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Arts & Entertainment Preview - February 1998

Classical Music
B Y   A U S T I N   B A E R


A More Perfect Union


Håkan Hagegård (right)

Just about everyone acknowledges that The Marriage of Figaro is the perfect opera. But where is a perfect cast? Record collectors (a fanatical breed) and hoarders of pirated tapes (still more fanatical) tend to find their favorites in the archives. True enough, stellar artists have been serving Mozart's wondrous comedy gloriously since the dawn of recorded sound, but the parade continues. This month the Lyric Opera of Chicago fields what would rank as a dream ensemble in any age (February 11 - March 8; 312-332-2244, ext. 500). At the top of the comedy's social ladder are Håkan Hagegård and Renée Fleming as the jealous philanderer Count Almaviva and his dejected Countess. Bryn Terfel and Elizabeth Futral appear as their quick-witted servants Figaro and his bride-to-be, Susanna, on whom the Count has cast his roving eye. Susan Graham adds to the erotic confusion as the skirt-chasing pageboy Cherubino, aflame with teenage hormones. Critics often say that although today's opera stars have a facility with different styles and languages which earlier generations would envy, they lack the spark of personality. In the case of the Lyric's Figaro team no such complaint applies. Terfel, in particular, is a grand original. As Figaro, he never leaves any doubt of his tenderness for Susanna, yet he has a temper. Departing from sprightly tradition, he plays a possessive man and a dangerous one. The opera ends on a famously conciliatory note, but the play by Beaumarchais on which it is based was incendiary: a harbinger if not indeed a cause of the French Revolution. Without playing Mozart false, Terfel brings out the undercurrents.


Another Season Under His Baton


Other orchestras tour with their music directors. For the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra that is not an option. Unlike any other symphony orchestra of significant standing, the VPO is self-governing. The players themselves, not some authority figure with a stick, take charge of shaping their collective identity. For its annual visits to Carnegie Hall since 1984 -- concerts invariably numbered among the season's brightest -- the VPO has deliberately rotated maestros, drawing from an all-star stable including Karajan, Solti, Bernstein, Maazel, Abbado, Levine, Ozawa, and Barenboim. This year's leader is Riccardo Muti, which is cause for special celebration. His seasons as the music director of the Philadelphia Orchestra, from 1980 to 1992, live in memory as a golden age, but of late the maestro has been a stranger to his American public, dividing his time chiefly between Milan's fabled opera house, La Scala, and the VPO.


Riccardo Muti conducting the VPO


An immaculate technician blessed with a rare dramatic intensity and an exceptional flair for pulse and color, Muti has long enjoyed a unique rapport with the VPO. Paradoxically, material that the players possess as if by birthright sounds under his baton not "classical" but fresh-minted. The New York programs begin with Mozart, in which the Muti-VPO partnership sets standards for transparency, grace, and sense of drama. Muti makes no specialty of Mahler, whose largely tortured, self-lacerating canon he mostly leaves to others, but his reading with the VPO of the sunny Symphony No. 4 casts a golden glow. Beethoven, Brahms, and Hindemith complete what will surely be three evenings to remember (February 27 - March 1; 212-247-7800).


The Gospel According to Bach


Bach's Passion comes alive

In the history of Western painting and sculpture Jesus Christ has been a superstar for centuries. In music only Johann Sebastian Bach ever brought Him to life in any fashion that music lovers and the faithful deem sufficient. In fact, he did so more than once, but most memorably in the majestic St. Matthew Passion. The oratorio interpolates ornate arias and chorales in a congregational style into a setting of the gospel text that is mostly spare in the extreme. The part of Jesus adds not a syllable to what we read in the Bible. Except for His last words ("My God, why hast Thou forsaken me?"), His utterances are accompanied by the string section, creating a halo of sound, but only once does the vocal line rise to true song. The passage occurs during the Last Supper, when Jesus invites the disciples to drink the wine. This month, in performances by the New York Philharmonic under Kurt Masur, these haunting lines are entrusted to Matthias Goerne (February 12 - 17; 212-875-5030). At Easter time Wolfgang Holzmair delivers them with the Boston Symphony Orchestra under Seiji Ozawa, in Boston (April 8 - 11; 617-266-1200) and at Carnegie Hall (April 15, 16; 212-247-7800). These are artists between whom it is simply impossible to choose. Goerne's is the more dramatic instrument, Holzmair's the more lyrical. But on recent albums of Schubert songs (Goerne's on Hyperion and London, Holzmair's on Philips) both baritones reveal the same almost scary ability to dive beneath the surface, capturing in an inflection the deepest, most evanescent states of soul and mind.


Austin Baer is a writer based in New York.

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