Search - Victoria De Los Angeles, Georg Paskuda, Gerhard Stolze :: Wagner: Tannhäuser

Wagner: Tannhäuser
Victoria De Los Angeles, Georg Paskuda, Gerhard Stolze
Wagner: Tannhäuser
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (17) - Disc #2
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #3


     
?

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Victoria De Los Angeles, Georg Paskuda, Gerhard Stolze, Wolfgang Windgassen, Chorus and Orchestra of the Bayreuther Festspiele
Title: Wagner: Tannhäuser
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Opera D'oro
Release Date: 10/20/1998
Album Type: Box set
Genre: Classical
Style: Opera & Classical Vocal
Number of Discs: 3
SwapaCD Credits: 3
UPC: 723723377227
 

CD Reviews

Glorious Live Wagner
Leon | Stanford, CA United States | 05/21/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Tannhauser is a surprisingly infrequently recorded opera, and of the studio recordings currently available none are satisfactory. That being said I was thrilled to discover this live recording. I was somewhat dubious of the label, because I had heard bad things about live opera, and this label specifically. Thankfully the low-range price encouraged me to buy it just to try. What good fortune that I did. This recording is sensational. The dramatic plan of Tannhauser allows for the inclusion of four exceptional principals in the parts of Venus, Elisabeth, Tannhauser, and Wolfram, and that's exactly what you get on this recording. Bumbry is a sensual clearly-sung Venus. de Los Angeles' Elisabeth ranks up with Ludwig's Leonora as one of the great righteous soprano performances. Windgassen is an exceptional Tannhauser and the true star of this recording. His musical expression puts the tortured soul of Tannhauser into stark relief. From his tortured cry "O Konigin Gottin lasst mich sein" to his exultant "Mein Heil in Maria" to his final redemption in "Heilige Elisabeth bitte fur mich" Windgassen is the complete character. Fischer-Dieskau does an excellent job as Wolfram, especially in the song to the evening star, perhaps the opera's most recognizable showpiece. A warning, this is a LIVE recording. The sound is not ideal. There are coughs, and stage noises. In some places it even sounds like someone offstage was giving cues to the singers on their next word. When confronting the music however, none of it matters. I continue to listen to this recording with great regularity 6 months after purchasing it. This is truly the Tannhauser to own, and makes me wonder why this opera is so infrequently recorded and staged."
Excellent Live Tannhaeuser
Leon | 05/07/1999
(4 out of 5 stars)

"This is one of those opera plots that makes us low-pitched males wince. In spite of the fact that the stable, sensitive, intelligent baritone is in love with her, and also gets to sing the hit song, the heroine falls for the flashy, unstable, and stupid tenor. Bass-baritones of the world, unite!This live performance from Bayreuth, 1961, is superbly, subtly conducted and has some great singing. Bumbry is marvellous as Venus, and de los Angeles and Fischer-Dieskau are excellent as Elisabeth and Wolfram. Windgassen as Tannhaeuser is quite good, though he emphasizes the choppiness of the lines that Wagner gives him. (He does not have a lot of competition in the discography.) The minor roles are well done. The recorded sound is very good, though not excellent. Incidentally, for Amazon's attention, this recording does not come up among the hundred or so that are retrieved when you search with "Wagner" and "Tannhaeuser.""
Radiant De los Angeles in 1961 Bayreuth Tannhaeuser
L. E. Cantrell | Vancouver, British Columbia Canada | 12/28/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"SOURCE:

1961 live performance from the Bayreuth Festival.



SOUND:

Decent live-recorded mono. Voices and orchestra are fairly evenly balanced. There is some variation in the pick-up of the singers as they roam over the stage, changing their relationships with the microphones, but this serves to provide a certain feel of authenticity to the piece. As I have noted before with regard to live mono recordings, compulsive audiophiles who measure quality by the clarity of the fourth bassoon or the third viola, should turn away right now. This is not for you. You will hear neither here (nor, for that matter, would you be likely to hear them in any real theater or concert hall.) Some not terribly disturbing stage noises are present, as is the occasional voice of a prompter. There are some coughs, but the Bayreuth audience was generally well-disciplined. For those willing to listen to this set with a little goodwill, the sound is perfectly acceptable.



TEXT:

This performance is an amalgam of Wagner's Dresden Version of 1845 and his Paris version of 1861, in essentially the form adopted for the Vienna production of 1875.



FORMAT:

Disk 1: Overture; Act I, tracks 2-13. Disk 2: Act II, tracks 1-18. Disk 3: Act III, tracks 1-12.



DOCUMENTATION:

No libretto. Short essay on the opera. Short summary of the plot by Act. Track listing that identifies the main character singing but does not provide timings.



CAST:

Tannhaeuser - Wolfgang Windgassen

Elisabeth - Victoria de los Angeles

Venus - Grace Bumbry

Wolfram von Eschenbach - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau

Landgraf - Josef Greindl

Walther von der Vogelweide - Gerhard Stolze

Biterolf - Franz Crass

Heinrich der Schreiber - Georg Paskuda

Reinmar von Zweter - Theo Adam

Shepherd - Else-Margarete Gardelli



CONDUCTOR:

Wolfgang Sawallisch with the Bayreuth Festival Orchestra and Chorus.



COMMENTARY:

The greatest Wagner-worshiper of them all once huffily dismissed "Tannhaeuser" as "Mein schlectest Oper." I am going to take the contrary position. I think that "Tannhaeuser" is Wagner's best opera. Before all you true-blue Wagnerites begin foaming at the mouth, I hasten to remind you the RW did not regard "Tristan und Isolde," "Die Meistersinger" and especially, "The Ring" as operas. They were music dramas, entirely superior things to mere operas, in his opinion (if in no-one else's.) "Tannhaeuser" is an opera directly in the line of descent in German Romantic opera from the very first of the bunch, Weber's "Der Freischuetz." "The Flying Dutchman" and "Lohengrin" are both Romantic operas, the former, of course, more so than the latter--and so are Wagner's effectively dead operas, "Die Feen," "Das Liebesverbot" and, alas, "Rienzi." Of the three Romantic operas still in the living repertory, I find "Tannhaeuser" the most pleasing for its sheer, grand melodiousness, its use of operatic conventions such as vocal ensembles showing emotional counterpoint and full-blown musical conflicts between a character and the whole ensemble. "Tannhaeuser" is also the least afflicted among the three by the long (and too-often drearily repetitive) monologues that would become one of the essential features of the forthcoming music dramas.



This recording captures the 1961 revival of "Tannhaeuser" at the Bayreuth Festival. Greindl, Adam and Fischer-Dieskau assumed the same roles they'd had in the 1954 version. Gerhard Stolze was promoted from Heinrich der Schreiber to Walther von der Vogelweide. New voices were heard at Bayreuth for the roles of Venus, Elizabeth and Tannhaeuser.



Josef Greindl's big, dark, sometimes mean-sounding voice, had allowed him to perform long and wonderful service as opera's resident cave man, but 1961 is late for him and he sounds it. I find him markedly more effective in the 1954 version. Adam and Stolze are fine, but they are in not especially memorable parts. Fischer-Dieskau is fine, too, but between 1954 and 1961 he had become a great deal more Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau and much less Wolfram von Eschenbach. Wolfgang Windgassen took over the title role from the magnificent Ramón Vinay. Of Windgassen, previous Amazon reviewers have written that he "blusters and shouts, and sounds barytonal [sic]," that he "emphasizes the choppiness of the lines". Perhaps, perhaps, (although that baritonal crack is a little hard to swallow) but if anyone can name a tenor, with the dubious exception of Domingo, who could have sung the part half as well as the 1961 Windgassen at any time in the past twenty-five years, I would be surprised--no, astonished!



The stars of this recording are Grace Bumbry, with her big, bold Venus, and Victoria de los Angeles, whose Elizabeth very nearly equals that of the exquisite Elizabeth Gruemmer. (For those in any doubt, that last is intended as high praise indeed!)



Sawallisch's conducting is admirable. I can find no significant fault with it. But in some largely indefinable way it lacks the oomph, zing and--for want of a better word--truth of Keilberth's 1954 version.



Opera d'Oro has performed a valuable service by making the Bayreuth Festival "Tannhaeusers" of 1954 and 1961 available at super-bargain price. Both are excellent. Your choice between them depends on whether your prefer the incomparable Vinay or the glowing De los Angeles. My advice, for what it's worth, is to get both.



Five stars."