WAGNER Parsifal
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Richard Wagner
Genre:
Opera
Label: Sony Classical
Magazine Review Date: 06/2014
Media Format: Digital Versatile Disc
Media Runtime: 280
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 88883 72558-9

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Parsifal |
Richard Wagner, Composer
Andrew Stenson, Third Sentry, Tenor Daniele Gatti, Conductor Evgeny Nikitin, Klingsor, Baritone Jennifer Forni, First Sentry, Soprano Jonas Kaufmann, Parsifal, Tenor Katarina Dalayman, Kundry, Soprano Lauren McNeese, Second Sentry, Soprano Maria Zifehak, Voice, Soprano Mario Chang, Fourth Sentry, Tenor Mark Schowalter, Grail knight, Tenor New York Metropolitan Opera Ballet New York Metropolitan Opera Chorus New York Metropolitan Opera Orchestra Peter Mattei, Amfortas, Baritone René Pape, Gurnemanz, Bass Richard Wagner, Composer Runi Brattaberg, Titurel, Bass Ryan Speedo Green, Grail knight, Bass-baritone |
Author: Arnold Whittall
Significant details are inevitably lost when a darkly lit production using the full dimensions of the Metropolitan Opera stage is viewed on a small screen. I was impressed by the austere grandeur of some episodes, alienated by the abstractions elsewhere – especially in the ceremonial scenes that end Acts 1 and 3, where the vagueness of the terrain risks neutralising the impact of the enacted rituals, with their focus on Amfortas’s physical agonies. This uneasy mix – reinforcing the obvious while side-stepping certain essentials – also transfers to the musical dimension.
Daniele Gatti has sometimes been accused of failing to access the proper pace and inner life of Wagner’s score; his laborious slowing down for the Act 1 transition music illustrates the problem. But there are compensations. The orchestral sound is consistently rich and resonant, and the singing is – without exception – mesmerisingly in tune with the production’s highly stylised ritualism. The impassioned intensity Jonas Kaufmann brings to Parsifal’s music is matched by the rhetorical conviction of Peter Mattei’s Amfortas and Evgeny Nikitin’s Klingsor, and complemented by the warmer qualities of Katarina Dalayman’s Kundry and René Pape’s Gurnemanz. Nevertheless, it is as if the opera’s much-vaunted notions of compassion and redemption are being coolly appraised rather than vigorously affirmed or contradicted. This is very much Wagner for the 21st century.
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