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              SEEN 
              AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL OPERA REVIEW 
                          
                          Wagner, Die Meistersinger von 
                          Nürnberg: 
                          
                          Soloists, Staatskapelle und Staatsopenchor Berlin. 
                          Conductor: Daniel Barenboim. Staatsoper 
                          Unter den Linden, Berlin. 19.3.2008 (MB) 
                          
                            
                          … 
                          the Romantics rediscovered the Gothic style. At the 
                          end of the nineteenth century there were Gothic 
                          churches in profusion. This was the most striking 
                          example of stylistic reference. On the other hand, 
                          although in The Mastersingers there is no end 
                          of references to the Minnesänger and to the forms of 
                          sixteenth and – even more so – fifteenth century 
                          music, Wagner’s music actually has nothing to do with 
                          the historical truth about the town of Nuremberg. This 
                          is why I feel really ill at ease when people try to 
                          depict the historical town on the stage when it is 
                          absent from the music. Kupfer did not go so 
                          far as to present a Meistersinger ohne Nürnberg. 
                          Indeed, Nuremberg was present throughout, replete with 
                          Cranach, stained glass, and banners (including King 
                          David and his harp), although never with quite such 
                          exuberant delight as, say, in Graham Vick’s 
                          Breughelesque production for Covent Garden. What 
                          instead we had, which perhaps better served Boulez’s 
                          general point than the absence of the historical town 
                          he himself advocated, was a staired centrepiece, 
                          serving, subtly altered in different guises as the 
                          Katharinenkirche – today, of course, Katharinenruine – 
                          as the balcony of Act Two, as a staircase to Sachs’s 
                          workshop, and so forth. The shape of this centrepiece 
                          suggested to me a ruined tower, perhaps even Berlin’s 
                          own celebrated image of the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedächtniskirche, 
                          and thereby seemed to allude to the devastation of the 
                          ‘German catastrophe’. This may, however, have been my 
                          imagination rather than the director’s intention; it 
                          does not really matter. A sense of the modern city was 
                          superimposed, by virtue of the skyscraper backdrop to 
                          the second act and first part of the third. This 
                          cleverly suggested, rather like an affectionate Adorno 
                          – if that can be imagined – the tension between 
                          Wagner’s thoroughgoing adoption of modern technical 
                          and technological means and his harking back to a 
                          pre-modern age of guilds, corporations, an age prior 
                          to excessive division of labour. Sachs, it will be 
                          recalled, is both poet and shoemaker. The utopian 
                          quality to this lost age, if it ever existed, was 
                          gently suggested by the joy of the Festwiese scene and 
                          its processions, giant figure of Death, flamethrowers, 
                          acrobats, and all. 
               
                          
                          Cast:
                          
                          
                          
                          Hans Sachs – James Morris
                          Veit Pogner – René Pape
                          Kunz Vogelgesange – Paul O’Neill
                          Konrad Nachtigall – Arttu Kataja
                          Sixtus Beckmesser – Roman Trekel
                          Fritz Kothner – Hanno Müller-Brachmann
                          Balthasar Zorn – Peter-Jürgen Schmidt
                          Ulrich Eisslinger – Patrick Vogel
                          Augustin Moser – Peter Menzel
                          Hermann Ortel – Yi Yang
                          Hans Schwarz – Bernd Zettisch
                          Hans Foltz – Andreas Bauer
                          Walther von Stolzing – Burkhard Fritz
                          David – Florian Hoffmann
                          Eva – Dorothea Röschmann
                          Magdalene – Katharina Kammerloher
                          Ein Nachtwächter – Alexander Vinogradov
                          
                          Production:
                          
                          Staatskapelle Berlin
                          Staatsopernchor Berlin
                          Eberhard Friedrich (chorus master)
                          Daniel Barenboim (conductor)
                          Harry Kupfer (producer)
                          Hans Schavernoch (designs)
                          Buki Schiff (costumes)
                          Franz Peter David (lighting)
                          Roland Giertz (choreography)
                          
                          
                          This was a frustrating Meistersinger: in many 
                          ways good, but it could easily have been better. The 
                          Prelude to Act I surprised me and did not augur well. 
                          It combined a somewhat uninflected smoothness of line 
                          with a surprisingly hard-driven quality. The 
                          combination put me in mind of Karajan on an off-day, a 
                          comparison which annoyingly continued to suggest 
                          itself to me throughout the performance, especially 
                          the first two acts. Like Karajan even at his most 
                          unappealing – and I speak as an admirer in general – 
                          Daniel Barenboim would not have been capable of 
                          allowing the performance to fall below a certain 
                          level. There was, for instance, no doubt that he had 
                          command of the work’s structure. (If only one could 
                          have said that of the conductor during the Royal 
                          Opera’s Ring.) But the trick, if one can call 
                          it that, of Wagner conducting is to combine over the 
                          drama’s vast span a Furtwänglerian Fernhören 
                          with attention to detail, so that command of both 
                          short- and long-range aspects – and the reality is far 
                          more complex than this, involving numerous 
                          intermediate stages – dialectically heightens the 
                          effect of the other. One can look more 
                          synchronistically at both score and performance, and 
                          see an equally important, related but distinct, 
                          problem for the conductor to address. Wagner, as 
                          Pierre Boulez has written, ‘refused to sacrifice 
                          expressiveness to polyphony, endowing each part in the 
                          polyphonic web with such expressive power that there 
                          is almost a conflict of interest: everything sings and 
                          sings “unendingly”’. Not only balancing but in a sense 
                          also heightening that conflict is the conductor’s 
                          task. This requires an almost superhuman attention to 
                          Boulez’s ‘everything’.
                          
                          As so often with Barenboim, perhaps drawing upon his 
                          expertise in both French music and Mozart, there was 
                          some beautiful highlighting of woodwind detail. There 
                          were times, however, when Barenboim and his orchestra 
                          simply sounded careless. Anyone can make mistakes, but 
                          there were more than one would have expected, perhaps 
                          most glaringly from one of the horns just before the 
                          Trial Song. More seriously, there were times when 
                          Barenboim sounded insensitive not only towards the 
                          singers, but towards the stage events as such. (With 
                          regard to the former, surtitles would doubtless have 
                          mitigated the problem, but, whilst I have seen them 
                          here in Parsifal and Tristan, there were 
                          none on this occasion, for an opera whose 
                          conversational exchanges are far more rapid.) 
                           Pierre Monteux once referred so tellingly to ‘the 
                          indifference of mezzo forte’; here, especially 
                          during the second act, there was too much indifference 
                          of harsh orchestral forte. Whilst there were 
                          moments when the Staatskapelle Berlin sounded its 
                          usual, burnished self, there were too many when it did 
                          not. Indeed, the moments when the performance moved up 
                          a gear brought into heightened relief what had been 
                          missing, for instance when we heard the ’cellos rich 
                          mahogany of the Prelude to Act III, itself beautifully 
                          paced, and subsequently the conjuring up of an 
                          appositely Tristan-esque ecstasy in the 
                          triangle between Sachs, Eva, and Walther. Perhaps 
                          conductor and orchestra had allotted more time to 
                          rehearsal of Prokofiev’s The Gambler, 
                          the new opera for these Berlin Festtage. This 
                          may be understandable, but Die Meistersinger 
                          does not play itself.
                          
                          René Pape had originally been slated to play Hans 
                          Sachs. His attention to text and line was exemplary as 
                          Pogner, but I cannot have been the only member of the 
                          audience wishing that he had taken on the greater 
                          role. James Morris was therefore in something of an 
                          invidious position. He was strongest in the third act, 
                          but for much of the second act, he surprisingly seemed 
                          to struggle to establish the force of personality that 
                          must be clear by this stage. It is here, not in the 
                          final act, that Sachs comes into his own. Company 
                          stalwarts, Roman Trekel and Hanno Müller-Brachmann 
                          shone as Beckmesser and Kothner, offering more rounded 
                          portrayals than is generally the case. In this, they 
                          were certainly assisted by Harry Kupfer’s production. 
                          Beckmesser rightly emerged early on as an impressive 
                          if limited figure, his subsequent ridiculousness 
                          brought on by hubris rather than intrinsic. Kupfer 
                          brought an interesting ambiguity to Kothner: insisting 
                          upon the Tabulatur, but visibly on the side – 
                          in terms of stage placement as well as inclination – 
                          of Pogner and Sachs during the Prize Song, watching 
                          and listening, even if he did not quite understand. 
                          This was characteristic of a laudable characterisation 
                          and differentiation granted to the Mastersingers as a 
                          whole. Their corporate identity did not preclude 
                          individual personality, a fine example of this being 
                          Peter Menzel’s keenly observed Augustin Moser. 
                          Moreover, their reactions developed. The sense of fear 
                          was palpable as Walther began to sing; they were 
                          uncomprehending and threatened, but only later 
                          vicious, once Beckmesser’s marking had encouraged 
                          them. Choral contributions were good, if not at the 
                          outstanding level I have heard before in this house.
                          
                          Burkhard Fritz sang well enough as Walther, with an 
                          appropriately baritonish Heldentenor, 
                          but there was something a little too generalised about 
                          his enthusiasm and boisterousness, which did not 
                          always tie in with the events portrayed. He was a 
                          little too much the spoilt child when things did not 
                          go his way at the end of Act I. Stolzing, one must not 
                          forget, is a Junker, not a young Siegfried. His 
                          clothes, however, justly marked him as an outsider, 
                          the latest in Wagner’s long line of flawed charismatic 
                          heroes. As his intended, Dorothea Röschmann often sang 
                          beautifully, but audibly struggled at times. It is 
                          difficult to surmise what she thought she was doing at 
                          the climax of the Quintet, when suddenly she forced 
                          her voice to stand out from the blend of the others,  
                          to conclude with a cadence more suited to Puccini than 
                          to Wagner. The effect jarred, to put it mildly. Her 
                          Magdalene, Katharina Kammerloher, shone at her first 
                          appearance. Again, Kupfer should receive some of the 
                          credit for this portrayal as far more than the usual 
                          crone. This was a girl with a sense of fun, visibly – 
                          and audibly – attracted to David. It is a pity that 
                          her subsequent appearances were more anonymous. There 
                          was no such problem with Florian Hoffmann’s wonderful 
                          David, who both looked and sounded the boyish part. He 
                          was bright within appropriate limits, ardent without 
                          cloying, and evinced an attention to the verbal and 
                          musical text that far exceeded some more senior 
                          members of the cast.
                          
                          A guiding principle of the production, although not 
                          obsessively emphasised, was that of conflict between 
                          old and new – and the shades of grey in between, as I 
                          have already commented with regard to Kothner. Boulez 
                          once remarked, concerning the only Wagner music drama 
                          he has never conducted: 
 
                          
                          
                          To be utopian, however, cuts both ways, for a utopia 
                          cannot exist. Kupfer did not travel very far down the 
                          deconstructionist route, but the presentation was 
                          finely nuanced. There was a nice touch to the 
                          inability of Sachs to find someone on whom to bestow 
                          the Festwiese garland, following Walther’s 
                          refusal. Eventually, he placed it on the floor. A 
                          sentimental path would have been to give it to 
                          Beckmesser, but this would have been to rehabilitate 
                          him unduly. Instead, and with considerable poignancy, 
                          the defeated town clerk walked over to it and looked 
                          at what might have been, excluded from the general 
                          rejoicing without being ostracised. Indeed, during 
                          Walther’s singing of the Prize Song, Beckmesser had 
                          occasionally displayed grudging approval, taking note 
                          and even nodding, without the banal prospect of a 
                          wholesale conversion. It was a pity that the musical 
                          performances did not always match the production, for 
                          had they done so, this could truly have been a 
                          Meistersinger to cherish.
                          
                          
                          
                          Mark Berry
                          
                          
 

