Perhaps encouraged by Cosima's birthday, I have been dipping into
around 60 recordings of the "Siegfried Idyll." Which performance(s)do
you prefer and why? Full(ish) orchestra, chamber version – or even
piano? Any thoughts on changing interpretation over the last eight
decades or so (i.e. since the recordings by Siegfried Wagner and
Muck).
It's amazing what this piece yields up at every new hearing. Was this
the quasi-symphonic door to Wagner's future – a door he did not live
to pass through??
Thanks in advance for any comments.
Cheers.
Jonathan Carr
--
Derrick Everett
--
Derrick Everett
I think the sound of paint drying would be more like that John Cage
piece. You know, the one he "wrote" where all you "hear" is the ambient
noise.
:-)
Seriously, I never heard Gould's take. I guess it is a piano
transcription, ala Liszt's Beethoven material?
michael
Bert
http://www.bertcoules.co.uk
Actually, no. Among Gould's many delusions, he believed that he was an
orchestral conductor.
On a more positive note, I believe that his recording uses exactly the
band specified by Wagner, that is, no more players that could be
accomodated on the stairs at Triebschen. It is therefore more
"authentic" than any recording of the Idyll made by a large orchestra.
--
Derrick Everett
It's in the FAQ, section II-E, under "Orchestral works".
--
Derrick Everett
> On a more positive note, I believe that his recording uses exactly the
> band specified by Wagner, that is, no more players that could be
> accommodated on the stairs at Triebschen.
Does the house still exist? I wonder what the acoustic's like? Now
there's an idea for a truly authentic period recording...
Bert
http://www.bertcoules.co.uk
Yes, the house still exists, it is a museum now. If you can read German,
please follow the link
http://www.kulturluzern.ch/wagner-museum/
Cheers,
--
Herman van der Woude
hvdwoude @ zonnet.nl
(spaties toegevoegd om SPAM te vermijden / spaces added to avoid SPAM)
> Yes, the house still exists, it is a museum now. If you can read German,
> please follow the link
> http://www.kulturluzern.ch/wagner-museum/
Thanks very much, that's fascinating. Pity there isn't a photograph of the
famous staircase, though.
Bert
http://www.bertcoules.co.uk
For authenticity, the audience should yell bravo after the flower scene in
Parsifal, as Wagner himself did. For which the other members of the audience
hissed him!
Ralph
http://www.yeodoug.com/articles/wagner_museum/wagnermuseum.html
Anyone who has not visited Tribschen but has a chance to do so, please
take it. It is - still - the loveliest spot, really worthy of the
"Idyll" and you can't do much better than that! Then there is all the
history - not least Toscanini conducting the "Idyll" on the lawn before
the villa with his Lucerne Festival Orchestra just before the second
world war. Friedelind Wagner, who lived for many months in the villa
before fleeing from the Nazis to the U.S., was in the audience.
Cheers
Jonathan Carr
I'm fond of the smaller-scale versions. Two spring to mind,
Norrington's on EMI and the Academy of St Martin in the Field under
Marriner.
I also have a number of "big-band" Idylls, but these seem often to
miss the mark - I think the scale and relative simplicity of the piece
work against a big-band interpretation. Having said that, I caught the
tail end of a performance on the radio I thought very fine indeed, and
it turned out to be by Thielemann with the BPO.
Dogbertd
Bert
http://www.bertcoules.co.uk
Me too. I thought that was a very fine performance, and never
afterwards felt that the souped orchestral version was quite right.
I've got it on vinyl, but I don't know if it's available on CD.
Other than that, I also liked the Boulez version, also for small
forces, that came out on vinyl on the back of _Die Liebesmahl der
Apostel_: Boulez's Lovefeast, on the other hand, wasn't much of a
performance.
For an orchestral recommendation, I'd suggest the Michel Plasson disk
that has the _Idyll_ along with some Wagner rarities: the Faust
Overture, "Der Tag Erscheint", _An Webers Grab_, _Trauersymfonie_ and a
rattling good _Das Liebesmahl der Apostel_. All well played, and the
Liebesmahl is easily the best version of that choral piece that I've
heard. Michel Plasson with the Dresdner Phil, on EMI Classics, and
recommended by me.
Of the stuff I haven't heard, I'd be most interested to hear the
Norrington version, and I'd also be interested to hear Gould's piano
transcription, played by Gould. I've heard that - as Deryck suggests -
the speeds are so damn slow the thing stalls; but I've heard a ouple of
the Gould transcriptions - "Siegfried's Rhine Journey" and something
else - on the radio and thought they were brilliant, so I'd be
interested to see what he made of anything in Wagner. (I'm not as much
of a Gould fan as some, but when he was playing music that suited him
he was extraordinary.)
Cheers!
Laon
Me too. I thought that was a very fine performance, and never
> For an orchestral recommendation, I'd suggest the Michel Plasson disk
> that has the _Idyll_ along with some Wagner rarities: the Faust
> Overture, "Der Tag Erscheint", _An Webers Grab_, _Trauersymfonie_ and a
> rattling good _Das Liebesmahl der Apostel_. All well played, and the
> Liebesmahl is easily the best version of that choral piece that I've
> heard. Michel Plasson with the Dresdner Phil, on EMI Classics, and
> recommended by me.
For anyone who wants to hear a selection of Wagner's orchestral music, the
Michel Plasson and Dresden Phil. disk (EMI 7243 5 56358 22) would be an
excellent choice. Apart from the 'Idyll', the works presented on this disk
are all from the 1840's and so contemporary, of course, with 'Dutchman'
and the first version of 'Tannhäuser'. So not at all juvenile efforts,
even if not in the same class as the 'Idyll'.
> Of the stuff I haven't heard, I'd be most interested to hear the
> Norrington version, and I'd also be interested to hear Gould's piano
> transcription, played by Gould. I've heard that - as Deryck suggests -
> the speeds are so damn slow the thing stalls; but I've heard a ouple of
> the Gould transcriptions - "Siegfried's Rhine Journey" and something
> else - on the radio and thought they were brilliant, so I'd be
> interested to see what he made of anything in Wagner. (I'm not as much
> of a Gould fan as some, but when he was playing music that suited him he
> was extraordinary.)
>
The same disk (Sony SK 46279) contains Gould's piano transcription and a
performance of the 'Idyll' conducted by Gould; it was the latter I was
referring to. On the CD box it is described as, "Gould's Conducting Debut
and Final Recording". It is authentic in the sense that it uses only 13
players, all members of the Toronto Symphony.
Another recording that deserves mention is authentic in a different sense,
since it is conducted by Siegfried himself. It was recorded by the London
Symphony Orchestra in April 1927. I have this recording on a CD set
entitled, 'Siegfried conducts Richard Wagner' (Trax Classique TRXCD12).
--
Derrick Everett (deverett at c2i.net)
====== Writing from 59°54'N 10°36'E ======
http://home.c2i.net/monsalvat/index.htm
http://home.c2i.net/monsalvat/wagnerfaq.htm
> On Fri, 14 Jan 2005 18:27:26 -0800, Laon wrote:
>
>
>> For an orchestral recommendation, I'd suggest the Michel Plasson disk
>> that has the _Idyll_ along with some Wagner rarities: the Faust
>> Overture, "Der Tag Erscheint", _An Webers Grab_, _Trauersymfonie_ and a
>> rattling good _Das Liebesmahl der Apostel_. All well played, and the
>> Liebesmahl is easily the best version of that choral piece that I've
>> heard. Michel Plasson with the Dresdner Phil, on EMI Classics, and
>> recommended by me.
>
> For anyone who wants to hear a selection of Wagner's orchestral music, the
> Michel Plasson and Dresden Phil. disk (EMI 7243 5 56358 22) would be an
> excellent choice.
And choral music, I should add: 'Der Tag Ercheint' is for men's chorus and
wind band; 'An Webers Grabe: Hebt an den Sang' is for men's chorus "a
cappela", while 'Das Liebesmahl' is for men's chorus and an awfully big
orchestra. Several recordings of the latter have been issued on CD;
but the pieces that Wagner wrote for Weber's reburial in Dresden are
rarely performed and, to my knowledge, not available on any other
recording.
One thing does strike me, happily ploughing through all these
interpretations. On the whole the early ones - i.e. those recorded in
the 20s and 30s - are the quickest e.g. Siegfried (16.14mins), Blech
(17.13), Muck (17.34), Walter- Vienna (16.44), Toscanini-New York
(16.12), Weingartner (15.48) etc. Compare the post-war maestros, for
instance Karajan (19.41), Maazel (21.03), Thielemann (19.11),
Celibidache (23.38), Klemperer (18.01) not to mention Gould-chamber
group (24.28) or Gould -piano (23.31).
There are exceptions of course e.g. Paray in Detroit racing across the
finishing line in 15.20, a speed no doubt appropriate to the venue. Its
amazing what this piece can take and still sound superb, or at least
interesting. But I wonder if these comparisons don't help us make a
broader point about Wagnerian interpretation in general. Have
conductors really got slower over the years and if so, why? I know the
argument that in the old days conductors had to hurry to get their
pieces on to one or two sides of a 78 shellac disc. Maybe that's part
of the explanation but I can't believe it accounts for everything.
Cheers.
Jonathan Carr
--
original post:
=================
It is available on Berkshire Record Outlet www.broinc.com I just received my
copy on Thursday ~ about $9.00 plus tax & Shipping
I have been there two years ago and, if remember correctly, even
climbed it. There is a page from the score to Tristan with notes made
by Toscanini hanging over the stairway.
A beautiful spot on the south shore of the lake. It is now a museum and
the garden around it is a public park (where my wife, who does not
share my love to Wagners' music, aited for me).
I tried Berkshre and got a not found - and still do whatever variant I
try. It would be interesting to know your search criteria, expecially
since I paid 4 dollars more.
I got mine just days ago and I haven't confirmed if he got his yet.
It could be that we got the last 2, I don't know.
I was looking specifically for Liebesmahl, I did find a 2 versions of
Liebesmahl on Amazon.com.uk - but they were pricey as I recall.
Cheers,
Terri
> Derrick,
> Bert
> http://www.bertcoules.co.uk
Not only does it exist, but many years ago the BBC made one of its best
music films there, "The Siegfried Idyll" with Alan Badel as Wagner and
Gemma Jones as Cosima, recreating the original performance. If you have
more pull with BBC archives than I do -- my contact has fled to the
National Film and TV Archive -- you could suggest they look it out for
BBC4, maybe; they pulled out some of those marvellous M.R.James
adaptations from the same era. Although they've probably wiped it...
Cheers,
Mike
Bert
http://www.bertcoules.co.uk
Perhaps, since it is out of print, Derrick might possibly be persuaded
to repr**uce it and....?
Charles