5.0 PCM sound. Grade: C

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Mahler Symphonies No. 1-7

Mahler Symphonies No. 1-7. Claudio Abbado conducts the Lucerne Festival Orchestra. Released 2011, this is a box set of seven discs from EuroArts, Mahler Symphonies No. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7.  All of these titles have been previously released and reported on this website. See individual title stories for details.

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Mahler Symphony No. 2 "Resurrection"

Mahler Symphony No. 2 "Resurrection". Claudio Abbado in 2003 conducts the Lucerne Festival Orchestra & the Orfeón Donostiarra (Chorus Master José Antonio Sainz Alfaro). Soloists are soprano Eteri Gvazava and contralto Anna Larsson. Directed for TV by Michael Beyer. Released 2010, EuroArts claimed that the disc has 5.1 dts-HD Master Audio surround sound, but see comments below. Grade: D


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Rienzi

Wagner Rienzi opera to libretto by the composer. Directed 2010 by Philipp Stölzl (with co-director Mara Kurotschka) at the Deutsche Oper Berlin. Stars Torsten Kerl (Rienzi), Camilla Nylund (Irene), Ante Jerkunica (Steffano Colonna), Kate Aldrich (Adriano), Krzysztof Szumanski (Paolo Orsini), Lenus Carlson (Cardinal Orvieto), Clemens Bieber (Baroncelli), Stephen Bronk (Cecco del Vecchio), and Gernot Frischling (Rienzi Stand-in). Sebastian Lang-Lessing conducts the Orchestra of the Deutsche Oper Berlin with the Chorus and Extra-Chorus of the Deutsche Oper Berlin (Chorus Master: William Spaulding). Stage design by Ulrike Siegrist and Philipp Stölzl; costume design by Kathi Maurer and Ursula Kudrna; video by Momme Hinrichs and Torge Møller of fettFilm. Directed for TV by Johannes Grebert. Released 2010, disc has 5.1 dts-HD Master Audio  sound. Grade: B+

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The Ring Without Words

 

Wagner The Ring Without Words is an 83-minute long "symphonic synthesis" of selections from the orchestral music in the Ring cycle. This was arranged by Lorin Maazel, and Maazel recorded it with Berlin Philharmoniker. Released in 2012, disc has 5.1 dts-HD Master Audio sound. Grade: C

Lorin Maazel is one of the most experienced conductors in the world and also a composer. In 2000, Maazel was commissioned by Telarc to "edit" all of the Ring operas into a single orchestral piece that would provide a summary of the whole cycle in concert form for a symphony orchestra. This Maazel did by starting with the first note of Rheingold and ending with the last chord of Götterdämmerung. Along the way he added no music of his own. His contribution was to decide what to cut and where to "splice" the remaining music in a manner that would not sound jarring. Of course, no singing or staging was contemplated.

The idea was to present Wagner's core creation in a unified way (rather than just play a bunch of concert excerpts). This might be considered something of a gimmick. But the project apparently was successful. In 2000, Maazel recorded it with the Berlin Philharmoniker, and Telarc published this as a CD. According to Maazel (speaking in a bonus on subject disc) Telarc sold hundreds of thousands of CDs to folks who were a new audience for the Wagner Ring.  Maazel’s synthesis was taken up by other orchestras like  the Houston Symphony, which presented it in 2010.

Now guess what? Way back in 2000, Maazel and the Berlin Philharmoniker also made a video of The Ring Without Words. EuroArts got the rights to the video and published it in Blu-ray. From the artistic viewpoint, there can be no doubt that there is a market for the Ring without Words and that it can benefit many people as a video. Personally it reminds me of my passion for butter pecan ice cream. I just love butter pecan, but I don't want to eat a gallon of it in one hour. Ring without Words has most of the famous music and themes Wagner created in 4 long operas. The smashing together of so many dramatic musical ideas is efficient; but for me, it becomes tiresome.

Now lets turn our attention to the technical merits of the video. From the viewpoint of someone who has only experience with CDs, this video might be impressive. But from our perspective, the video is sadly obsolete.  The video was probably state-of-the-art in 2000. But the picture today has an over-illuminated and faded look with unsaturated colors and a generally listless aura. The title has Master Audio output, but that's no help if, as here, the master recording is muddy and lacking in fidelity. And, oh, the players in the orchestra in 2000 looks so much younger then than they look now!

There has been confusion about the art work on the keepcase. The 1st of the 4 images in the slideshow above shows the original front cover. The 2nd image presents a problem. Who do you think has more lawyers: EuroArts or The Lord of the Rings? The 3rd image is the replacement cover art that's on the title now. The last image is the back-cover art, which is very similar to the original back art.

In summary, I don't think this year 2000 version of The Ring without Words will have much appeal to discerning HDVD fans. But a re-recording of the work per state-of-the-art of today might be a welcome addition to the catalog, that least for those who really love butter pecan.

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