( 3 Customer Reviews )
A Rival for Karajan May 21, 2013
By M A B. (Lower Hutt, New Zealand) See All My Reviews
"I was unsure what to expect from this recording, with all the weight of expectation at the name of Domingo. But I was gratified to find that, as ever with Wagner, that the orchestra and conductor are the decisive factor - and Thielmann and the Vienna State Opera deliver. Perhaps Karajan's singing cast was finer across the board, despite the obsessive concerns about Peter Hofmann by some critics. Domingo is outstanding, Meier even better.....and that orchestral playing! I would have given this 4.5 stars, on the basis that nothing is perfect, but either way, it is very fine and a long-awaited rival to the other DGG version."
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Thielemann's superb reading September 21, 2012
By Rory R. (Winnipeg, MB) See All My Reviews
"Everyone should listen to this recording, even if you have a favourite performance of the past. Thielemann's measured, yet intense, calm yet passionate, beautifully crafted performance brings out the score's spiritual longing perhaps better than anyone. It isn't a strikingly 'dramatic' performance, but the conflicts, which in Parsifal are mainly inner turmoils, are simply and eloquently displayed. No need to add to the praise for Meier; this is arguably the finest Kundry recorded, and Domingo makes you wish he had sung more Wagner in his career. At this stage of his long career, it suits him perfectly. It's a performance which you may find haunts you for days after in a quiet way."
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A very fine PARSIFAL from Thielemann and Domingo April 3, 2012
By Boyd Cathey (Wendell, NC) See All My Reviews
"Christian Thielemann has already established himself as a master interpreter of Wagner's works. This new PARSIFAL confirms and adds an exclamation point to that reputation. While Thielemann will not efface the indeliable memory of the various Knappertsbusch PARSIFALs(especially the 1950, 1962, and 1962, all from Bayreuth) or perhaps the commercial Solti and von Karajan, he certainly continues and holds high that remarkable central European tradition. The Vienna Philharmonic knows its repertoire by heart and literally "sings" as no other. And Placido Domingo? Incredibly he once more "becomes" Parsifal, perhaps with not as much sheen as a few years back, but still wonderfully fluent and convincing. Other roles, including Franz Selig (as a more lyrical Gurnemanz) and Waltraud Meier, are well handled, and sonically this presentation is state of the art. All in all, a very worthy release to be treasured."
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