A real treat, but be 
                warned this is not a complete Meistersinger 
                - there are gaps. But my word, it is 
                worth it to experience Furtwängler's 
                astonishing grasp of this huge score. 
                This is Furtwängler the Light, 
                entirely in touch with the aura this 
                piece projects. 
              
 
              
The performance is 
                taken from 1943's Bayreuth Fetsival. 
                The transfer level is fairly high, and 
                strings can appear gritty and edgy, 
                yet none of this can obscure Furtwängler's 
                dignified conception of the Overture. 
                Trills still buzz with energy, and the 
                conductor's shaping of lyric melody 
                is a thing of wonder. 
              
 
              
Of the names in the 
                cast list, possibly Josef Greindl was 
                the greatest, and certainly his Pogner 
                is one of the greatest assumptions this 
                reviewer has heard. Greindl exhibits 
                great depth of sound, and his 'Das schöne 
                Fest Johannistag' is simply beautiful 
                against a bed of sound in the orchestra. 
              
 
              
In Walther (the great 
                Max Lorenz), one hears a wonderful singer, 
                to begin with obviously reining his 
                voice in. He is unleashed for 'Am stillen 
                Herd'. David (Erich Zimmermann) is hugely 
                characterful. Sachs is Jaro Prohaska. 
                I question whether this Sachs projects 
                the requisite authority (his 'Halt, 
                Meister!' towards the end of Act 1, 
                for example), and right from the start 
                he sounds on the tired side. 
              
 
              
Throughout Act 1, Furtwängler 
                inspires the Bayreuth orchestra to produce 
                miracles. He never for a second merely 
                accompanies, always fully aware of the 
                Wagnerian tapestry in front of him. 
              
 
              
The happy-go-lucky 
                youthful swing of the opening of Act 
                2 is perhaps a little pressed by Furtwängler, 
                although it does settle into some sort 
                of a lilt. It is in Scene 2 that Furtwängler 
                comes into his own, moulding the strings 
                so expressively against Greindl's voice. 
                Worth noting, too, that the Magdalene 
                and Eva (Müller and Kallab) work 
                so well together, their voices complementing 
                each other. All of which seems in retrospect 
                but preparation for Prohaska's Fliedermonolog. 
                Here the distant horns are so many hunting 
                horns, and if Prohaska's first part 
                of this monologue is not fully involving, 
                the sadness of the remainder more than 
                makes up for it. 
              
 
              
Müller comes into 
                her own in Scene 5 ('Da ist er! - Ja, 
                Ihr seid es!'), her impassioned duet 
                with Walther rising to a natural climax, 
                only to be interrupted by the Nightwatchman. 
                Furtwängler coaxes from the orchestra 
                during these scenes the most astonishing 
                delicacy. A pity the Nightwatchman himself 
                (Erich Pina) sounds nervous. 
              
 
              
There is wit in this 
                act too - not something that immediately 
                springs to mind with Furtwängler! 
                - around the discovery of Beckmesser 
                and the depiction of the stage's chaos. 
              
 
              
If one needs any proof 
                as to Furtwängler's genius, one 
                need only go to the Prelude to Act 3 
                - in fact, maybe even the first note 
                thereof, which seems to immediately 
                conjure up this first scene's special 
                atmosphere. Note also the gorgeous horns 
                - mellow and refined - and the real 
                explosion of emotion at 5'57. True, 
                the ensemble is not perfect as we shift 
                into the action of the final act. 
              
 
              
Here it is Sachs’ Wahn 
                monologue that impresses. Believably 
                world-weary, Prohaska is infinitely 
                human. It is only later in the act that 
                he appears not to have the truly 'paternal' 
                touch. Lorenz, after Furtwängler's 
                glowing preparation, really opens out 
                for his 'Morgenlich leuchtend'. 
              
 
              
If any act proves that 
                this is Furtwängler's Meistersinger, 
                it is this long Act 3. He paces it to 
                perfection, with the end truly climactic. 
                Certainly from Walther's Preislied onwards 
                this sits at the very top of the Meistersinger 
                tree, and all sonic limitations become 
                irrelevant. 
              
 
              
Good to have a second 
                stab on CD4 at the Meistersinger 
                apple in the Act 1 Prelude (BPO, February 
                29th, 1949), more assured 
                in sound, plus a glowing 'Karfreitagszauber', 
                Siegfried's Funeral March and a Prelude 
                and Transfiguration from Tristan 
                to close the set. But it is in the Bayreuth 
                Meistersinger that this set's 
                value lies, and for which we should 
                be ever grateful, despite the missing 
                sections. 
              
Colin Clarke