Richard Wagner, Parsifal
Amfortas
WOLFGANG KOCH
Gurnemanz RENÉ PAPE
Parsifal ANDREAS SCHAGER
Klingsor TÓMAS TÓMASSON
Kundry ANJA KAMPE
Titurel MATTHIAS HÖLLE
STAATSKAPELLE BERLIN STAATSOPERNCHOR KONZERTCHOR DER STAATSOPER / DANIEL BARENBOIM
Stage direction DMITRI TCHERNIAKOV
Costume design ELENA ZAYTSEVA
Set design DMITRI TCHERNIAKOV
Light design GLEB FILSHTINSKY
Chorus master MARTIN WRIGHT
Dramaturgy JENS SCHROTH
Gurnemanz RENÉ PAPE
Parsifal ANDREAS SCHAGER
Klingsor TÓMAS TÓMASSON
Kundry ANJA KAMPE
Titurel MATTHIAS HÖLLE
STAATSKAPELLE BERLIN STAATSOPERNCHOR KONZERTCHOR DER STAATSOPER / DANIEL BARENBOIM
Stage direction DMITRI TCHERNIAKOV
Costume design ELENA ZAYTSEVA
Set design DMITRI TCHERNIAKOV
Light design GLEB FILSHTINSKY
Chorus master MARTIN WRIGHT
Dramaturgy JENS SCHROTH
HD recording: Staatsoper im Schiller
Theater, Berlin – 04/2015
Bel Air
Classiques Blu-Ray BAC428
For
many of us Daniel Barenboim is the finest living Wagner conductor. Some might
demur from quite such a sweeping judgment, but few would deny that he is one of
a tiny handful of dominant interpreters of Wagner. This Parsifal, recorded live at the Berlin Staatsoper in April 2015,
further cements his standing and reputation. Musically it is simply outstanding.
Visually and conceptually it falls a little short of outstanding, but it is
never less than thought-provoking. The combination is not quite one for the
ages, as is his celebrated Ring with
Harry Kupfer from Bayreuth in 1991-2, but it is definitely one of the most
satisfying Parsifals that I have come
across for a while.
Dmitri
Tcherniakov represents the home of the Knights of the Grail as what looks
like a cavernous factory interior. Steering away from explicitly modernist
productions, though, this factory has colonnades. Its inhabitants are dressed
in generic mid-twentieth century costumes. Think Warsaw Uprising, postwar
Germany, or a Solzhenitsyn gulag – dark colors and wintry, vaguely military outfits.
In Act 1, Parsifal stands out with brightly colored T-shirts that he
occasionally changes on stage, pulling a new one out of the rucksack that
accompanies him throughout. There is much more color in Klingsor’s palace in
Act 2, which Tcherniakov presents as a schoolroom painted in institutional blue,
with the Flower Maidens wearing school uniforms, supervised by a benign-looking
and bespectacled Klingsor, looking rather like a Latin teacher approaching
retirement.
I found
the staging in Act 2 somewhat disconcerting – casting children holding dolls as
temptresses certainly has the power to shock. But the scene where Parsifal is
beset by the (underage) Flower Maidens is suitably de-sexualized, and Tcherniakov
certainly offers a new take on this scene, helped by some very fine singing
from the chorus. When Kundry arrives on the scene she certainly has no difficulty
projecting herself as the only adult in the room. The only part of Act 2 that fell flat for
me was the final confrontation with Klingsor, where the sense of drama emerging
from the orchestra pit was not matched by events on stage.
The two most
striking feature of this production are definite additions to Wagner’s
narrative. In Act 1 the celebration of the Knights’ sacred ritual takes a
definitely cannabilistic turn, with the Knights draining the blood from
Amfortas’s wound and passing it around in a chalice. And in the final moments
of the drama, Gurnemanz’s increasing antipathy to Kundry culminates in his
stabbing her (in the back!) while she is locked in a passionate embrace with
Amfortas, turning Wagner’s ideas about Kundry’s redemption on their head (or
alternatively, taking them to their logical conclusion). I was not particularly
moved by either innovation, although both certainly succeed in highlighting the moral
bankruptcy of the Knights of the Grail, who do come across as an even more unpleasant
bunch than usual.
The real
strengths of this production are in the conducting and singing. Barenboim sets
the tone with a masterful and magisterial prelude. His pacing maintains
momentum and drama through the long discursive sections of Act 1, building up
to a spectacular denouement with the massed ranks of the chorus. Parsifal is hard to pace because it is relatively
static, Barenboim’s feel for the pulse
of the music, and his ability to drive the action on the stage from the pit
while maintaining balance between voices and instruments, is evident throughout.
There are
no weak points among the principals. René Pape is a fine Gurnemanz, who rises
to his set-pieces (“Titurel, der fromme held”, for example) but is a commanding
presence throughout. Wolfgang Koch offers us a suitably tortured Amfortas in
the opening and closing acts, conveying both the character’s pathos and his
weakness. Tómas Tómason’s Klingsor suffers from the sensible sweater he is
forced to wear, but sounds suitably menacing at the end of Act 2. Parsifal and
Kundry are both first-rate. Andreas Schager’s Parsifal develops from a spoiled
adolescent in Act 1 to a compelling leader in Act, singing with power, control,
and delicacy throughout – a rare combination in contemporary Wagner tenors.
Anja Kampe is a very fine Kundry, whose
singing and acting encompasses the multiple personae of this complex role –
from servile handmaiden to passionate seductress, to candidate for final
redemption.
My only
misgivings with this production are the woefully inadequate liner materials (no
more than a sketchy act-by-act summary), and my perennial bugbear of the credits
rolling during the prelude. But sound and visual quality are both excellent,
with two-channel and multi-channel options available. So I recommend this BluRay
very highly indeed.