Product Description
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To celebrate the 200th anniversary of Beethoven's birth in 1970,
German television took Fidelio into the studio and filmed the
Deutsche Oper Berlin's production of the composer's only opera.
Karl Böhm, well-known as a master conductor of this opera, leads
an astonishing performance which emphasizes orchestral clarity
and emotional depth. The conductor leads a strong cast headed by
the glorious Gwyneth Jones and powerful James King in the
starring roles. First time on DVD! "Gwyneth Jones sang a
passionate Leonore...James King was a Florestan on the summit of
his vocal expression." (Berliner Morgenpost)
.com
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Beethovens only opera, Fidelio is often problematic in
performance but this 1970 production by the Deutschen Opera
Berlin with an all-star cast led by conductor Karl Böhm, dispels
all reservations. The opera houses production was moved to a
studio where it was filmed with barely a hint of lip-synch
problems. Video director Ernst Wilds fluid camera movements and
closeups render the story more , and thus more
believable. The sets and period costumes by Wilhelm Reinking are
effective without overtly calling our attention to them, an
indication that the music comes before flashy visuals that may
compete for our attention. The same can be said for the staging
by Gustav Rudolf Sellner. The story of injustice and tyranny and
abuse of political prisoners unfortunately carries a contemporary
relevance. Still, the story of Leonore, the prisoners wife who
dons male attire, gets a job at the prison, and saves her husband
from the murderous Pizzaro does require suspended belief as does
the last-minute arrival of the Kings minister who sets
everything right. What makes Fidelio so powerful is Beethovens
music, especially when performed with the intensity of this cast
and Böhm, a masterful Beethoven conductor who gets everything
right here. He exposes the tensions underlying the light-hearted
banter at the start of Act I, makes the Prisoners Chorus
heart-wrenching, and sparks the joyful ending. His tempos and the
playing he elicits from the chorus and orchestra are superb. It
helps that he has a first-class international cast at his
disposal. Soprano Gwyneth Jones had a reputation for uneven
singing but in 1970 she was in fine vocal shape and her voice
easily handles the roles demands. Her Abscheulicher aria is
spine-tingling and her acting throughout is more than convincing.
A surprise here is Olivera Miljakovic, as Marzelline, the jailors
daughter, who sings with a fresh, bright voice that blends well
in ensembles. The men are uniformly excellent. Tenor James King
is a powerful Florestan, the prisoner in the dungeon, singing
with anguished tones that capture the mans desperation. As the
foolish but good hearted jailor, Josef Greindl acts and sings
well, as does the bad guy, the prison governor, Pizarro, sung by
another Bayreuth stalwart, Gustav Neidlinger. And to have a great
basso like Martti Talvela in whats really a cameo role as the
Kings Minister, is icing on a very enticing cake. This is about
as good a DVD Fidelio as we have. --Dan Davis
Fidelio is an all-regions color disc in 4:3 ratio. Sound options
include PCM Stereo and DTS 5.1 Surround. Sung in German,
subtitles are available in English, French, German, Spanish and
Chinese.