Beethoven, Fidelio, A. Denoke, J. Villars, A. Held, T. Quasthoff, Berlin Philharmonic, S. Rattle (re-released on November 11, 2008) EMI 2 17630 2 | 110'10" Online score: Beethoven, Fidelio Paul Robinson, Ludwig van Beethoven: Fidelio |
Angela Denoke has had her detractors, in this role and others, although her coverage at Ionarts has been generally positive. Still, for power, pitch accuracy, and overall beauty of tone (in spite of a lovely "Komm, Hoffnung") there are far better Leonoras out there, like Christine Brewer (in either German or English), Christa Ludwig (stupendous), Birgit Nilsson (impeccable), Gwyneth Jones (intense), Elisabeth Söderström (at Glyndebourne with Bernard Haitink at the helm), Hildegard Behrens, Deborah Voigt, and the upcoming re-release of Jessye Norman from Decca. Regrettably, there are better Florestans than Jon Villars, too: a young Jonas Kaufmann in a Zurich DVD conducted by Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Ben Heppner before the cracks in the Met DVD with Karita Mattila. A truly excellent recording will cost more, and Rattle's version cannot complete against, for example, Mackerras's historical instruments recording with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, not to mention classics by names like Klemperer (above all, by most accounts) and, roughly in this order, Furtwängler, and Kleiber (with room further down the list for Böhm, Karajan, and Solti).
Nothing to do with this post but: I finally found some (very poor) references for the record of Marx's Herbstsinfonie:
ReplyDeleteEine Herbstsinfonie in H-Dur für großes Orchester 1920/21
Ein Herbstgesang
Tanz der Mittagsgeister
Herbstgedanken
Ein Herbstpoem
Orchester: Großes Orchester Graz
Dirigent: Michel Swierczewski
Aufnahme:
Stefaniensaal, Graz, 24. & 25. Oktober 2005
Verlag: …
(http://www.mynetcologne.de/~nc-waltergu3/wal_cd_klassik/CDs/Marx_EineHerbstsinfonie.htm)
Sadly, there's no mention for the label, but it might be without any label, as the conductor also works as a sound engineer (or however you call that). He possibly made his own record, as I remember the CD cover to look really homemade. And we kind of lost the CD itself, because my friend lent it to our professor, who died in April...
Anyway, here's a link where you could download it:
http://www.micmacmusic.com/product_info.php?products_id=659&osCsid=0129f2dc9b9867d52729d670b4d7b7da
I think that's it!
Wow -- thanks for remembering this and for passing along the info!
ReplyDelete