Aida seems a 
                favourite opera on the Walhall label. 
                One has come 
                my way before, also in German, with 
                Schmidt-Isserstedt at the helm but there 
                exists also WLCD0057 (VSO/Karajan); 
                WLCD0031 (Fausto Cleva/Met) and WLCD007 
                (Clemens Kraus/Munich). Each, it would 
                seem, has something at least of interest. 
                Here in Frankfurt in 1952, the presence 
                of one Christa Ludwig certainly made 
                this reviewer leap to the CD player. 
                By the way, this performance has been 
                on CD on Myto but this is the first 
                incarnation to come my way. The recording 
                is, in the main, quite acceptable, although 
                it can be strained to its limits; the 
                end of Act 2 is a case in point. 
              
 
              
The conductor on this 
                occasion is Kurt Schröder, whose 
                take on the Act 1 Prelude makes for 
                interesting listening – he makes it 
                sound like Wagner! This is Verdi trying 
                to be Lohengrin-like (Prelude 
                to that work’s Act 1), a concept that 
                makes for a strange experience. This 
                is especially so when Ramfis enters 
                and starts singing in German; it is 
                difficult not to expect ‘Sì, 
                corre voce’ from Ramfis instead of ‘Hört, 
                es geht die Stimme’. But once the linguistic 
                shift to German has been made, some 
                critical evaluations can be made. Schröder’s 
                conducting is generally workmanlike 
                and professional, although he can transcend 
                this at times to generate real excitement; 
                as he demonstrates in the first half 
                of Act 4. Dances, though, can suffer 
                from a distinctly painted-on Germanic 
                gait. You have been warned. 
              
 
              
Max Lorenz has divided 
                critics over the years. The two camps 
                of ‘for’ and ‘against’ can broadly be 
                divided geographically – those inside 
                Germany’s borders and those without. 
                Lorenz was a Heldentenor, and that for 
                sure comes across in his ‘Celeste Aida’ 
                (‘Holde Aida’, of course). He has reserves 
                to spare at the final hurdle. He could 
                have held the last note forever, possibly. 
                His rendition is hugely strong; some 
                would say shouted. Clearly he is to 
                dominate this recording, and so it turns 
                out despite the excellence of his Aida, 
                Annelies Kupper, who incidentally created 
                the title role in the ‘official’ premiere 
                of Richard Strauss’s Der Liebe de 
                Danae. His desolation clearly comes 
                through in Act 4 Scene 2 (‘La fatal 
                pietra’; ‘Es hat der Stein such über 
                mir’) where he, in conjunction with 
                Schröder, manifests a dramatic 
                crescendo that leads clearly to Aida’s 
                vocal entrance. 
              
 
              
Annelies Kupper sang 
                Elsa von Brabant in a recently-reviewed 
                Lohengrin on Preiser - a set 
                that also shared Otto von Rohr. Her 
                pure yet robust voice, a rare phenomenon, 
                works supremely well as Aida. She is 
                convincing in her portrayal while leaving 
                one admiring her legato, and she can 
                demonstrate real strength also, as in 
                her ‘Qui Radames verrà’ (here 
                ‘Hierher kommt Radames’, Act 3; CD2 
                track 4). Her enunciation is excellent, 
                her intervals pure. There is a purity 
                also of voice in its higher reaches 
                at ‘Fuggiam gli arbori inospiti’ (‘Entflieh’n 
                aus diesem Lande wir’) that makes for 
                delicious listening. Her strength can 
                be sampled at her highly strung, ‘Ritorna 
                vincitor’ (‘Als Sieger kehr’ er heim!’). 
                Kupper and Lorenz make a powerful team, 
                particularly in the closing stages of 
                the opera. The final track on this set 
                begins at the memorable ‘O terra addio’ 
                (‘Leb’ wohl, o Erde’) – and memorable 
                it is, especially with Kupper’s radiant 
                high register in top form. Lorenz almost 
                matches her ... the occasional over-pushed 
                accent apart. 
              
 
              
Margarete Klose is 
                huge-of-voice for this Amneris. Her 
                outbursts in Act 4 are magnificently 
                dramatic, but perhaps Act 2 shows her 
                at her greatest - despite some bumpy 
                orchestral contributions - her voice 
                complementing Kupper’s perfectly. 
              
 
              
Amonasro sounds evil 
                in Rudolf Gonszar’s interpretation. 
                And Christa Ludwig? A strong but lovely 
                Priestess (Sacerdotessa), her melismas 
                wonderful. It is interesting to note 
                that this recording comes right at the 
                very end of Ludwig’s stay at Frankfurt; 
                she joined at the age of 18, debuting 
                there as Orlovsky. Only three years 
                later she was to begin her long association 
                with the Vienna State Opera. 
              
 
              
Aage Poulsen’s King 
                has a great, rounded yet focused bass 
                voice; Ramfis similarly is large of 
                voice and presence (Otto von Rohr). 
                And for once even the Messenger (Hans 
                Bert Dick) is more than acceptable. 
              
 
              
Like so many of these 
                Walhall sets, this is worth a hearing. 
                There is much to enjoy and in this case 
                the recording is perfectly acceptable 
                if nothing distinguished. Regular readers 
                will know the score when it comes to 
                documentation, though. No synopsis, 
                just a track-listing: German, with Italian 
                in parentheses. 
              
Colin Clarke