Stephen Milling’s Landgrave has noble force, and Emma Bell’s Elisabeth is commandingly expressive. But the chorus is wonderful, the playing under Hartmut Haenchen’s direction has luminous purity, and three singers repeatedly steal the show. He’s an old hand, but his voice sounds strained and hard – sad, given that Sophie Koch makes such an effective foil as Venus. Tim Albery’s production makes two nods towards modernity – through an unexplained crowd of refugees herded by guards, and through that well-worn cliché of a theatre-within-a-theatre which progressively disintegrates – but for the most part it simply focuses on the words, and encourages us to savour the music without any conceptual overlay.Īnd in these terms our pleasure is not unalloyed, particularly with regard to Peter Seiffert in the title role. Tannhäuser forsakes the fleshly delights of the Venusberg for a life of struggle and suffering on earth: Wagner’s medieval Christian allegory can be interpreted in many ways, but it chimes surprisingly neatly with one finding of contemporary neuroscience - to the effect that the unbridled pursuit of pleasure yields ever-diminishing pleasures in return.
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