Friday 11 July 2008

Wagner, Lohengrin 'In fernem Land' - Volker 1936 & 1942

There has been widespread discussion of why the standard of singing of Wagner and Verdi has declined so much compared to a peak that certainly lasted until the 1930s and 1940s - and in some cases continued into the 1950s. This blog certainly does not adopt the 'older is always better' approach - the crackle of a 78 does not necessarily equal greater music making. The standard of performance in many areas of classical music has been maintained or even improved - for example, to take those still alive or who died only very recently, there are a wealth of pianists of the first rank (Richter, Michelangeli, Argerich, Pollini to name only some).
The standard of production of Wagner operas has imeasurably improved. But the general consensus that there are no Wagner tenors of the recent period to match Melchior or Lorenz, for example, is true and the characteristics accounting for this are clearly explicable. The weight of voice and superb diction of Melchior or Lorenz does convey a 'heroic' feel no contemporary tenor matches. As both Siegfried and Tristan, to take the obvious examples, are indeed projected as 'heroic' characters, in a moral even more than a physical, sense the ability, or otherwise, to project this alters the perspective conveyed by the Wagner operas themselves. (Placido Domingo has the character of voice, and it is superb to hear him singing Wagner but, as is widely remarked, his inauthentic German pronouciation him prevent him reaching the absolute peak - a Tristan in utmost delerium, expressing his deepest thoughts, would not choose to sing in what is audibly a foreign language. In Verdi, of course, Domingo does scale the peaks and shows there is not a complete abscence of Verdi singing at the very highest level that exists among Wagner tenors).
Finding the greatest recordings of Wagner singing therefore is an area where some research has to be done. In aiding that, and because he does not receive the same degree of general recognition as Melcihior for example, an absolute must is Franz Volker singing Lohengrin.
Volker performs Lohengrin superlatively, given his very different character of voice to Lorenz or Melchior, because the character himself is very different to Tristan or Siegfried. The latter are heroes because they struggle against, and overcome, great moral and physical challenges. Lohengrin does not have that character. As a knight ordained by God to be victorious he faces no such struggle and the role requires no such heroic voice. Lohengrin is God protected perfection and Volker's extraordinary evennness of voice production, and again his superb diction, render this character with huge effect.
Volker's complete 1942 recording of Lohengrin in Berlin, conducted by Heger, is superb and because it gives the opera in its entirety not to be missed.
To my mind an even greater examples of Wagner singing, however, comes in the 1936 studio recordings of excerpts from Lohengin conducted by Tietjen. This recording of 'In fernem Land' has the added advntage, for a recording rather than a dramatic performance, of including the second half of the aria - the cut was, of course, decided by Wagner himself and works to heighten the drama in opera performance, but the extra music in a recording is a bonus with Volker's superb singing.
The absolute peak, however, is the 1936 performance at Bayreuth conducted by Furtwangler. Not only, as would be expected, is the orchestral interpretation at an extraordinary level but the greatness of the conducting brings from Volker an even greater performance. As the excerpt is from the opera production it does not have the second half of 'In fernem Land' but it is a peak of Wagner interpretation.
The fact of who was the principal guest at the 1936 Bayreuth festival, and who was in power in Berlin in 1942, again confirms that there is no short term justice in the world and, regretably, no one to one relation between music and politics. But the fit of the singer and the role is extraordinary - entirely worthy of its extremely high reputation.

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