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| Artists: Renee Fleming, Strauss, Mnpo, Thielemann Creators: Richard Strauss, Christian Thielemann Label: Decca Category: Music
List Price: $21.98 Buy New: $13.96 You Save: $8.02 (36%)
New (27) Used (7) from $13.96
Avg. Customer Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 1876
Format: Deluxe Edition, Extra Tracks Media: Audio CD Discs: 2 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 5.5 x 5 x 0.5
UPC: 028948013203 EAN: 0028948013203 ASIN: B001D27GKQ
Release Date: September 16, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
| Showing reviews 6-8 of 8 | | « PREV | | |
Stunning September 17, 2008 7 out of 10 found this review helpful
This is a must have for Renee fans. It is different from the original 10 years ago, but this CD was recorded live. She stands alone in the world with the most glorious and intoxicating voice. I have seen her live 3 times and she was totally AMAZING. I have been waiting for a live recording of the Four Last Songs since I saw her on PBS a few years back and this CD is well worth the wait.
A modern interpretation by a voice born to sing Strauss September 16, 2008 18 out of 18 found this review helpful
Many people will be surprised by the negativity of the comments by bert1761, the first and previous reviewer of this disc. First, let me say that I deplore the practice of some Amazon readers who give another reviewer a negative vote simply because they do not agree with the opinion expressed. I think "bert" writes honestly, more in sorrow than in anger, and that his is a thoughtful, intelligent, sincerely held opinion that deserves careful consideration. I know what he means by the overt expressiveness of Fleming's interpretation but I do not agree that it is obtrusive or excessive. The voice is in wonderful condition and she is able to sustain the line with apparently effortless ease - except when she clearly chooses to disrupt it deliberately for emotive effect. The lower register is rich and characterful - you can hear its development just from the resonance of Renee's speaking voice in the publicity interviews on this website - and the top soars as creamily and amply as ever; I hear no strain anywhere. Her German is of course impeccable and her breath control a thing of wonder. I, too, am a great fan of Janowitz's and Te Kanawa's (earlier version with Davis) more restrained, classical interpretations, but Fleming's "Im Abendrot", for example, still works its magic for me. She is perhaps delivering here on record more of what you might hear in a live performance (indeed, I believe these are live takes - although you'd never know), when your communicative gestures can be more emphatic than in a recording - but slightly idiosyncratic instances of vocal colouring and verbal inflection can, on repeated listenings, become a little quirky and irritating. Nonetheless, this is an immediate, heartfelt interpretation of these inexhaustibly moving songs and very much a performance for the modern listener who needs and expects more individuality to distinguish one version from another. Furthermore, the recorded sound is technically marvellous; I have never heard so much detail in the orchestration of these songs.
The subsequent Strauss arias and songs are a glorious addition to her discography; Fleming was born to sing this composer - and just as she would opt to sing Strauss over any other composer for the voice, I would choose Fleming to interpret him. I cannot hear any inadequacy in her lower register in the first extended "Ariadne" excerpt and I rank this disc with her earlier selection of Strauss "bon-bons" with Susan Graham and Barbara Bonney. The bonus arias on the second disc in the Deluxe Edition are testament to her versatility and supremacy in other composers, especially Tchaikovsky's Tatyana.
So I respectfully beg to differ from the previous reviewer's judgement - but would fiercely defend and welcome his right to express it, prompting, as it does, civilised debate.
3-1/2 stars solely because of the "bonus" material September 16, 2008 18 out of 25 found this review helpful
As one can see from my other reviews, I have long been enraptured by the voice and talent of Renee Fleming. But what I have found spellbinding in the past is nowhere to be encountered on this CD. Gone are the creamy vocals, superior musicianship and tremendous intelligence. In their place appears to be tremendous indulgence.
This recording of the "Four Last Songs" could not be any more different from Ms. Fleming's 1995 recording. In that recording, her beautiful legato singing and sensitive phrasing produced a stunning and intimate performance to stand alongside the greats -- even though Ms. Fleming had never performed them live at the time and was only in her mid-30s. In the current recording, her phrasing and singing is very choppy -- as though she needs to find a different color for every word. While she is arguably interpreting the poems set to music, Strauss could never have intended one to do so at the expense of the gorgeous lines of his music. Moreover, this performance feels as though Ms. Fleming is "overacting" her part as interpreter, much in the same way she marred her up-to-that-point-excellent performance in Gergiev's Verdi Requiem by treating the Libera Me in many respects as though it were an operatic mad scene.
Things improve somewhat after the Four Last Songs, but not by much. The second excerpt from "Ariadne auf Naxos" is excellent, but the first lies too low for her voice and causes her to make some uncomfortable noises from her lower register and, while much of her performance of "Es gibt ein Reich" is beautiful, she sounds strained at the end and detracts from much of what came before. The orchestral songs that follow may be the best thing on the disc, but it may be because one's associations with those pieces are nowhere near as strong as with the "Four Last Songs" and "Ariadne" excerpts, so that Ms. Fleming does not come across as mannered and indulgent.
The problems with this recording are highlighted even more by the inclusion of the bonus material on the Deluxe Edition. But if one is a newcomer to Ms. Fleming's work and is not deterred from purchasing this recording because of the Four Last Songs, the Deluxe Edition is well worth the expenditure. (My rating for the "Standard Edition" of this CD is only 2 stars.) Excerpts from some of her earlier recordings show her at the height of her powers, deploying her magnificent voice beautifully and appropriately dramatically. Her performance of Tatyana's letter scene from "Eugene Onegin" is may particular favorite. And having heard her perform it at the Met two years ago, I know that she is still capable of such magnificent work. (And you can see for yourself on the DVD of that performance. Tchaikovsky - Eugene Onegin / Fleming, Vargas, Hvorostovsky, Gergiev, Carsen [Metropolitan Opera 2007])
Alternatively, someone interested in hearing the best of Renee Fleming can purchase any or all of the following: Renee Fleming - Signatures ~ Great Opera Scenes / Sir Georg Solti; Renee Fleming - Strauss Heroines / Bonney, Graham, Eschenbach; Renee Fleming - The Beautiful Voice ~ Gounod, Lehar, Orff, Puccini, Rachmaninov, Strauss; Renee Fleming - I Want Magic! ~ American Opera Arias; and Strauss: Four Last Songs; Songs with Orchestra; Rosenkavalier Suite.
Oh for the good old days...
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