[Met Performance] CID:138810



Die Meistersinger von N?rnberg
Metropolitan Opera House, Sat, February 10, 1945 Matinee Broadcast





Die Meistersinger von N?rnberg (230)
Richard Wagner | Richard Wagner
Hans Sachs
Herbert Janssen

Eva
Eleanor Steber

Walther von Stolzing
Charles Kullman

Magdalene
Kerstin Thorborg

David
John Garris

Beckmesser
Gerhard Pechner

Pogner
Emanuel List

Kothner
Mack Harrell

Vogelgesang
Morton Bowe

Nachtigall
Hugh Thompson

Ortel
Osie Hawkins

Zorn
Richard Manning

Moser
Lodovico Oliviero

Eisslinger
Karl Laufk?tter

Foltz
Lorenzo Alvary

Schwarz
John Gurney

Night Watchman
Louis D'Angelo


Conductor
George Szell





Note: The opera began at 1:30 and the broadcast at 2:00.
The opera began at 1:30 and the broadcast at 2:00.

Review 1:

Review of radio transmission on station KGKO, Dallas by John Rosenfeld in the Dallas Morning News

There's Music in the Air:

Wagner's "Meistersinger" Gets Tight, Balanced Performance Under Baton of George Szell

The BLUE NETWORK'S broadcast of Wagner's 'Die Meistersinger" was the first in five years and only the fourth since the Metropolitan Opera went on the air. We remember no better performance over loud-speaker nor can recall one in the opera house that was so apparently warm and ardent. The hero was patently George Szell, the conductor, who realized the need of balancing both the vocally massive and orchestrally symphonic into a sustained frolic of almost four hours. This takes a large order of taste and virtuosity and even a larger quantity of know-how. Never during the long reign of the late and respected Artur Bodanzky over the Metropolitan's German repertoire, did "Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg" sing in such true and Wagnerian style.

The voices of Eleanor Steber and Charles Kullman as Eva and Walter respectively had the range, body and youthful quality asked by the music and so seldom available among Teutonic routiniers. The suave lyricism of Herbert Janssen, often miscast for the music of Wagnerian deities and warriors, was right enough for Hans Sachs except for the nethermost reaches. Better was Gerhard Pechner's Donald Duckish Beckmesser. Among the mastersingers the Kothner of Mack Harrell was outstanding. Emanuel List, basso, was an unfortunately tremulous Pogner. We have no way of knowing the comic charm of John Garris' David but it was expert vocally.

There is hardly the time or place to reconsider "Die Meistersinger" in this, its seventy-seventh year. It is a comic opera only in the fact that it ends happily and generally avoids the major glooms and tensions. Wagner was no prankster but he did qualify as a satirist. His critical enemies, the musical conservatives and doctrinaire Viennese writer, Hanslick, were especially the butts of his jests. The Mastersinger Guild itself might be construed as the musical establishment of Europe that ignored Wagner's innovational music dramas. In one instance, however, Wagner exhibited a flamboyant genius akin to Babe Ruth's pointing to a spot in the grandstand and then knocking a home run into it. Wagner builds the entire action of "Die Meistersinger" to the climax of Walther's Prize-Song, which has to be so good, so moving, so passionate, and so winning as to triumph over the complications of the plot. The Prize-Song is just that good and was delivered Saturday in a manner it deserved.

"Die Meistersinger" is a prodigious achievement both in libretto and music. None who hear it today will outlive it. Exigencies of broadcasting deprived listeners of the great Prelude, the [first act] chorale and several delectable bits.



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