- Production emotionally very dark, which can mostly be justified. Yes, trapped in a maze of sorts for Act I worked very well.
- Act III staging of Tristan's sick-bed hallucinations was ghostly, beautiful, and effective. Excellent use of a scrim, too.
- Kinda dubious about the Act II torture chamber.
- Portraying Marke as an evil torturer is contra everything in the libretto and score, though K. Wagner mostly made it work.
- My traveling companion thought Tristan had died and then been resurrected by the attention of his friends (Kurwenal, the Shepherd, and a third unidentified character), but what I saw was exactly the kind of thing you see in every other production of the opera.
- Stephen Gould's Tristan mostly beautiful sung, with some odd stabbing at the notes in Act I.
- See previous long post about Herlitzius's Isolde.
- Georg Zeppenfeld!! That was a gorgeously sung Marke, and what a voice. (He has appeared in SF once, as Sarastro in the production we saw between Hockney and Kuneko.)
- Christa Mayer an excellent Brangane, well sung and acted.
- Towering work from Christian Thielemann. Astonishing, yet unmannered and natural, control over every musical element.
Lisa Hirsch's Classical Music Blog.
The iron tongue of midnight hath told twelve. Lovers, to bed; 'tis almost fairy time.
Berce mollement sur ton sein sublime
Ô puissante mer, l’enfant de Dindyme!
Sunday, August 30, 2015
Tristan und Isolde: Longer Version
Some bullet points:
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