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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Pacifist Strauss still packs a punch
I think this opera is worth acquiring and not just if you are a Strauss completist. As a big Strauss fan, I drew the line at the interminable "Guntram", and indeed that is the only Strauss opera which is probably performed less often than this one, which still awaits a UK premiere, I believe. It requires a big orchestra and two sterling singers and is awkward to pair with...
Published 22 months ago by Ralph Moore

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0 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars This recording is not the one you want
Don't waste your time with this recording, it sucks. The only good CD is the live recording from Carnegie Hall with soprano Alessandra Marc (conducted by Robert Bass).
Published on January 5, 2009 by Joel


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Pacifist Strauss still packs a punch, March 31, 2010
This review is from: Richard Strauss: Friedenstag (Audio CD)
I think this opera is worth acquiring and not just if you are a Strauss completist. As a big Strauss fan, I drew the line at the interminable "Guntram", and indeed that is the only Strauss opera which is probably performed less often than this one, which still awaits a UK premiere, I believe. It requires a big orchestra and two sterling singers and is awkward to pair with anything else. Additionally, its subject matter is rather arcane and possibly simplistic or sentimental to a modern audience; the irony is that it was frequently performed during the 30's while the Nazis were in the ascendant and no-one in authority seemed to find its message of peace, love and harmony incongruous with Nazi Germany's aggressive rearmament and expansionism. The action is set in the Thirty Years' War, the bloodiest period of internecine strife in German history, but the contemporary relevance must surely have been overt.

The libretto gave Strauss the devil's own job; it is a fairly high-flown collaboration between Stefan Zweig, (who, being Jewish, had to beat a hasty retreat but still kept an eye on things) and his librettist successor Josef Gregor. Both were sincere but had less of an ear for drama and dialogue than the composer himself; meanwhile he was typically too deferential to men of letters, just as he had been with Hofmannsthal. I have read some pretty damning things about both the opera and this recording, but have to say that they give me pleasure and neither the opera itself nor Sinopoli's performance is anywhere near as bad as some maintain, despite some mild longueurs, especially at the beginning.

First, the Staatskapelle is superb; from 1992 until his death, Sinopoli inspired what was already a truly world-class orchestra. Secondly, despite reviews to the contrary, the singing is equally impressive: Albert Dohmen at times sounds very much like George London and brings the heft and authority of a seasoned Wotan to the role of the Commander. He is certainly preferable to Weikl's bleaty sound in the rival Sawallisch recording. Deborah Voigt is phenomenal: touching and feminine in her vulnerablity yet whacking out some terrific top C's in the final, rousing paean to Peace. I do not hear any unsteadiness, discoloration or steeliness in her tone, just hear one great dramatic soprano giving it all she's got and employing a trenchant lower register as required. Just as Dohmen is superior to Weikl, she is far preferable to Sabine Haas. Perhaps neither has the majesty of Hotter and Ursuleac but they do not have the advantage of high-tech sound, having been recorded in 1939. Supporting parts are well taken, especially Botha's caricatured Italian tenor, recalling a more celebrated role in "Der Rosenkavalier".

The music is not consistently first-rate - some of what Pauline Strauss called "note-spinning" obtrudes - and there are plenty of echoes of other Strauss operas, not least how the opening, with guards on watch, reminds us of the start of "Salome" and how the blazing C major finale of "Friedenstag" recalls that of "Die Frau ohne Schatten" - but those last pages really make the most glorious noise when performed con gusto by Sinopoli and his willing forces. I thoroughly enjoy the work and even confess to finding many ideas moving - such as the entwining of the personal sorrow of the Commander's wife with her spirited appeal for reconciliation, or the elation of that last chorale. There is also a recording of a good live performance featuring the splendid Alessandra Marc, but on balance this recording seems the best choice, in that we have music here to which Sinopoli was especially temperamentally suited.
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1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Enthusiastic Voigt's Singing,Uninspired Strauss' Opera, February 16, 2005
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This review is from: Richard Strauss: Friedenstag (Audio CD)
Not the best Strauss' music ever but a very deserving recording by late Sinopoli and his team.This "Day of Peace" was conceived during NazisxStrauss crisis because his collaboration with jewish Stefan Zweig,then replaced by livret writer Joseph Gregor.By listening "Friedenstag",it's possible to realize that Strauss didn't like Gregor's lines;in despite of some interesting achievements(the people-choir beseeching for food,the reconciliation between the two rivals commandants))this one act-opera reserves its best music bars to Maria,the only character that has a name(others gain patents,only).I supposed this recording should be a must have to Voigt's admirers;there're another cd version with Alessandra Marc but surely,Maria is just perfect to Voigt's singing and she fulfils a so enthusiastic performance that listener will be intoxicated by her vocal radiance and that big amount of hot top C's on final.Her phrasing over "But a day must come when waiting ends;beloved,I want the truth!I want you!" is one of the most beautiful I heard on discs ever.I didn't like her partner,Albert Dohmen(the Commandant)'cause I think he has a strange vocal texture or,in another words,a rough voice,besides that exaggerated diction on surrender scene.Botha sings well finished his poetical and italianate character and Sinopoli pulls out the best of this score with his fine orchestra and chorus.Like a huge Strauss fan,I think this cd an absolutely unmissable one.
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0 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars This recording is not the one you want, January 5, 2009
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Joel (Jackson, MS) - See all my reviews
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Don't waste your time with this recording, it sucks. The only good CD is the live recording from Carnegie Hall with soprano Alessandra Marc (conducted by Robert Bass).
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Richard Strauss: Friedenstag
Richard Strauss: Friedenstag by Richard [1] Strauss (Audio CD - 2002)
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