FURTWÄNGLER Wagner Ring Cycle: 4. Götterdämmerung (1953, Rome) - PACO060
Furtwängler's mighty 1953 Ring Cycle - Part 4. Götterdämmerung
The monumental finale to this superlative performance
"Pristine deserves nothing but praise for what it has done"
The final instalment in Furtwängler's superb Italian Radio Ring, Götterdämmerung
offers for much of its duration perhaps the finest sound of the entire
cycle. With each act being recorded on a different day, one notices
slight changes in quality, and for me the best of the lot technically,
from Das Rheingold onwards, is to be found in the second act
here. From a musical point of view it is also interesting to assess how
Furtwängler and the Italian orchestra increasingly gel through the
performances, and listening to Götterdämmerung leaves little
doubt that by this point all the musicians, soloists and conductor were
performing with a single, unified vision and purpose.
However, this does not mean to say that Götterdämmerung
didn't through up a whole heap of technical difficulties to be
addressed. As with all the Ring operas I found hundreds upon hundreds of
thumps, like someone stamping on a wooden stage. Götterdämmerung was no exception, though inexplicably not all of the acts in all of the operas suffered this, and here Act Two escaped.
Tape hiss too was barely noticed during Act 2, though a
major issue throughout Act 3 and here quite variable. Act 2 suffered
other short noise problems which, although simple enough to deal with
singly, involved again hundreds of individual, manual interventions and
many hours of work. The greatest difficulty, though, was reserved for
the final act of the entire Ring - extensive sections of
repeated treble dropout at approximately quarter-second intervals,
repairable only by hand-selecting each section and boosting it
sufficiently to smooth it out - a hugely tedious and time-consuming
task. Curiously I noticed the same problem afflicting the first 45
minutes or so of the EMI CD transfer of Act 1, yet it was happily absent
from EMI's original 1972 LPs used here.
Overall, the end result I hope more than justifies the
time and effort spent in restoring it and remastering it. The
transformation here with XR remastering has been quite amazing to hear
and hugely rewarding - one embarks on lengthy projects such as this
without any firm idea of how much success (or otherwise) one might be
fortunate enough to witness. To paraphrase Furtwängler's words slightly,
and echo them back to the conductor with perhaps some similar feelings
after spending several weeks almost entirely immersed in Wagner, "I hope
he would have been satisfied with me"!
Andrew Rose