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Wozzeck, opera, Op. 7
Composed by Alban Berg
Performed by Leipzig Radio Symphony Chorus, Leipzig Radio Symphony Orchestra
with Rolf Wollrad, Norbert Klesse, Theo Adam, Ekkehard Wlaschiha, Gisela Schroter, Konrad Rupf, Dresden Kapellknaben, Helmut Klotz, Alois Tinschert, Reiner Goldberg, Horst Hiestermann, Gisela Pohl
Conducted by Herbert Kegel
Alban Berg: Wozzeck, Op 7,Gisela Pohl,Ekkehard Wlaschiha,Theo Adam,Konrad Rupf,Rolf Wollrad,Alban Berg,Herbert Kegel,Dresdner Kapellknaben,Gisela Schroter,Leipzig Radio Symphony Chorus,Leipzig Radio Symphony Orchestra,Alois Tinschert,Helmut Klotz,Helmuth Klotz,Horst Hiestermann,Reiner Goldberg,Berlin Classics,Classical,German/Austrian 20th/21st Century Opera,Opera,Opera / Operetta / Oratorio
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Samuel Barber / Thomas Schippers
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000029V2 Release Date: 1997-01-14 |
Tracks:
- Medea's Dance Of Vengeance, Op. 23a
- String Quartet In B Minor, Op. 11: Adagio For Strings
- Second Essay For Orchestra, Op. 17
- Overture To The School For Scandal, Op. 5
- 'Andromache's Farewell,' Op. 39: Andromache's Farewell, Op. 39
- Intermezzo From Vanessa (Act II), Op. 32
- Overture To Amelia al ballo
- Interlude From Wozzeck (Act III)
- Introduction To Fervaal, Op. 40
Amazon.com
This classic disc has been the prime recommendation for Barber's short orchestral pieces since the early 1960s. Remastered onto CD for the first time, and with the addition of some other items conducted by Thomas Schippers, it sounds better than ever. All of Barber's music is blessed with the virtues of impeccable craftsmanship, tunefulness, and, above all, brevity. Although a Romantic by temperament, Barber had the gift of being able to fit a lot of emotional impact into a very small space. The famous Adagio for Strings and the Second Essay actually sound much bigger than they are, but they don't go on a second too long--which means you can play them again right away! You'll want to. --David HurwitzAmazon.com
The most beautiful recording ever made of the Adagio for Strings is at last on CD, thoughtfully coupled with some of the other recordings the young Thomas Schippers made for Columbia Masterworks--of the music of Barber and others--between 1960 and 1965, at the start of his all-too-brief career. Although he was never on personal terms with Barber, Schippers had the ability to put Barber's music across in just the right way, with the perfect blend of energy and lyricism, toughness and warmth, and, above all, the feeling that its sentiment was real, yet ineffably contained. The performance of the New York Philharmonic (in the Adagio, as well as in the Second Essay for Orchestra, the Overture to the School for Scandal, Andromache's Farewell, and Medea's Dance of Vengeance) is aglow with inspiration, and the sound is exceptionally vivid, with a palpable sense of presence and space. --Ted LibbeyCustomer Reviews:
A sparkling remaster.......2006-12-29
Great music and a great package.......2006-11-10
An American Classic.......2005-12-03
Best of Barber.......2004-09-30
Is there anything to add...?.......2003-09-26
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The Great War: Classical And Popular Selections From The Time Of World War I (National Public Radio Milestones Of The Millennium)
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000HXKX Release Date: 1999-01-12 |
Tracks:
- Military March No. 1 In D Major, Op. 39: Pomp Ad Circumstance
- Waltz Fom Der Rosenkavalier Suite
- 'Von der Schonheit' From Das Lied von der Erde
- 'De l'aube a midi sur la mer' From La Mer
- Symphony No. 1 in D Major, Op. 25 'Classical Symphony': III. Gavotta. Non troppo allegro
- L'histoire du soldat Suite - IV. The Royal March
- L'histoire du soldat Suite - V. The Little Concert
- Le tombeau de Couperin - V. Menuet
- Le tombeau de Couperin - VI. Toccata
- Sinfonia From Pulcinella Suite
- Walzer From Funf Klavierstucke, Op. 23
- Interlude From Wozzeck, Act III
- Prologue From Music Ffor The Theatre
- 'Shine On Harvest Moon'
- 'Alexander's Ragtime Band' - Irving Berlin
- 'Over There'
- 'How You Gonna Keep'em Down On The Farm (After They've Seen Paree)?'
- 'The Man I Love' From Stride Up The Band
- 'West End Blues'
Amazon.com
The first two-thirds of this disc is a fascinating cram course in concert music around the time of World War I. The programmer has put together some fascinating juxtapositions--for example, Strauss's Rosenkavalier leads almost seamlessly into Mahler's Das Lied von der Erde, and Schoenberg sounds out of context with everybody (including Berg). The selections are all short, and performance quality runs from great to mediocre, but this is still a thought-provoking educational experience, even though Bartók and Ives are conspicuously missing. The popular selections are less interesting, often campy, and although vintage recordings are used, they aren't always the right vintage. And someone missed a point by separating Copland's jazzy "Music for the Theatre" from Louis Armstrong, who could have followed immediately. --Leslie GerberCustomer Reviews:
Music and the Great War.......2007-05-14
How a Century Has Change Our Perception of War.......2005-10-29
Linda Kobler reconstituted this mix of classical and popular music with a keen sense of history. The CD is twice divided (in both the classical and the popular music) into 'Before the War' 1901 - 1917, 'During the War' 1917 - 1922, and 'After the War' 1922 - 1928. In the first era are the works of Elgar ('Pomp and Circumstance'), Strauss (a waltz from 'Der Rosenkavalier'), Mahler (excerpt from 'Das Lied von der Erde'), and Debussy ('La Mer') joining the songs 'Shine On Harvest Moon' and 'Alexander's Ragtime Band'. The War period is represented by Prokofiev's 'Symphony No. 1', Stravinsky's 'L'histoire du soldat', and Ravel's 'Le tombeau de Couperin' in tandem with 'Over There'. After the war include Stravinsky ('Pulcinella Suite'), Schoenberg (Waltz from 'Five Piano Pieces'), Berg (excerpt from 'Wozzeck') and Copland ('Music from the Theatre') with popular songs 'How you gonna keep 'em down on the farm', 'The Man I Love', and 'West End Blues'.
The excerpts selected for this survey are exceptionally good: orchestras include NY Phil, LA Phil, Philadelphia Orchestra, London Symphony, and the Columbia Symphony under such batons a Ormandy, Bernstein, Salonen, Tilson Thomas, Schippers and Stravinsky; soloists include Glen Gould, Robert Casadesus, Lili Chookaskian, Louis Armstrong, et al. The sonics are very fine and the performances are each from significant full recordings remaining in the catalogue.
The booklet accompanying this concert of memories is written by Linda Kobler who uses each selection as a pivotal point in the atmosphere of the globe that accompanied the Great War: it is very well written and informative. This is one of those recorded collections that goes far beyond an accumulation of bits and pieces and instead gives food for thought about how our political and social actions intertwine with the arts in a prophetic way. Highly Recommended. Grady Harp, October 05
Excellent Recording!.......1999-03-13
I think this CD may be a bit choppy to "easy" listeners, but for anyone who has a sincere interest in delving into the musical senses of earlier generations it's VERY good! I recommend the entire NPR Milestones of the Millennium series to such aficionados.
Good music, bad title.......1999-02-11
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Alban Berg Collection / Various (Coll)
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000B09Z4 Release Date: 2004-03-09 |
Customer Reviews:
Fabulous bargain, but Berg needs texts!.......2006-02-05
But the budget price comes with a catch: No texts or librettos. (There are at least scene synopses for "Wozzeck" and "Lulu.") With some composers, this wouldn't be a serious problem, but Berg was one of the greatest control freaks in music history. Without knowing exactly where each word is placed, listeners who don't understand German will miss an important facet of this intricately multi-layered music.
Superb Berg performances ... good value!.......2006-01-05
Real Estate Saver.......2004-10-04
Not being particularly fond of lieder in general, I feel less qualified to make an educated call as to who might own which recordings of the songs other than to remark that I already own this recording of Op. 2 (which, of course includes the lyrics). In fact, as is the case with a previous reviewer, I already own a number of recordings from this set (which I received as a gift). No matter, it's still worth owning, and I agree with yet another reviewer's suggestion to grab it while it's available. True, one might prefer different performances here or there but honestly, this affords the best way of acquiring everything in one fell swoop, and there's not a clinker in the whole set.
In that vein, I might suggest that fans of the VC seek out Szeryng's performance with Kubelik, now available remastered on DG Eloquence at budget price. It's much less emotional than Mutter's beautiful reading but I find this proves an enhancement rather than a detraction; I also feel that Kubelik, possibly due to his Austro-Hungarian upbringing, ultimately has a better grasp of this repertoire than Levine (although I love his OOP Lulu Suite/Wozzeck excerpts on Sony and Mahler 4 on RCA).
Best Set; Good Price..........2004-05-11
Excellent collection.......2004-04-06
This is 8-CD set and includes the complete works of Berg on acclaimed performances.
Especially, the stars of this set (for me):
Wozzeck (Hildegard Behrens, Wiener Philharmoniker, Abbado)
Lulu, complete opera in 3 act (Teresa Stratas, Franz Mazura, Yvonne Minton, Jules Bastin, Robert Tear, Opera National de Paris, Pierre Boulez!!)
Lulu-Suite (London SO, Abbado)
Three Pieces for Orchestra (London SO, Abbado)
Piano Sonata (Daniel Barenboim)
Alban Berg's musical language is difficult to understand (at least in first listening), but when listening more times, we notice that, actually in his music, there is a very mystic or impressive and lyric atmosphere. So, I think that he is a "Romantic" modern. Just, he expressed these lyric atmospheres with realist and striking language. Still, he was used 12-tone system, but he was not forget tonality and used the both styles (even so he used jazz passages, especially in Lulu). In other words: Berg is one of the most famous and important composers and he impressed the composers came after him (ex. Shostakovich, Britten, Henze)
This is an essential collection and highly recommended.
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Berg: Lulu; Wozzeck
Karl Christian Kohn , Karl-Ernst Mercker , Kurt Böhme , Leopold Clam , Loren Driscoll , Martin Vantin , Patricia Johnson , Robert Koffmane , and William Walther Dicks Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000E53D Release Date: 2003-04-08 |
Tracks:
- 1. Akt, 1. Szene- Langsam, Wozzeck, Langsam!
- Verwandlung. Orchester-Nachspiel
- 2. Szene- Du, Der Platz Ist Verflucht!
- Verwandlung. Orchester-Nachspiel Und Beginnende Militmusik Im Hintergrund
- 3. Szene- Tschin Bum ! Hst Bub- Da Kommen Sie!
- Verwandlung. Orchester-erleitung
- 4. Szene- Was Erleb' Ich, Wozzeck-
- Verwandlung. Orchester-Einleitung
- 5. Szene- Geh Einmal Vor Dich Hin
- 2. Akt- Orchester-Einleitung. 1. Szene- Was Die Steine Glzen!
- Verwandlung. Orchester-Nachspiel
- 2. Szene- Wohin So Eilig, Geehrtester Herr Sargnagel-
- Verwandlung. erleitende Takte U. Kammerorchester-Einleitung. 3. Szene- Guten Tag, Franz - Ich Seh
- Verwandlung. erleitende Takte Und Orchester-Vorspiel (Ldler)
- 4. Szene- Ich Hab' Ein Hemdlein An, Das Ist Nicht Mein
- Verwandlung. Orchester-Nachspiel (Walzer)
- 5. Szene- Oh! Oh! Andres! Ich Kann Nicht Schlafen
- 3. Akt, 1. Szene- Und Ist Kein Betrug In Seinem Munde Erfunden Worden
- Verwandlung. Orchester-Nachspiel
- 2. Szene- Dort Links Geht's In Die Stadt
- Wozzeck- 3. Akt.- Verwandlung. Orchester-erleitung (H) [B]
- 3. Szene- -Tantzt Alle; Tanzt Nur Zu !-
- Verwandlung. Orchester-Nachspiel. 4. Szene- -Das Messer- Wo Ist Das Messer--
- Verwandlung. Orchester-Epilog- Invention er Eine Tonart (D-Moll)
- 5. Szene- -Ringel, Ringel, Rosenkranz, Ringelreih'n!-
- Lulu- Prolog. -Hereinspaziert In Die Menagerie-
- 1. Akt, 1. Szene- -Darf Ich Eintreten-- - -Mein Sohn!-
- Introduktion (Zum Canon). -Gnige Frau Frau Medizinalrat -; Canon- -Sie Bekommen Mich Noch Lange N
Customer Reviews:
The worst Lulu ever.......2007-01-20
Two masterworks from the years between the wars in a recording from the sixties.......2005-10-17
Scholars have analyzed these works extremely closely and have discovered all kinds of symbolic patterns in the notes. For example, the music occurring around Marie as she dies seems rather chaotic, yet one scholar has shown that the music consists of ten fragments of music heard from and around her earlier in the opera. So, her life is passing before her as she dies.
There is always a debate about how much of this deep meaning one can actually hear and it does vary for each listener. This kind of discussion goes on in all the arts, but is particularly so in music because it is the most abstract of the arts. How abstract and how removed from the surface can any "meaning" be and still be heard? This was a discussion we had many times in music school and I have met no more than a very few who convinced me they could actually hear this deeply (and this is more than recognizing a given row or its transformation or hearing the most fleeting tonalities in atonal works).
For me, just as some of the ultra late romantic become somewhat over composed with a level of detail that seems to be there for its own sake, some of this minutiae is like going to a restaurant for a meal and being given an essay about a photograph of a painting of a pork chop. It may be interesting, informative, and even beautiful, but you still leave hungry.
"Wozzeck" and "Lulu" are powerful and affecting works. They do sound much more like highly chromatic, but tonal works than the abstractions of Webern. "Lulu" is the more severe and, well, bleak of the two. I have heard more than a few praise these works for telling the truth about human life and getting to the true center of the human heart. To me, they seem more like artworks that were above all anti-bourgeois and seem proud of that stance. They seem to invoke not only the materialist views of the world of Marx, but also of Freud, and other now long forgotten apostles of deterministic thought. Is it possible to still see these works eighty years on as modern? They are as much prisoners of their time as are any other opera and less transcendent than I expect great works of art to be.
Franz Wozzeck is a powerless man who has a child out of wedlock with a woman named Marie. He subjects himself to crackpot scientific experiments with a Dr. Schoen for a bit of extra money for Marie and their son. Marie feels oppressed by the social stigma of being an unwed mother, but also has eyes for other men. She is particularly attracted to a Drum Major who looks so wonderfully masculine, but is really a mere surface of a person. She has an affair with the Drum Major, which Wozzeck discovers. Since Wozzeck is already teetering on the edge of sanity from his impotence and the experiments, he falls off and stabs Marie after she tells him that she would rather be stabbed than beaten. He leaves her body and tosses the knife in a pond. Later, crazed even more deeply by guilt, he goes into the pond after the knife and drowns. The last moment of the play involves Marie's and Wozzeck's orphan at play and running off the stage oblivious that he is alone in the world.
So, is this the true heart of us all? Is that last moment poignant, sharp irony on the human condition, or mere kitsch? I mean, dealing with the world view of this drama might benefit from as much detachment and irony as you can bring to it.
"Lulu" is even harsher. She is married to a professor of medicine who has a heart attack when he sees her with a painter he has commissioned to paint her portrait. She marries the painter at the urging of another doctor, who is engaged to another, with whom Lulu has had a long term love affair (such as love is in this work). Finally, the doctor understands that the painter really is blind to Lulu's true nature and tells him of her past. He kills himself. Under threat the doctor marries Lulu. She then takes up with a Countess who is enamored of her. Lulu ends up killing him with a revolver he has given her. She is arrested and sentenced to prison.
However, the countess arranges to take her place in prison to aid Lulu's escape. The Countess, the doctor's son, and an athlete help her escape abroad. Lulu then ends up with a wealthy man who ends up being a pimp and sells her to Cairo.
While the opera was incomplete at Berg's early death at fifty, the outline and sketch let us know that she is living in London with the doctor's son and the athlete. When the Countess arrives without money, Lulu is reduced to becoming a streetwalker. She goes through a series of clients who are the musical reincarnations of her various husbands. One of them kills the doctor's son, and the last kills both Lulu and the Countess, since he is Jack the Ripper (!).
The music is powerful and worth knowing because it is so personal to Berg and works its magic quite well. However, I have been at a symphonic concert when the Lulu Suite has been played and seem people get up and leave because they find it so harsh and intense.
Berg was indeed a major composer of the twentieth century. He cannot be merely dismissed. If you want to understand the serious art of that century you must come to terms with these works. You don't have to love them, but you cheat yourself if you don't know them at least a bit. Certainly, the morality of these operas, shocking in their time, is roughly equal to the "normal" behavior in any two episodes of "Friends" and "Law and Order". So, it must be the music that continues to affect people so strongly.
These recordings by Karl Böhm are masterfully done with great sound and solid singing. Some would prefer a different style of Sprechstimme (the half-singing) done here, but I find it appropriately chilling with the singing voice sliding around above the simultaneously sounding singing voice. I have no idea how it is done, but it sounds wonderfully insane.
first of all you have to understand a role.......2004-11-12
The worst version you can choose if you really "UNDERSTAND" Berg. Good singers for the wrong repertoire.
Martin Pitchon
Canada
This is an amazing opera.......2003-11-23
As you know, Alban Berg couldn't finished this opera, the 1-297 measures of the 3rd Act was being finished, but later, Berg, was written last (approx.) 700 measures without orchestration (only with a Piano part and libretto).
In 1970's, Friedrich Cerha was orchestrated this measures and with this version, complete Three Acts was performed in Paris Opera, conducted by Pierre Boulez, in 1979. (The recording of this performance is available on DG Classics)
But, this performance is better than the version of Boulez's. (I have listened both of two recordings). And, even so, this is a live recording from Berlin, Deutsche Oper, in 1968. So, there isn't 3rd Act, instead of this, (with the same affairs) they were performed the last movements of Lulu-Suite (Symphonic Pieces from Opera). These movements are, 4th movement - Variations on Wedekind's Theme for Lute-, and 5th movement - The Last Scene (Jack the Ripper kills Lulu and Countess Geschwitz)...Even so, Berg was wanted this movements to be perform (to think that, if he can't finish the 3rd Act).
The soloists are excellent, especially Evelyn Lear (as Lulu), Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (as Dr. Schön), Loren Driscoll (as Painter) and Donald Grobe (as Alwa). It is an interesting condition that, actually Karl Böhm isn't a conductor of 20th Century Music. We know with his historic Mozart and R. Strauss recordings. But in this set, he is amazing in both of Wozzeck and Lulu.
Another an interesting condition that, in "Wozzeck", the composer was used a large ensemble (ex. A quadruple orchestra, plus choir) and this is an atonal opera, isn't a 12-tone music at all. In "Lulu", Berg was used a little small ensemble than in Wozzeck (tripled orchestra, no choir), but this is a full 12-tone music. So, this opera is more difficult to reading the partition (of opera) or listen this music with understands than Wozzeck (it is interesting, but, Berg was written more difficult music with a little small ensemble and his first opera "Wozzeck" is more easy to understand or reading the partition but this is scored for large ensemble). Because, Berg was used 12-tone system at all, so, perhaps, this is more difficult to listen, but if you listen more and more, you will enjoy (!) with this music.
And there is a very amazing music in this opera: Interlude - Film Music (in 2nd Act between 1st and 2nd Scenes). In last minutes of 1st Scene, Lulu kills Dr. Schön and she arrests by police with help of Alwa (Doctor's Son). With a fast fall of curtain, Interlude - Film Music starts and there is a show that a (black-white, without colouring and without sound) short film tells, that Lulu's fortune in one year. Because of subject of film, in the music, starts and moves forwards, than music reaches to a centre (of music) and than, the music moves backwards! (This music was used once again in Lulu-Suite as the 1st movement of suite)...
Best tracks: Act 1
No. 2 Canon, No. 4 Melodram - The Death of Professor, No. 5 Arioso of The Painter (this is a very mysterious music), No. 10 Monoritmica (The Rhythm of Death, this rhythm was used in whole opera, in every passages!), No. 12 (Sonata Development)
Act 2:
No. 6 and 7 (Lulu kills Dr. Schon and arrests), No. 8 Film Music (of course!)
Instead of Act 3 (from Lulu-Suite): Variations (because of the Third act wasn't be found yet) and Adagio (Lulu, Countess Geschwitz...Jack the Ripper!)
Highly recommended for any Alban Berg, 20th Century Music or opera admirers.
El mejor Wozzeck en la discografía.......2003-09-28
Karl Böhm realiza una interpretación llena de detalles y el sonido de DG es en ésta grabación digno de mencionarse, con un buen balance y sin la tendencia a los agudos típico de las grabaciones de DG.
Esta grabación es el punto de referencia para las otras que existen y ni la versión de Abbado ni Dohnanyi estan a su altura.
Este set de CDs consta de dos óperas, la ya comentada Wozzeck y Lulú en su versión original incompleta con sólo los dos primeros actos y la suite de Lulú como complemento, pero a pesar de ser una buena interpretación, en esta última ópera recomiendo la versión de Boulez en DG, con la reconstrucción del tercer acto por Friedrich Cerha y con Teresa Stratas como protagonista principal.
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Matthias Goerne - Arias
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart , Richard Wagner , Robert Schumann , Engelbert Humperdinck , Richard Strauss , Erich Wolfgang Korngold , Alban Berg , Matthias Görne , Dorothea Röschmann , Manfred Honeck , and Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000055X2Q Release Date: 2000-12-12 |
Tracks:
- Die Zauberflote: Der Vogelfanger bin ich ja
- Die Zauberflote: Bei Mannern, welche Liebe fuhlen
- Die Zauberflote: Ein Madchen oder Weibchen
- Le nozze di Figaro: Hai gia vinta la causa !
- Le nozze di Figaro: Crudel ! perche finora
- Don Giovanni: Deh, vieni alla finestra
- Tannhauser: Blick ich umher in diesem edlen Kreise
- Tannhauser: Wie Todesahnung...O du mein holder Abendstern
- Szenen aus Goethes Faust: Ein Sumpf zieht am Gebirge hin
- Konigskinder: Verdorben! Gestorben!... Ihr Kindlein, sie sind gefunden
- Ariadne auf Naxos: Harlekinlied
- Die tote Stadt: Mein Sehnen, mein Wahnen
- Wozzeck: Wir arme Leut!
- Wozzeck: Dort links geht's in die Stadt...Du sollst da bleiben, Marie
Amazon.com
Possessor of one of today's most beautiful baritone voices, Matthias Goerne has been associated, on stage and disc, more with lieder than with opera. Listeners who were spellbound by the emotional impact of his performances of Schubert's great song cycles were amazed at the comic perfection of his Papageno in his Metropolitan Opera debut. This recording, on which he creates and impersonates nine vastly different characters from operas spanning three centuries, is an even bigger surprise. Using--but never abusing--an extraordinary range of vocal and expressive color and inflection, he captures Papageno's humor, Count Almaviva's malicious cunning, Don Giovanni's seductiveness, Wolfram von Eschenbach's inward, chaste devoutness, and Wozzek's yearning desperation and madness, with equally total involvement and conviction. Along the way there are also rarities: the Minstrel's heartbreaking lament from Humperdinck's Die Königskinder--unjustly neglected if the rest of the opera is indeed as beautiful as this aria--Harlekin's ironic ditty from Strauss's Ariadne; the Pierrot's sensuous dream-song from Korngold's Die tote Stadt; and the final, heroically dramatic section of Schumann's Scenes from Faust. Soprano Dorothea Röschmann, his partner in four duets, also takes on several greatly varied roles with admirable flexibility. A children's chorus and a women's chorus participate in one aria to lovely effect, and the orchestra is excellent. --Edith EislerCustomer Reviews:
A captivating stage performer doesn't register as dramatically on disc.......2005-09-24
Goerne Excellent in Familiar and Unusual Repertory.......2003-10-10
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Marilyn Horne
Manufacturer: Gala ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00005KAVI Release Date: 2001-05-22 |
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Berg: Wozzeck
Manufacturer: Chandos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00008WQB9 Release Date: 2003-05-20 |
Tracks:
- Slowly, Wozzeck, Slowly! - Andrew Shore
- Wozzeck You Are A Decent Man, And Yet.... - Alan Woodrow
- Andres! This Place Is Accursed! - Andrew Shore
- Listen. There's Something Moving There Below Us - Andrew Shore
- Tschin, Bum, Tschin, Bum Bum, Bum, Bum! - Jean Rigby
- What Will You Do Now, Poor Lamb?... - Dame Josephine Barstow
- Whose There? - Jean Rigby
- This Is Monstrous, Wozzeck! - Andrew Shore
- Wozzeck-Just Like A Lunatic!! - Andrew Shore
- Show Me How You Parade! - Dame Josephine Barstow
Tracks:
- How They Glisten Brightly! - Dame Josephine Barstow
- What's That, There? - Andrew Shore
- Why Are You Rushing, My Dearest Friend - Stuart Kale
- Hey, Wozzeck! - Stuart Kale
- But What Are You Trying To Tell Me, Herr Doktor - Stuart Kale
- Good Morning Franz - Andrew Shore
- Scene Change [Slow Landler]-Taver Music Onstage - Philharmonia Orchestra
- Him! Her! Damn! - Andrew Shore
- A Hunter From The Rhine - Jean Rigby
- And Yet, If A Traveller Pauses - John Graham-Hall
- Mmmmmmm - Jean Rigby
- I Am A Man - Andrew Shore
- And Out Of His Mouth - Dame Josephine Barstow
- And Once There Was A Lonely Child - Dame Josephine Barstow
- And Fallin On Her Knees Before Him - Dame Josephine Barstow
- The Town Is Over There - Andrew Shore
- How The Moon Rises Red! - Andrew Shore
- Dance, Damn You! - Jean Rigby
- The Dagger? Where Is The Dagger - Andrew Shore
- I Ought To Wash Myself Clean - Andrew Shore
- Scene Change [Invention On A Key] - Philharmonia Orchestra
- Ring-A-Ring-A-Roses, All Fall Down - Jean Rigby
Customer Reviews:
A 'Wozzeck' for People Who Thought They Didn't Like It.......2003-09-20
I have loved 'Wozzeck' ever since the Mitropoulos recording made in the early 1950s with Mack Harrell and Eileen Farrell and have owned recordings conducted by Abbado, von Dohnanyi and Böhm. I had never heard it before in English and I have to admit that in this recording I heard and understood things I simply had missed before [and my German is passable]. The diction in this recording is clear and understandable, but Chandos also includes an English libretto to help you understand any of the occasional misheard words.
The rising young English conductor, Paul Daniel, does a remarkable job; he keeps things moving along but also tightens the tension appropriately as we move towards the shattering final scenes. The Philharmonia play the complex score brilliantly. The singers--Andrew Shore as Wozzeck, Josephine Barstow as Marie, Alan Woodrow as the Drum Major, Peter Bronder as Andres, Stuart Kyle as the Doctor, Jean Rigby as Margret--are first-rate and generally the equals of singers on earlier recordings. I had worried that Barstow, who is no longer young, wouldn't sound right as Marie, but indeed she does. For instance, the lullaby ['What will you do now, poor lamb?'] is a perfect combination of gentleness and mounting anxiety. Later, as the drama progresses her tone becomes more harried and harrying. She has always been a good actress and that is in evidence here.
Andrew Shore, as Wozzeck, is as good as I've ever heard. He catches the simple humanity of the man as I've never heard it. He tries so hard to be good and one sees him slipping into insanity in spite of his efforts. In Act III, especially, his singing and acting are riveting.
The marvelous new English translation is by Richard Stokes. It not only preserves the meaning of the German original, but faithfully follows the flow of the music in much the same way the German words--by Berg, after Büchner--do. The recorded sound is state-of-of-the-art.
I suspect this will the recording of 'Wozzeck' I reach for most often.
Recommended.
CD I, Act I, 34:00
CD II, Acts II & III, 57:43
TT=91:43
(There appears to be a small price break on account of the short timing for two CDs.)
Scott Morrison
A new standard in Wozzeck performance.......2003-08-29
So why would anyone want to listen to an opera about a poor deranged soldier who has gone crazy from a mad doctor's experiments and who ultimately murders his girl friend and stumbles into his own death, leaving behind a pathetic little child? The answer is in the extraordinary details of the libretto, which demonstrate extraordinary insights into human nature, as well as some of the most original music ever written. Yes, it's very disturbing, but at the end of the opera one is left with a seriously renewed empathy for the human condition.
Average customer rating:
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Alban Berg: Wozzeck (Opera in 3 Acts) - Franz Grundheber / Hildegard Behrens / Wiener Philharmoniker / Claudio Abbado
Franz Grundheber , Aage Haugland , Peter Jelosits , Werner Kamenik , Wiener Staatsopernchor , and Wiener Philharmoniker Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000001G9D Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Wozzeck: Act One - Scene 1- 'Langsam, Wozzeck, langsam!' (Hauptmann, Wozzeck)
- Wozzeck: Act One - Scene 2 - 'Du, der Platz ist verflucht!' (Wozzeck, Andres)
- Wozzeck: Act One - Scene 3 - 'Tschin Bum...! Horst Bub? Da kommen sie!' (Marie, Wozzeck)
- Wozzeck: Act One - Scene 4 - 'Was erleb' ich, Wozzeck?' (Doctor, Wozzeck)
- Wozzeck: Act One - Scene 5 - 'Geh einmal vor Dich hin...' (Marie, Drum Major)
Tracks:
- Wozzeck: Act Two - Scene 1 - 'Was die Steine glanzen!' (Marie, Wozzeck)
- Wozzeck: Act Two - Scene 2 - 'Wohin so eilig, geehrtester Herr Sargnagel?' (Captain, Doctor, Wozzeck)
- Wozzeck: Act Two - Scene 3 - 'Guten Tag, Franz.' (Marie, Wozzeck)
- Wozzeck: Act Two - Scene 4 - 'Ich hab' ein Hemdlein an, das ist nicht mein...' (Wozzeck, Marie, Drum Major, Andres)
- Wozzeck: Act Two - Scene 5 - 'Oh! Oh! Andres, ich kann nicht schlafen.' (Wozzeck, Andres, Drum Major)
- Wozzeck: Act Three - Scene 1 - 'Und ist kein Betrug in seinem Munde erfunden worden...' (Marie)
- Wozzeck: Act Three - Scene 1 - 'Und kniete hin zu seinen Fussen' (Marie)
- Wozzeck: Act Three - Scene 2 - 'Dort links geht's in die Stadt.' (Marie, Wozzeck)
- Wozzeck: Act Three - Scene 3 - 'Tanzt Alle; tanzt nur zu...!' (Wozzeck)
- Wozzeck: Act Three - Scene 4 - 'Das Messer? Wo ist das Messer?' (Wozzeck, Captain, Doctor)
- Wozzeck: Act Three - Scene 5 - 'Ringel, Ringel, Rosenkranz, Ringelreih'n!'
Amazon.com essential recording
This 1988 Vienna State Opera production of Wozzeck is, to my ears, vastly superior to the 1979 performance by Christoph von Dohnányi with the same orchestra. The entire emotional and dynamic range of the music is here, projected in striking relief. The anxieties of the tale are unflinchingly portrayed, but so, too, are the many moments of tenderness and rapturous beauty. The cast--Franz Grundheber plays the title role and Hildegard Behrens portrays Marie--are skilled dramatists as well as voices, even on record. The disc commemorates one of the rare instances when a company has done justice to the dazzling splendor of Berg's conception. --Joshua CodyCustomer Reviews:
Great orchestra, but Abbado misses the terror and mystery.......2005-09-18
But the singers, reduced sometimes to a secondary attraction, don't catch fire, particularly the Wozzeck of veteran Grundheber, which is just good, middle-of-the-road work. almost every other major Wozzeck on record--Walter Berry, Fischer-Dieskau, Eberhard Waechter, and the first, Mack Harrell--seems much more inspired and dramatically intense. Behrens is a gripping Marie, and her somewhat threadbare voice by this time sounds just right for this worn-out proletarian victim. All in all, a set to value for its orchestral detail but not for the action onstage.
Dirección excelente, interpretes cuestionables........2003-02-25
A Monument in Vienna Opera history.......2001-05-24
Seldom have I heard such unity and congruence in a live performance, even watching it on TV or listening at home. In Berg's Wozzeck, every musical and dramaturgical detail is most important, and this production comes very close to being ideal. Abbado and his vocalists and instrumentalists join each other in a splendid performance in which all efforts come beautifully together to create this monumental human drama. I do not want to repeat here what is said by other reviewers. To me, this recording is a document. It documents the supreme musical and dramatical artistry of Alban Berg which is on the same high level as that of the other supreme master of music and drama, Mozart.
This production is also a monument in Vienna Opera history, as it is one of (or THE) highlight of the artistic leadership of Claudio Abbado, who, together with Claus Helmut Drese as Opera Director at the time, is to be credited for the outstanding quality of many productions at the Vienna State Opera - a quality it has lost since both left this house.
Live is hard, and then there's Alban Berg........2001-04-04
Alban Berg did an incredible job putting the story of Wozzeck, the archetypal innocent loser, to music. Seldom has an opera composer been able to convey heart-wrenching emotions so directly in his music, at no moment falling to the regurgitated cliches so popular in the Italian tradition. Yet, the atmosphere of the opera remains more "latin" than "teutononic". In addition, this works clearly illustrates the virtues of an atonal approach in communicating emotions in a very direct way.
This recording stems from a time that Abbado recorded a little too much for his own good. Recording the Beethoven, Brahms, Schubert, Mendelsohn Symphonies and many other works in just a matter of years often resulted in recordings of Barenboimian mediocrity. The opposite applies here, there is an intensity/electricity that is simply mesmerizing. The recording is of a live performance and stage and audience noises abound. Don't let those and other distractions keep you from buying this set. If you only own one Berg recording, choose this one.
Great conducting, sad inaccurate singing.......2001-01-07
What I'm wondering is why the classic recording with Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Evelyn Lear and the fabulous conducting of Karl Bohm (also on DG) is out of print. When it came out about 8 years ago, in a 3-CD set with "Lulu," I snapped it up, and have enjoyed it ever since.
Save your money on this one. Look for a reissue of the Bohm set.
Average customer rating:
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Berg - Wozzeck / Wächter · Silja · Zednik · Malta · Winkler · Laubenthal · Dohnanyi
Alban Berg , Arnold Schoenberg , Christoph von Dohnanyi , Eberhard Wächter , Anja Silja , Wiener Philharmoniker , Heinz Zednik , Alexander Malta , Hermann Winkler , and Horst Laubenthal Manufacturer: Polygram Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B0000041RN Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Wozzeck: Act I, Scene 1: Langsam, Wozzeck, langsam! - Heina Zednik
- Wozzeck: Act I, Scene 1: Wir arme Leut! Sehn Sie, Herr Hauptmann, Geld, Geld! - Eberhard Waechter
- Wozzeck: Act I, Scene 2: Du, der Platz ist verflucht! - Eberhard Waechter
- Wozzeck: Act I, Scene 3: Tschin Bum, Tschin Bum, Bum, Bum, Bum!
- Wozzeck: Act I, Scene 3: Wer da?
- Wozzeck: Act I, Scene 4: Was erleb' ich, Wozzeck? - Alexander Malta
- Wozzeck: Act I, Scene 5: Geh' einmal vor Dich hin!
- Wozzeck: Act II, Scene 1: Was die Steine glanzen?
- Wozzeck: Act II, Scene 1: Was hast da? - Eberhard Waechter
- Wozzeck: Act II, Scene 2: Wohin so eilig, geerhrtester Herr Sargnagel? - Heina Zednik
- Wozzeck: Act II, Scene 2: He Wozzeck! Was hetzt Er sich so an uns vorbei? - Alexander Malta
- Wozzeck: Act II, Scene 3: Guten Tag, Franz
- Wozzeck: Act II, Scene 4: Ich hab' ein Hemdlein an, das ist nicht mein... - Alfred Sramek
- Wozzeck: Act II, Scene 4: Er! Sie! Teufel! - Eberhard Waechter
- Wozzeck: Act II, Scene 4: Jedoch, wenn ein Wanderer, der gelehnt steht an dem Strom der Zeit - Alfred Sramek
- Wozzeck: Act II, Scene 5: Andres! Andres! Ich kann nicht schlafen - Eberhard Waechter
Tracks:
- Wozzeck: Act III, Scene 1: Und ist kein Betrug in seinem Munde erfunden worden...
- Wozzeck: Act III, Scene 2: Dort links geht's in die Stadt
- Wozzeck: Act III, Scene 3: Tanzt Alle; tanzt nur zu, springt, schwitzt und stinkt - Eberhard Waechter
- Wozzeck: Act III, Scene 4: Das Messer? Wo ist das Messer? - Eberhard Waechter
- Wozzeck: Act III, Scene 5: Ringel, Ringel, Rosenkraz, Ringelreih'n - Vienna State Opr Chor/Balatsch
- Erwartung: Scene 1: Hier hinein? Man Sieht den Weg nicht...
- Erwartung: Scene 2: Ist das noch der Weg? Hier ist es eben
- Erwartung: Scene 3: Da kommt ein Licht!
- Erwartung: Scene 4: Er ist auch nicht da...
- Erwartung: Scene 4: Er ist noch da...Herrgott im Himmel
- Erwartung: Scene 4: Aber so seltsam ist dein Auge...
- Erwartung: Scene 4: Du siehst wieder dort hin?
- Erwartung: Scene 4: Oh! nicht einmal die Gnade, mit dir sterben zu durfen...
- Erwartung: Scene 4: Liebster, Liebster, der Morgen kommt...
Amazon.com
This 1979 version of Berg's imposing drama by Christoph von Dohnányi and the Vienna Philharmonic is a taut performance that single-mindedly pursues the shrill violence of the music. Eberhard Waechter underlines the title character's blinding rage. Dohnányi can draw delicate textures from the orchestra as well as shattering climaxes, but the overall effect is, for most ears, too stressful to be truly pleasurable. Surely the expression of savagery is one key to the opera's power, but other aspects of the composer's multifaceted personality are too often ignored--both in Berg's public reputation and in this recording. --Joshua CodyCustomer Reviews:
A beautifully played but dramatically tepid Wozzeck.......2006-02-20
For anyone who wants a taut, detailed reading, this could have been a good one except for the lamentable casting of Eberhard Waechter in the title role. Long past his vocal prime, Wachter doesn't have enough voice for the part, is unable to push the inner anguish so essential to the character, and seems unwilling to attempt sprechstimme, instead simply singing, which isn't what Berg wanted. Anja Silja makes a dramatic, if wobbly Marie, doing much better with the sprechstimme but with a lack of vulnerability--she's as tough as the Nurse in Frau Ohne Schatten. In all, since this version is out of print, I don't see any reason to search for it.
A Disturbing But Fascinating Opera.......2000-05-03
Dohnanyi handles the orchestra superbly as the tension builds to the jarring chord that represents Wozzeck's act of murder, never charging ahead too fast, never flagging. Also wonderful is the nice tight sound of the recording which really reveals the contrapuntal richness and complexity of Berg's music.
It is also nice to have Schonberg's interesting Erwartung on this disc. It is another chilling tale of love and death that takes the form of a short operatic monologue.
I would recommend this recording with hesitation. Great music and great sound. Enjoy!
Nevertheless, it's a riveting performance........1999-12-19
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Berg: Wozzeck
Alban Berg , Anja Silja , and Karl Bohm Manufacturer: Opera D'oro ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000059LW5 Release Date: 2001-03-06 |
Tracks:
- Act One: Langsam, Wozzeck, Langsam! Eins Nach Dem Andern!
- Act One: Wozzeck, Er Ist Ein Guter Mensch, Aber...
- Act One: Orch Postlude/Du, Der Platz Ist Verflucht!
- Act One: Tschin Bum, Tschin Bum, Bum, Bum, Bum!
- Act One: We Da? Bist Du's Franz? Komm Herein!
- Act One: Was Erleb' Ich, Wozzeck? Ein Mann Ein Wort?
- Act One: Orch Intro/Geh Einmal Vor Dich Hin
Tracks:
- Act Two: Was Die Steine Glanzen! Was Sind's Fur Welche?
- Act Two: Wohin So Eilig, Geehrtester Herr Sargnagel?
- Act Two: He, Wozzeck!...Was Hetzt Er Sich So...
- Act Two: Transitional Passages/Intro/Guten Tag, Franz.
- Act Two: Transitional Passages/Orch Prld (Country Dances)
- Act Two: Lustig, Lustig...Aber Es Riecht...
- Act Two: Wordless Chor Of Sleeping Soldiers
- Act Two: Und Ist Kein Betrug In Seinem Munde...
- Act Three: Dort Links Geht's In Die Stadt.
- Act Three: Tanzt Alle; Tanzt Nur Zu, Springt...
- Act Three: Orch Postlude/Das Messer? Wo Ist Das Messer?
- Act Three: Orch Epilogue/Ringel, Ringel, Rosenkranz
Customer Reviews:
I just posted a comment on the.......2006-07-16
No Stars based on my one clip of this cd. When you hear the Kagel/Berlin Classics then you'll know what a masterpiece this opera can be.
An Astonishing Performance!.......2006-03-09
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