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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Modern masterpiece, November 28, 2003
Composers have, for years now, taken to adapting the work of rock bands into fully symphonic scores - with varying degrees of success. The best that can be said of most of them (even top-notch efforts, such as the London Symphony Orchestra's adaptations of Pink Floyd songs in "Us and Them: Symphonic Pink Floyd") is that they sound, well, nice. Nice and safe and thoroughly background-like. Without exactly descending to the level of muzak, these arrangements nonetheless easily sink into the background, half-heard during dinner or polite conversation.But German composer Torsten Rasch, working with the Dresden Philharmonic, has done something decidedly beyond mere arrangement, and way beyond transcription, with his orchestral treatment of Rammstein's music. While influences from Wagner to Schoenberg are readily identifiable, his music has the immediacy of an open wound. It's not safe; it's arresting, urgent and dangerous. It gets under your skin in a way that is both lyrical and unsettling. Love or hate it, this music demands your attention, and will not leave you indifferent. Don't think you'll escape Till Lindemann's dark, insinuating lyrics, either. They are the center of "Mein Herz Brennt" which is, after all, a song cycle. It's difficult to imagine his words sung operatically, but they are, by bass Rene Pape. His vocal interpretations lend a Pucciniesque grandeur to songs that could easily be arias from dark, romantic operas of the early Modern period. What operas they would be, if they existed! His singing of the the titular "Mein Herz Brennt" ("My Heart Burns"), which occurs about halfway through the CD, calls to mind the quasi-occult villain of Offenbach's unfinished masterpiece "Tales of Hoffman" -- a kind of evil sandman who brings nightmares. There is sadness and nobility in both his reading and Rasch's exquisite use of orchestral coloring. Pity him, it says, for the nightmares he brings are part of his nature, and they are as beautiful as they are terrifying -- which pretty much sums up this whole work. Pape is accompanied by actress Katharina Thalbach, whose guttural, Gollum-like vocal styling in "Sehnsucht" ("Longing"), "Ich Will" ("I Want"), and "Alter Mann" ("Old Man") blur the piece into the realm of Performance Art. Hers is the voice of a demon or imp. Or perhaps the Id -- at once gleeful and tortured, in ecstasy and pain beyond mortal imagining. Her work in "Herzeleid" ("Heartbreak") is especially unnerving. Imagine the demon-posessed girl from The Exorcist singing one of those heartbroken-heroine-dying-of-consumption arias from any number of grand operas and you get the idea. The orchestration in that song is equally edgy, like an undiscovered section of Stravinsky's "Rite of Spring". "Mein Herz Brennt" is not without consonance, as well. "Seeman" ("Sailor") , "Nebel" ("Mist") , and "Alter Mann" all contain passages of aching beauty, soaring above the pensive tone clusters and changing meters. With all of the tension and dissonance, these sonorous phrases break through the dark clouds like brilliant shafts of sunlight. The most unusual orchestration comes in "Sehnsucht" which, like Rammstein's original version, is heavily seasoned with ethnic Middle-Eastern tonalities. It has a quiet, erotic splendor that moves from the physical to the metaphysical throughout its seven minutes. Finally, the CD wraps up with "Stimmen aus dem Kissen" ("Voices from the pillow" - a phrase from the lyrics of "Mein Herz Brennt"), a purely orchestral work created from numerous motifs and melodies that appear throughout Rammstein's oeuvre. It's an eleven-minute tone-poem that makes for great listening by itself. It's not dinner music either, but rather a dramatic, animated concert piece vaguely reminiscent of Prokofiev's more serious works. Which is not to say that this song cycle is unoriginal. In fact, it represents the possible stirrings of a new genre of modern orchestral music -- one which combines traditional scoring techniques with contemporary sensibilities in the same way that Rammstein's own brand of Industrial Metal combines old-school, danceable rock-and-roll with hip-hop inspired samples and metaphorical, socially-aware lyrics. You have to have pretty eclectic musical tastes to listen fervently to both heavy metal and traditional symphonic music. My own tastes run the gamut from Albinoni to Zappa. If you are of similar temperament, this disc is for you.
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