For what it is, this disc by soprano
Deborah Polaski and tenor
Johan Botha with
Bertrand de Billy leading the Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra can't be beat. Of course, what it is -- the duet from
Wagner's Tristan und Isolde -- is conceptually unusual, though it does make a certain amount of sense. Because while the opera's best-known parts are the Prelude at its beginning and the "Love-Death" at its end, the hard-beating heart of the work is the ecstatic love duet at the center of Act II. Still, there are only four other true duets between the principals in the whole opera, so to fill up the running time this disc also includes the music around the duets: the whole of the fifth scene from Act I and the central scene and finale from Act II. These inclusions necessitate the addition of three other soloists plus the brief appearance of the
Wiener Singverein, but they also create a sense of dramatic continuity that would otherwise be painfully lacking in a program of just duets.
The performances here are so good one regrets the exclusion of much of the opera's music.
De Billy is a straight-ahead dramatic
Wagner conductor, and he obtains committed playing from the Vienna Radio Symphony. But, naturally, the focus is on
Polaski and
Botha, and both deliver exciting performances.
Polaski has a huge voice with an ardent tone and a throbbing vibrato, while
Botha has a heroic voice with a clarion tone and a searing attack, and the combination of the two is just this side of overwhelming. Neither exceedingly nuanced nor especially subtle singers,
Polaski and
Botha go right for the passionate core of
Wagner's music and deliver love duets of great intensity. A full-length recording of the opera by the same forces might reveal more fully developed characterizations, but until that comes along, fans of the works will have to be satisfied with this disc of excerpts. Oehms' super audio digital sound is very clean but still atmospheric.