After being seated on the left aisle for the Thursday performance, I had the chance to compare the sound on the right aisle, again at about halfway back into the house. The acoustics in the Concert Hall are notoriously variable, and from the right side, the singers seemed more present -- especially those, like Yuri Vorobiev as Gurnemanz, who stood on the right side of the podium. While Nikolai Schukoff's Parsifal, who stood on the left side, sounded about the same, it was also odd to note that the four tuned gongs in the procession scene sounded much more clearly when I was seated on the left side, perhaps because the gongs' stand was on the right side of the orchestra, facing towards the left side of the house. Whatever the reason, on Friday night the gongs were so faint as to be almost non-existent far too often.
The high quality of this performance -- perhaps not perfect but at a very high level -- and the magic of the score made the empty seats seem doubly shameful. Vorobiev's Gurnemanz was more robust on the second night, especially in the molten low notes, perhaps after some improvement if he was indeed a little under the weather, and his facial expressions, which lent great credibility and sympathy to the character were that much clearer from the right aisle. The quality of Schukoff's voice grew on me somewhat, although the role, at least to my ears, requires a sweeter tone for the transcendent Parsifal of the third act. Thomas Hampson's Amfortas was more visceral and terrifying -- the howl of despair as he longs for death -- at the first performance but still stood out from his colleagues on Friday night.
W. Kinderman, Wagner's Parsifal (Oxford University Press, 2013) |
This performance will be repeated once more, tonight in the Kennedy Center Concert Hall (October 12, 8 pm).
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