Most helpful critical review
13 of 22 people found the following review helpful
1The sting is in this tale
BySparky "Rob"on April 28, 2008
As a young lad more comfortable "shaking my booty" at a big club, I concede that I'm a bit tight when it comes to the fine points of opera. Fortunately my worldly wife has given me a foot up, and together I'm proud that we've managed to lick a few of the tougher ones. Alas, this bloated tome of intellectual guff does little to spread Willy Wagner's Ringsicle (as my wife affectionately calls it) to a wider audience. And I had such big hopes that it would explode the famous preconceptions of the Ring as being accessible only to stiffs and boffins!
I have been invited to the opera by Di Gaetani on previous occasions, and I can still feel how generous his endowment is to the Arts. There's no doubt that his love of the piece flows liberally through the book as he lets the authors show off their insides and analyses. Editorially, however, the strained effort to connect their diverging perspectives leaves me only with a meandering mess: and wurst, a blown opportunity to crack the ADD generation. For instance, while out watching the spectacle with my wife I tried and failed to insert myself into the action using this guide as a kind of "theatrical lubricant". As a seasoned goer (to the opera), my missus quickly relieved herself of any responsibility, but I had to pull the plug early, leaving deflated -- thanks to this bumf! Although I couldn't put my finger on any particular offending article in this collection, the rub is that my head was sore from trying to absorb the highbrow material. At least comfort comes from knowing that I can get through the end of Tristan and Isolde without losing my bottle.