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              SEEN 
              AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL OPERA     REVIEW
               
            
            Wagner, Tristan und Isolde: 
             Bavarian 
            State Opera Festival 2008:   
            Soloists, Bavarian State Opera Orchestra, Kent Nagano (conductor) 
            Nationaltheater, Munich  30.6.2008 (JFL)
            
            
            
            Production Team
            
            
            Peter Konwitschny (direction)
            Johannes Leiacker (sets & costumes)
            Michael Bauer (lighting)
            
            
            
            Cast
            
            John Treleaven (Tristan)
            Waltraud Meier (Isolde)
            Jan-Hendrik Rootering (King Mark)
            Michael Volle (Kurwenal)
            Michelle De Young (Brangäne)
            Franceso Petrozzi (Melot)
            Kevin Conners (Shepherd)
            Christian Rieger (Steersman)
            Ulrich 
            Rieß 
            (Young Sailor)
            
            
            
            
            Peter Konwitschny’s Munich “Tristan” retains a very special place in 
            my heart – it set the stage for what was probably the first truly 
            great Wagner experience that I had and that I understood. The cast 
            had something to do with it (Waltraud Meier, Kurt Moll, Marjana 
            Lipovšek, Bernd Weikl, and Jon Frederic West), but it was also the 
            staging which immediately told a story that was understandable even 
            for someone not intimately familiar with the story and libretto.
            
            That very performance – with Zubin Mehta conducting – can still be
            
            
            seen on DVD, 
            and is a good reminder of this Tristan at its best, not just vocally 
            but also as far as the direction is concerned. It isn’t just that 
            Konwitschny’s production hasn’t aged all that well; it has become 
            sloppy, the intentions, details, and text-based acting blurred by 
            years of routine and singers’ willfulness. Like its third act, so 
            successful at suggesting that worn-down but still just-kept-together 
            castle Kareol, so this production is worn-down, yet just kept 
            together.
            
            What keeps it together are now isolated but important ideas and 
            pictures. The white ocean liner still raises some viewers’ ire; I 
            find it visually appealing, nearly iconic. The obvious absence of a 
            love potion, not a novel clarification of Tristan and Isolde’s inner 
            psychological workings but still as effective as in Wieland Wagner’s 
            day. (That they both sip a little early from their drinks gives 
            Isolde’s rants in the run-up to “Dich trink ich sonder Wank” a 
            touching, tender irony, while Tristan and Isolde are already moving 
            in on each other.) That aforementioned, dilapidated castle – so well 
            intimated by the stark room, the radiator, and the chair (wasn’t 
            that once a La-Z-Boy?), with the pictures of Tristan’s hallucinatory 
            daydreams and memories slapped on the wall with the help of a 
            slide-projector – it all still works well enough, and works best 
            when supported by a good cast.
            
            A good cast was present at the 2008 Opera Festival performance on 
            June 30th: John Treleaven forced his way through the 
            music admirably, his clear and nicely carrying  (smallish) voice 
            showing no sense of strain until the third act, which, all the same, 
            was the high point of his performance. Jan-Hendrik Rootering was a 
            sturdy Marke (though a bit pale compared to Moll or Pape). Michael 
            Volle offered his excellent, compelling, even ideal Kurnewal, making 
            more of the character than most. Michelle DeYoung gave a sturdy, 
            faultless Brangäne, her voice surprisingly similar to Isolde’s. Only 
            Christian Rieger’s Steuermann was unsatisfactory – a negligible 
            nitpick if that small part were not so exposed and prominent.
            
            The orchestra played flawlessly but too often too loud, and with 
            less engagement than can be – should be – hoped for. Details like 
            the wiggling flutes that depict the joy of arriving at Cornwall – 
            the banners hissing in happy anticipation – were left too far in the 
            background. On the upside, Nagano managed to accumulate some drive 
            toward the end of the Vorspiel, and his fleet ways often paid 
            dividends. The race may not always be to the swift – but in Wagner 
            it’s better to heed the intended speedy tempos than to succumb to a 
            dragging pace, failing to achieve the elusive broad glory of 
            Knappertsbusch, Furtwängler, and Thielemann. 
            
            Best of all was Waltraud Meier, who burned off a dramatic fire, even 
            if she no longer kindles one vocally. Incapacitated during the last 
            scheduled Munich run of Tristan, she gave a celebrated performance 
            shortly thereafter at La Scala. This Munich performance showed that 
            she was rightly hailed; she can still mesmerize as Isolde. 
            In 
            “O blinde Augen” her line “mit ihr gab er es preis!” was hit in 
            stride, with seething strength and violent passion. 
            
            Her Liebestod, bolder, louder than usual, searing and 
            intense, was just the touch to send the Wagnerian home delighted. I 
            couldn’t and can’t shed a tear for Linda Watson, no matter how well 
            she sings. Meier’s Isolde, no matter the condition of her voice, can 
            make me sob, seemingly at will.
            
            That is the litmus test of a good opera, and a good performance 
            thereof: Does it move? It isn’t merely the quality of the 
            singing that moves, it is the effectiveness of the drama. Most 
            operas are devoid of any acceptable sense of drama and desperately 
            depend on directors to salvage the mediocrity of the material. Many 
            operas are not even pleasing musically, and depend on conductors to 
            make sense of meaningless notes churned out by the yard. Not that 
            Verdi and Rossini operas are necessarily without merit, but few 
            works make it as easy to move as does Wagner; where, behind all the 
            superficial pomposity, a dramatic heart beats so strong that it 
            would take utter determination and skill of both performers and 
            directors alike to make it stop.
            
            Even watered-down, the Konwitschny Tristan remains strong, and even 
            in a lesser production Waltraud Meier could move mountains. It’s not 
            an artistic triumph anymore, but it is still Wagner done well and 
            done far, far above the average of what we are likely to see (and 
            hear) anywhere else.
            
            The Sean&Heard performance review of this production from November 
            2007 can be read 
            
            here.
            
            
            
            Jens F. Laurson
            
            
              
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