Opera

Ring des Nibelungen

Richard Wagner Ring des Nibelungen opera cycle performed 2008 at the Deutsches Nationaltheater Weimar and published by Arthaus Musik. Save money by buying all the Weimar Ring operas in a boxed set. The box includes the four titles described in more detail on this site at Das Rheingold, Die Walküre, Siegfried, and Götterdämmerung.  See individual titles for individual grades.  This set has the Arthaus Cat. No. 101374. Our blended grade for the box set is D+.


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Ring des Nibelungen

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Wagner Ring des Nibelungen opera cycle performed 2007-2009 at the Valencia Palau de les Arts Reina Sofia and published by C Major. Save money by buying all the Valencia Ring operas in a boxed set. The box includes the four titles described in more detail on this site:

(The artwork above is found on the front cover of the box and comes from the Das Rheingold.) See individual titles for grades. Our blended grade for the box set is C+.

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Das Rheingold

Richard Wagner Das Rheingold opera to libretto by the composer. Directed 2007 by Carlus Padrissa and La Fura dels Baus at the Calatrava opera house Palau de las Arts Reina Sofía in Valencia. Stars Juha Uusitalo (Wotan), Ilya Bannik (Donner), Germán Villar (Froh), John Daszak (Loge), Matti Salminen (Fasolt), Stephen Milling (Fafner) , Franz-Josef Kapellmann (Alberich), Gerhardt Siegel (Mime), Anna Larsson (Frica), Sabina von Walther (Freia), Christa Mayer (Erda), Silvia Vázquez (Woglinda), Ann-Katrin Naidu (Wellgrunde), and Hannah Esther Minutillo (Floßhilde). Zubin Mehta conducs the Orquestra de la Comunitat Valenciana. Videos created by Franc Aleu; sets by Roland Olbeter; lighting by Peter van Praet; costumes by Chu Uroz. Directed for TV by Tiziano Mancini. Grade: B

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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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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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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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Der Rosenkavalier

 

Richard Strauss Der Rosenkavalier opera to libretto by Hugo von Hofsmannsthal. Directed by Uwe Eric Laufenberg for the Semperoper Dresden. (The performance on this disc was recorded live in 2007 at the NHK Hall in Tokyo.) Stars Anna Schwanewilms (Feldmarschallin), Anke Vondung (Octavian), Hans-Joachim Ketelsen (Herr von Faninal), Maki Mori (Sophie), Kurt Rydl (Baron Ochs), Sabine Brohm (Marianne Leitmetzerin), Oliver Ringelhahn (Valzacchi), Elisabeth Wilke (Annina), Jürgen Commichau (Police Commissioner), Helmut Henschel (Marschallin's major domo), Gerald Hupach (Faninal's major domo), Matthias Heneberg (Notary), Tom Martinsen (Innkeeper), Roberto Saccà (Singer), Beate Siebert, Birgit Müller, Annett Eckert (Three noble orphans), Christiane Hossfeld (Milliner), Peter Küchler (Animal vendor), Ullrich Märker, Andreas Heinze, Ingolf Stollberg, Hans-Jürgen Staude (Four footmen), Naoki Espree Leopold (Mohammed), Dirk Wolter (Baron's son), Michael Wettin, Thomas Müller, Mirko Tuma, Werner Harke, Holger Steinert, Alexander Födisch (Baron's servants), Andreas Soika (Valet), Markus Hansel, Andreas Heinze, Klaus Milde, Andreas Burghardt (Four waiters), Gisela Pluskwik, Julia Brückner, Katharina Flade, and Min-Kyoung Kwon (Four little children). Fabio Luisi conducts the Sächsische Staatskappelle Dresden and the Staatsopernchor Dresden (Chorus Masters Matthias Brauer and Ulrich Paetzholdt). Stage design by Christoph Schubiger; costumes by Jessica Karge; lighting by Jan Seeger and Christoph Schmädicke. Directed for TV by Eiji Yoshida. Sung in German. Released 2008, disc has 5.1 PCM sound. Grade: A

Here's a report from Wonk Gordon Smith:

“Der Rosenkavalier has been my all-time favourite opera for many years, and I was curious to see how this first HDVD version would compare with those already issued on DVD. The Dresden State Opera (Semperoper) is highly qualified to present this work, since it was premiered there in 1911 to huge success. The performance immortalised on this disc was recorded by the Semperoper during it's 2007 tour of Japan.

In Act 1, we see the "mature" Marschallin ("Field Marshall's wife" sung by soprano Anne Schwanewilms) with her "toy boy" lover Octavian (sung by mezzo soprano Anke Vondung)—a pairing that is always deliciously ambiguous. (For those new to this opera, let me say that Octavian is a very young male character. The part is written in the mezzo range, so it's usually played by a woman.) This version is particularly delightful and, for me, even more successful than the iconic 1994 performance with Felicity Lott and Anne Sophie von Otter conducted by Carlos Kleiber. The necessity of this "trouser" role is, of course, that Octavian has to dress up as a maid to avoid being discovered in the Marschallin's bedroom by her lusty kinsman, Baron Ochs. The Baron has to find the "maid" sufficiently alluring to want to add her to his long list of conquests. In this version, Kurt Rydl could be accused of overplaying the Baron as a leery, lecherous caricature. But his rudeness contrasts with and gives greater depth to the sublime performances delivered by Anne Schwanewilms and Anke Wondung.

In Act 2, Octavian is chosen as the messenger for Baron Ochs to bring the silver rose to Sophie (sung by Japanese soprano Maki Mori), a 15-year old, admirably proper girl, as a formal marriage proposal from the Baron. When it comes to "the sublime", there can be very few moments in any opera, or in any other performance of this opera, to surpass the duets of Octavian and Sophie in this recording. In an appropriately "palatial" setting, Maki Mori's light soprano weaves and blends magically with Anke Vondung's mezzo as they discover the powerful attraction that draws them together in love at first sight. This produces something so wonderful that it makes you weep. Once again there is a stark contrast between this moment of ineffable beauty and the harsh reality of the Baron's earthy vulgarity and Sophie's shock at meeting her "intended" for the first time.

In Act 3, Octavian—once again disguised as the maid—tries to defend Sophie by drawing the Baron into a trap that will reveal his true nature. This brisk scene, full of weird and wonderful tricks and clever staging, leads to the reappearance of the Marschallin. She bows to the inevitable and, in a final moment of exquisite beauty, "releases" Octavian to pursue his true destiny with the young and radiant Sophie.

This EuroArts disc is one of the most moving opera performances I have ever seen on screen or in the opera house. The crispness of the Blu-ray images, the sensitive video editing, and the sumptuous recording of the Richard Strauss score combine to make a powerful case for HDVD being the ultimate way of enjoying opera. Can such superlative productions really be "better than being there"? The jury may be still out on that one. But they should certainly see this Rosenkavalier before delivering their verdict!”

Der Rosenkavalier

Richard Strauss Der Rosenkavalier opera to libretto by Hugo von Hofmannsthal. Directed 2009 by Herbert Wernicke at Baden-Baden. Stars Renée Fleming (Feldmarschallin), Franz Hawlata (Baron Ochs), Sophie Koch (Octavia), Franz Grundheber (Herr von Faninal), Diana Damrau (Sophie), Irmgard Vilsmaier (Marianne Leitmetzerin), Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke (Valzacchi), Jane Henschel (Annina), Jonas Kaufmann (Singer), Uli Kirsch (Pierrot), Andreas Hörl (Police Commissioner), Wilfried Gahmlich (Feldmarschallin's majordomo), Lynton Black (Notary), Jörg Schneider (Faninal's majordomo/innkeeper/animal vendor), Bernarda Bobro (Milliner), Catherine Veillerobe, Angela Rudolf, Nina Amon (Three noble orphans), Michael Schwendinger (Porter),  Manfred Schwaiger (Impresario), Ilker Arcayürek, Jens Waldig, Manfred Hanakam, Michael Schwendinger (Four footmen), Ilker Arcayürek, Manfred Hanakam, Jörg Espenkott, Max Sahlinger (Four waiters), Andreas Maurer,  Manfred Schwaiger, Jörg Espenkott, Christian Lusser, Michael Schwendinger, Kiril Chobanov, Akos Banlaky, Jens Waldig (Eight Lerchenauer retainers) and René Schumann (Leopold). Christian Thielemann conducts the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra, the Philharmonia Chor Wien (Chorus Director Walter Zeh), and the Theaterkinderchor am Helmholtz-Gymnasium Karlsruhe (Chorus Director Waltraud Kutz). Sets and costumes by Herbert Wernicke; lighting by Werner Breitenfelder. Directed for TV by Brian Large. Released 2009, disc has 5.1 dts-HD Master Audio sound. Grade:  NA

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Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk

Dmitri Shostakovich Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk opera to libretto by Alexander Preis and the composer. Directed 2009 by Lev Dodin at the Teatro del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino. Stars Vladimir Vaneev (Boris Timofeyevich Ismailov/Old convict/Ghost of Boris Timofeyevich), Vsevolod Grivnov (Zinovly Borisovich Ismailov ), Jeanne-Michèle Charbonnet (Katerina Lvovna Izmailova), Sergej Kunaev (Sergei), Nanà Miriani (Aksinya), Leonid Bornstein (Tattered peasant), Andrea Cortese (Administrator), Nikolaj Bikov (Porter), Marco de Carolis (First workman), Fabio Bertella (Second Workman), Andrea Cortese (Third Workman), Saverio Bambi (Coachman), Julian Rodescu (Priest), Vladimir Matorin (Police Inspector), Andrea Snarsky (Policeman), Cristiano Olivieri (Teacher), Piergiorgio Chiavazza (Drunken guest), Armando Caforio (Sergeant), Alessandro Calamai (Sentry), Natascha Petrinsky (Sonetka),  and Elena Borin (Female convict). James Conlon directs the Orchestra and Chorus  of the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino (Chorus Master Piero Monti). Sets and costumes by David Borovsky; restage by Alexander Borovsky; lighting by Jean Kalman, realisation by Gianni Paolo Mirenda; acrobatic movements and choreography by Jury Khamoutiansky. Directed for TV by Andrea Bevilacqua. Released 2009, disc has 7.1 dts-HD Master Audio. Grade: B


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