I’m very conflicted when it comes to writing about this DVD. It exemplifies
how problematic a genre opera is and how rare it is for everything to come
together successfully. I might heartily praise certain aspects of this disc,
but there are others I would run a mile from.
The musical values, for a start, are exceptionally good, and if this were
an audio-only release then it might come towards the top of a lot of people’s
lists. The singers are among the finest in their roles that I have come
across, especially the exceptional Pelléas of Stéphane Degout. He sings
this problematic role with ardent intensity that had the capacity to bowl
me over, and he is well contrasted with the unusually light voice of Elena
Tsallagova as Mélisande. Where Degout’s voice oozes sensuality and passion,
hers is a little distant, almost cold at times. She makes Mélisande a distant,
slightly detached character; a perfectly legitimate reading, and a contrast
to the heady intensity that many sopranos bring to the role. Their scenes
together are excellent, and the finest scene on the disc is the end of Act
4 when the pair meet and urge one another on to ever more ecstatic declarations
of their passion. This scene also showcases the wonderful playing of the
orchestra, pulsating with scarcely suppressed longing, and the supple, pliable
direction of Philippe Jordan which allows every scene to move with purposeful
vision, but also to dart off in directions which might surprise us.
The other parts are just as distinguished. Vincent le Texier’s Golaud is
a grand, almost Wagnerian figure. His is a deeper, darker voice than one
might normally associate with the role, thus underlining the scale of his
suffering, and he is poignant beyond belief in the final scene. Franz Josef
Selig also brings vast reserves of powerful dignity to the character of
Arkel. He seems world-weary and careworn in the first and last acts, but
his dialogue with Mélisande in the fourth act, where he misguidedly sings
of Mélisande opening the door to a new era, is redolent with life and hope,
thereby making his acting every bit as exciting as his singing. Anne Sofie
Von Otter invests the role of Geneviève with restrained dignity, and Julie
Mathevet is a convincing Yniold.
Musically speaking, then, all is very well. To say that Robert Wilson’s
production is an acquired taste, however, is to put it very mildly! Those
who know the director’s work will find no surprises here. Wilson’s style
is to ritualise the drama through gesture and distance, and his direction
of singers is the polar opposite of naturalism. His method owes a lot to
the stylised world of, say, Japanese Noh drama. Indeed, the scene where
Pelléas and Golaud enter the castle vaults seems to resemble a giant Sumo
wrestling ring where the two circle each other and size one another up.
In many ways his production suits the symbolist world of the drama very
well. His characters barely ever look at one another directly, reinforcing
the idea that no-one in Maeterlinck’s world understands anyone else. I liked
the way the scenes blend into one another, with the sets gliding in and
out of the stage area in a way that seems to reflect the manner of the music.
However, I found his approach very uninvolving, on the whole. That may be
the point, but I didn’t like it. Pelléas is a world of constantly
shifting shadows, but it is also one of sensuality and, to an extent, abandonment.
I found it impossible to imagine any of these characters investing in one
another to any great degree. In the tower scene, for example, the two lovers
stand at opposite ends of the stage with barely any interaction. It doesn’t
help that the stage if flooded in a sickly blue light throughout. Normally
I enjoy Wilson’s work – I really liked his Alceste – and some may
identify with his vision of the work which is entirely justifiable. I found
it estranging and isolating, though.
It is with the technical aspects that this DVD really comes unstuck, though.
As with their Don
Quichotte, the sound is 2.0 stereo only, and I always feel that this
misses the golden opportunity for surround sound that DVD affords. More
seriously, though, the recording levels are all wrong. Whether it’s microphone
placing or studio capturing, the sound levels frequently distort and break
up, ruining the experience, whether you’re enjoying the staging or not.
It could just be the copy that I got, but if not then it’s a serious
flaw with the disc that should have been sorted out by the engineers.
With regret for the excellent singing and playing, then, I have to say no
to this DVD. No matter what you think of Wilson’s design, this disc still
comes a very long way behind what is, for me, still the best Pelléas
on DVD, namely Boulez’s
seminal WNO performance. It still has the power to make your hair stand
on end nearly three decades later. That DVD gives thrills that this one
can only dream of.
Simon Thompson
Very good but comes a very long way behind what is still the best Pelléas
on DVD: WNO/Boulez.
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