The Metropolitan Opera,
New York City
| Octavian: |
|
Susan Graham |
| Marschallin: |
|
Reneé Fleming |
| Baron Ochs: |
|
Kristinn Sigmundsson |
| An Italian Singer: |
|
Barry Banks |
| Faninal: |
|
Hans-Joachim Ketelsen |
| Sophie: |
|
Miah Persson |
Edo de Waart, conductor
Performance of October 19, 2009
rtists often prove to be prophets.
Certainly a great number of notable painters, novelists, poets,
playwrights, and musicians at the beginning of the 20th
century prophesied what the majority of politicians and clerics
denied. That was no less than the dissolution of European
culture and its institutions, as they had been known since the
establishment of the Holy Roman Empire eleven hundred years
before. It had become increasingly difficult for mankind to deny
the unfolding of its murderous and cruel dark side, which was
soon to culminate in decades of world wars. With Salome
and Elektra, Strauss caused a sensation by addressing
this chilling truth. Following these two violent indictments,
Der Rosenkavalier was conceived: a sometimes, melancholy,
sometimes humorous, but always graceful farewell to the
past. The setting is an idealized Vienna of the 18th
century, the Age of Enlightenment, the time of Lessing, Kannt,
and Rousseau, when every philosopher wrote some kind of essay
about the sublime and the beautiful, and our culture, as many
historians would have it, was in full bloom.

The tides of melancholy and humor sedately
ebbed and flowed tonight under the direction of Maestro Edo de
Waart, who was inclined to address the myriad nuts and bolts of
this score rather than its voluptuous qualities. Still, he was a
solid ally for Susan Graham, the Rosenkavalier of the
evening, who presented a penetrating view into the heart of this
mercurial and many-faceted hero. Octavian’s breaking out of the
chrysalis of boyhood: his adolescence, his idealism, his
apprehensions, his growing into manhood, was gracefully portrayed
and well neigh perfectly sung. The rendezvous between Mariandl and
Ochs showed Graham’s comic gift to great effect, and the
presentation of the silver rose to Sophie, amid the mandatory
chandeliers and cherubim, was especially brilliant. Unfortunately
Sophie’s responding phrases, sung by the Swedish soprano, Miah
Persson, did not spin with the same suppleness and breadth as
those of the rose bearer. Persson has a sweet but not particularly
memorable voice, and gave a rather tepid accounting of this
idealistic and well-bred youngster in the thrall of first love.
Kristinn
Sigmundsson made more than a cliché of the Baron Ochs auf
Lerchenau, whose carnal indiscretions, being of the overt and clumsy
sort, are not as acceptable as those of the discrete Marschallin.
Although a flamboyant buffo, there was no doubting the
presence of a very fine voice. Now and again, when singing, for
example his “favorite waltz,” (reminiscent of Joseph Strauss’
Dynamide), one comes to see that the Baron has traces of
gentlemanly qualities, and does not find beauty exclusively in the
female form. This served as a counterbalance to his arrogance and
foolishness, and generated a certain amount of sympathy for him when
he is eventually exposed, ridiculed, and dismissed in the elaborate
‘wienerische Maskerad’ of the final act.
Certainly in all of opera the character of the
fairy tale Princess Marie Theresa von Werdenberg is one of the most
complex. Although a highly individual personality, she is also an
institution, representing many of the views, mannerisms, and
accomplishments – that is to say the culture - of her epoch.
Aristocratic, rich, beautiful, she is obsessed at the age of 32 with
the passage of time and the loss of her youth. The wife of a
Feldmarschall, she is engaged in a voluptuous affair with a teenaged
boy. She finds herself bored with a life of privilege, and sees
through the fawning attitudes of the many who are in need of her
good will. She is wise enough to know when her hold over Octavian
has come to an end, and with good grace and strength of character
relinquishes him to his newfound love. Aside from the first act
monologue, her complexities are generally played out in sequences of
surprisingly short duration. A look, a gesture, a phrase, is often
pivotal and heavily weighted with meaning. The dramatic challenges
for the Marschallin in this respect are great, demanding from the
outset a compelling eminence and formidable stature. It was
thrilling to see the way Sena Juranac, Leonie Rysaneck, and
Elisabeth Schwarzkopf met these challenges, dominating the stage, as
they did, with their presence, constant, electrifying, even when
they were silent.
Tonight, regrettably, this presence proved to
be a glaring absence, especially in the last act where at times one
had to search among the assortment of characters on stage for the
great Marschallin, wrapped as she was in her Hollywood stardust.
Reneé Fleming has an exceptionally pretty and obedient voice,
and she is an intelligent musician, but even in her best singing,
which took place in the final trio, there was something derivative,
something reminiscent now of Lehmann, now of Rysanek, now of
Schwarzkopf. None of it seemed to be her own personal possession.
These older singers lay claim to a virtue that Fleming does not
share. They lay claim to an occlusive relationship with their
culture, the great Western European culture, and its attendant
musical conventions. Miss Fleming, in contrast, is a hybrid, living
in both the world of a popular music industry, and the venerable
classical tradition. As the Marschallin is in many ways a symbol of
her own epoch, perhaps Reneé Fleming is a symbol of ours,
representing a phenomenon described by M. Rostovtzeff in his
Decay of Ancient Civilization, as: “…the gradual absorption of
the educated classes by the masses, the consequent simplification of
intellectual life… the gradual leveling down of standards.”

In order to see the implications of this
phenomenon more clearly, let us take an example more explicit than
that of Reneé Fleming. Let us take the example of a recorded
performance, made some years earlier, of Debussy’s Beau Soir,
sung by the celebrated American mezzo-soprano, Barbara Streisand. It
is possible that she took great trouble, to learn the pitches and
their duration, the diction, the phrasing and the meaning of each
word. One can observe, as well, a carefully placed tenuto
here, or decrescendo there, but her longstanding relationship
with her culture – pop culture - has placed the style of this song,
it’s spirit and deeper truth- its greatness, in a word - light years
beyond her artistic grasp.
To a lesser degree, but still, to a degree, the
same is true of the pop singer/opera singer Reneé Fleming. In spite
of careful study, and analysis, in spite of coaching, and listening
to singers of the past, and in spite of her distinguished schooling,
her liaison with pop culture insinuates itself in both music and
gesture, bleeds through, and ultimately trivializes the complex
character she portrays. This new genus of entertainer appearing at
the Metropolitan Opera, this genus of pop singer/opera singer, opens
itself to serious speculation. One wonders: Would the spell cast by
Maria Callas have been so profound, had she recorded all of the pop
tunes on the radio in the 1960’s? Would Lotte Lehmann (in spite of
wrong notes) have brought such mystery and wonder to the character
of the Marschallin had she sung Marlena Dietrich’s show tunes as
well? Would Renata Tebaldi have been the same Tosca, had she, on
occasion, stretched out on the floor at Carnegie Hall, like her
successor, Karita Mattla, and crooned some cabaret song about golden
earrings? One wonders.
-- Raymond Beegle
To
purchase tickets for the Metropolitan Opera's 2009/10 season, call
212-362-6000 or visit
www.metopera.org
Raymond Beegle
is Contributing Editor of Opera Quarterly, has written for Fanfare
Magazine, the Classic Record Collector (UK), and also appeared on
The Today Show (NBC) and Good Morning America (CBS). As an
accompanist, he has collaborated with Zinka Milanov and Licia
Albanese. Currently Mr. Beegle serves on the faculty of
Manhattan School of Music in New York City.
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