Wagner: Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg Marek Janowski & Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra
Album info
Album-Release:
2011
HRA-Release:
14.08.2013
Label: PentaTone
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Opera
Artist: Marek Janowski & Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra
Composer: Richard Wagner
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
- 1 Act I - Prelude 08:32
- 2 Act I - Da zu dir der Heiland kam (Chorus) 03:20
- 3 Act I - Verweilt! Ein Wort! (Walther, Eva, Magdalene, David) 08:46
- 4 Act I - David, was stehst? (Apprentices, David, Walther) 02:00
- 5 Act I - Mein Herr! der Singer Meister-Schlag (David, Walther) 02:58
- 6 Act I - Der Meister Ton' und Weisen (David, Walther, Apprentices) 10:18
- 7 Act I - Seid meiner Treue wohl versehen (Pogner, Beckmesser, Walther, Sachs, Vogelsang, Nachtigall) 04:21
- 8 Act I - Zu einer Freiung und Zunftberatung (Kothner, Pogner, Vogelsang, Ortel, Zorn, Nachtigall, Moser, Apprentices, David, Eisslinger, Foltz, Schwarz) 02:07
- 9 Act I - Nicht doch, ihr Meister (Pogner, Kothner, Apprentices, Sachs, Beckmesser) 06:53
- 10 Act I - Vielleicht schon ginget ihr zu weit (Sachs, Kothner, Beckmesser, Vogelgesang, Nachtigall, Pogner) 05:14
- 11 Act I - Dacht' ich mir's doch! (Beckmesser, Kothner, Pogner, Nachtigall, Sachs) 02:22
- 12 Act I - Am stillen Herd in Winterszeit (Walther, Sachs, Beckmesser, Kothner, Vogelsang, Nachtigall) 05:02
- 13 Act I - Nun, Meister, wenn's gefallt (Kothner, Walther, Beckmesser) 02:22
- 14 Act I - Was euch zum Liede Richt' und Schnur (Kothner, Walther, Beckmesser) 02:38
- 15 Act I - Fur dich, Geliebte, sei's getan – Fanget an! (Walther, Kothner, Beckmesser, Pogner, Ortel, Foltz, Moser, Nachtigall, Vogelsang, Zorn) 05:38
- 16 Act I - Halt, Meister! Nicht so geeilt! (Sachs, Beckmesser, Nachtigall, Kothner, Pogner, Apprentices) 07:21
- 17 Act II Scene 1 - Johannistag! Johannistag! (Apprentices, David, Magdalene, Sachs) 03:45
- 18 Act II - Lass seh'n, ob Meister Sachs zu Haus? (Pogner, Eva, Magdalene, Sachs, David) 06:23
- 19 Act II - Was duftet doch der Flieder (Sachs) 06:06
- 20 Act II - Gut'n Abend, Meister! (Eva, Sachs, Magdalene) 08:10
- 21 Act II - Das dacht' ich wohl! (Sachs, Magdalene, Eva, Pogner) 02:04
- 22 Act II - Da ist er! (Eva, Magdalene, Walther) 03:49
- 23 Act II - Geliebter, spare den Zorn (Eva, Magdalene, Walther, Night-watchman) 01:58
- 24 Act II - Üble Dinge, die ich da merk (Sachs, Walther, Eva, Night-watchman) 02:37
- 25 Act II - Jerum! Jerum! (Sachs, Beckmesser, Walther, Eva) 12:30
- 26 Act II - Den Tag seh' ich erscheinen (Beckmesser, Sachs) 05:31
- 27 Act II - Mit den Schuhen ward ich fertig schier (Sachs, Beckmesser, David, Chorus, Magdalene, Apprentices, Pogner, Walther, Night-watchman) 05:40
- 28 Act III - Prelude 06:00
- 29 Act III - Gleich, Meister! Hier! (David, Sachs) 07:03
- 30 Act III - Wahn! Wahn! Uberall Wahn! (Sachs) 07:14
- 31 Act III - Gruss' Gott, mein Junker! (Sachs, Walther) 09:04
- 32 Act III - Morgenlich leuchtend in rosigem Schein (Walther, Sachs) 10:17
- 33 Act III - Ein Werbelied! (Beckmesser, Sachs) 06:31
- 34 Act III - Das Gedicht? Hier liess ich's (Sachs, Beckmesser) 07:17
- 35 Act III - Sieh' Ev'chen! Dacht' ich doch, wo sie blieb'! (Sachs, Eva, Walther) 05:58
- 36 Act III - Hat man mit dem Schuhwerk nicht seine Not! (Sachs, Eva) 04:11
- 37 Act III - Mein Kind, von Tristan und Isolde (Sachs) 03:46
- 38 Act III - Die selige Morgentraum - Deutweise (Sachs) 01:08
- 39 Act III - Selig, wie die Sonne (Eva, Magdalene, Walther, David, Sachs) 04:39
- 40 Act III- Sankt Crispin, lobet ihn! (Chorus, Apprentices) 05:01
- 41 Act III - Ihr tanzt? Was werden die Meister sagen? (David, Apprentices, Chorus) 05:43
- 42 Act III - Wacht auf! Es nahet gen den Tag (Chorus) 02:07
- 43 Act III - Euch macht ihr's leicht (Sachs, Pogner, Beckmesser, Kothner, Chorus, Apprentices) 07:03
- 44 Act III - Morgen ich leuchte in rosigem Schein (Beckmesser, Chorus, Kothner, Nachtigall, Vogelsang, Ortel, Foltz, Sachs, Apprentices) 08:12
- 45 Act III - Morgenlich leuchtend im rosigen Schein (Walther, Chorus, Sachs, Pogner, Eva) 07:34
- 46 Act III - Verachtet mir die Meister nicht (Sachs, Chorus) 03:57
- 47 Act III - Ehrt eure deutschen Meister (Chorus) 01:57
Info for Wagner: Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg
This is second release in the ambitious project of conductor Marek Janowski and the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra to perform and record all of Wagner's operas together. And judging by the exceptionally high standard of this Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, when finished it will be a cycle to cherish.
'Despite his bizarre fears about stage directors (see Gramophone, A/11), Marek Janowski is no slouch when it comes to imparting decisive character and atmosphere to his opera performances. Starting with a barely more than eight-minute overture, this second step in the 72-year-old Polish maestro’s bicentennial Berlin concert cycle of mature Wagner is a swift, light, comic reading of the score, more Lortzing than Tristan. It has much of the narrative thrust of Rudolf Kempe’s old Berlin EMI set and, while we’re handing out similes, it also sounds as if Janowski, like Reginald Goodall, has spent valuable sectional time with his orchestral as well as his vocal soloists. The delicate cello in the introduction to ‘Am stillen Herd’ or the colour and point of the wind-playing in the little Act 3 intermezzo where Beckmesser comes spying in Sachs’s workshop are classy and delightful.
On this particular June evening Albert Dohmen sounded at home across the whole spectrum of Sachs’s poetry, wistfulness and wit. He and Janowski avoid making too much black-dog mood in the ‘Wahn’ scene or excessive anger and self-pity over Eva’s attraction to Walther. Meanwhile, Dietrich Henschel essays a Beckmesser who can be all of pompous, weird, a credible vocalist in both serenade and prize song to Eva – and funny. (His attempt on the prize song has a crazy credibility not a million miles away from Bayreuth’s recent take on the number as anarchic performance art.) Sonn is imaginative in David’s tricky cataloguing of all the tones, Zeppenfeld a Pogner of real passion and concern. Magdalene, the other masters and the chorus – challenged by (but more than coping with) Janowski’s pace and bounce on the Festwiese – are strong contributors.
So far, so fine. It must be said, however, that the lovers were not quite so exciting at the single evening’s performance on which this set is based. Robert Dean Smith, Bayreuth’s successful current Tristan, doesn’t essay a wide enough range of colour in the comparatively higher reaches of Walther’s mood-swings – although he and Janowski manage a nice private rehearsal feeling for the dictation of the dream prize song to Sachs. Edith Haller, an ideal Eva on paper, comes across as shy and innig, a cosy father’s daughter but insufficiently heroic in the ‘O Sachs! Mein Freund!’ outburst.
Janowski’s achievement is to have recreated a genuine comic feel for the piece. Bayreuth’s old, almost complete Furtwängler or more recent Barenboim are darker, more Tristan-like; Kempe, Cluytens, the Dresden Karajan and (slow speeds and English language notwithstanding) Goodall lighter and more comic. Toscanini in 1937 offers the most heaven of all but even the most recent transfer has not yet made this Selenophone original a hi-fi experience.' (Mike Ashman, Gramophone)
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Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin
Rundfunkchor Berlin
Chor: Eberhard Friedrich
Marek Janowski, conductor
Albert Dohmen (Hans Sachs)
Georg Zeppenfeld (Veit Pogner)
Michael Smallwood (Kunz Vogelgesang)
Sebastian Noack (Konrad Nachtigal)
Dietrich Henschel (Sixtus Beckmesser)
Tuomas Pursio (Fritz Kothner)
Jörg Schörner (Balthasar Zorn)
Thomas Ebenstein (Ulrich Eißlinger)
Thorsten Scharnke (Augustin Moser)
Tobias Berndt (Hermann Ortel)
Hans-Peter Scheidegger (Hans Schwarz)
Hyung-Wook Lee (Hans Foltz)
Robert Dean Smith (Walther von Stolzing)
Peter Sonn (David)
Edith Haller (Eva)
Michelle Breedt (Magdalene)
Matti Salminen (Ein Nachtwächter)
Recorded live at Philharmonie, Berlin, 3 June 2011
No biography found.
Booklet for Wagner: Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg