Product Description
-------------------
Olaf Baer, Eric Stoklossa, and Stefan Margita star in Janacek's
rarely performed final opera with Pierre Boulez conducting the
Arnold Schoenberg Chor and Mahler Chamber Orchestra.
.com
----
Few operas match Janáceks From the House of the Dead for
sustained intensity and raw emotional power, especially effective
in this 2007 Aix-en-Provence Festival staging. The opera is an
ensemble work requiring an evenly matched cast of singing actors
and a first-class orchestra under the baton of a conductor who
masters Janáceks but tricky rhythmic patterns, gritty folk-based
melodies, and brilliant orchestration. Thats what it gets in
this staging by Patrice Chéreau and conductor Pierre Boulez,
whose precision and attention to detail amplify the overwhelming
power of the score. This is one of those rare operas where
nothing much happens yet leaves you certain that it has revealed
important aspects of life. Without conventional arias, it
delivers the power of such "highlight" moments through dramatic
monologues and a continuous stream of orchestral music that
illuminates characters and situations. In this late work
completed months before his death, Janácek does in a mere 100
minutes what others strive to do in much longer time spans.
Sharing the honors is a superb cast that brings the opera to
life. You may despise what these people have done to land
themselves in the Siberian gulag of Dostoyevskys novel, but
Janáceks libretto, almost entirely taken and re-ordered directly
from the book, makes you sympathize with their degraded state and
shocked at the cruelty to which they are subjected. Janácek
focuses on six of the prisoners and several relate their stories.
These are uniformly well done, with the first act monologue of
Luca, a tale of how he murdered a prison commander, a gripping
experience. Its balanced in the final Acts story of Shiskov; a
grim tale of how he murdered his wife when she revealed her love
for the villainous Filka, who turns out to be none other than the
prisoner known as Luca. Filka/Luca is powerfully sung and acted
by Stefan Margita, Shiskov by Gerd Grochowski. Olaf Bär sings the
nobleman, a political prisoner roughly stripped of his clothes
and belongings and whos freed in the last Act. He becomes a
her figure to the pallid, retiring Alyeya, brilliantly
realized by Eric Stoklossa, teaching him to read and write and
ministering to him as he lies feverish in the prison hospital.
Special mention must be made of John Mark Ainsley, in the role of
Skuratov, who murdered a rich man who wanted to marry his
sweetheart.
Chéreaus stage direction masterfully focuses attention where it
needs to be, and keeps the dramatic arc flowing in ways that
allow the audience to follow the action not easy on a stage
filled with secondary characters, nearly all male and all in
either shabby prison clothes or green guards uniforms. Thierry
Thieu Niang staged the two brief plays within the opera,
prisoners performances mirroring some of their tales, bursting
with depravity. The sets by Richard Peduzzi are fitting too,
movable walls that reach to the top of the stage and enclose the
prisoners in a claustrophobic setting. Film director Stéphane
Metges camera placements and cutting are virtually always on
target, blending the personal stories in a larger context. Extras
include a 48" film that includes revealing scenes of Boulez and
Chéreau in rehearsal. This is a must-have for anyone interested
in 20th century opera. --Dan Davis
From the House of the Dead is an all-regions disc in 16:9 ratio.
Sound options include PCM Stereo and DTS 5.1 Surround. Sung in
Czech, subtitles include English, German, French, and Spanish.