

“Forgetting forms a part of all actions,” Nietsche wrote in one of his pamphlets. “To (over)live, one must sometimes destroy one’s past.” Korngold should know, because with those very words you can sum up the real themes of his most famous opera, Die Tote Stadt.

“A scene from the original 1920 Hamburg production of Die tote Stadt. From left to right: Walter Diehl (Graf Albert); Josef Degler (Fritz) Anny Münchow (Marietta); Felix Rodemund (Gaston); and Paul Schwartz (Victorin).”
Die Tote Stadt had its world premiere simultaneously in Cologne (directed by Otto Klemperer) and Hamburg on 4 December 1920, after which the whole world followed. Before the war, it was the most played of all contemporary operas.
RENÉ KOLLO (once RCA, now Sony)

“After 1938, Die Tote Stadt was no longer performed. Only in the 1970s did a cautious comeback begin. The first studio recording of the opera dates from that time (1975).
Unfortunately, the text booklet (which is otherwise well cared for with the well reproduced synopsis and the complete libretto in two languages) does not tell the ‘why’ of that release. I would have liked to know who exactly conceived the idea of recording Die Tote Stadt, all the more so since the work was still considered inferior at the time.
Even Leinsdorf never concealed the fact that he did hold the work in high esteem. And yet he conducts it as if it were a masterpiece. Perhaps he gradually came to believe in it? He gives the opera the grandeur of a monument and the lustre of gold. Particularly exciting and energetic, he leads the brilliantly playing Munich Radio Orchestra through the score. At the end of the first act, when Marie’s portrait comes to life, you imagine yourself in the middle of the dream scene from Hitchckock’s ‘Spellbound’, and even without the image the tension is up for grabs.
There is also excellent singing, although I have a bit of trouble with Kollo in his deman
Wiecej TUTAJ
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