In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:
  • Doktor Faust
  • Travis D. Stimeling
Ferruccio Busoni. Doktor Faust. DVD. Philippe Jordan/ Zurich Opera and the Chorus and Orchestra of the Zurich Opera House. With Thomas Hampson, Günther Groissböck, Gregory Kunde, Reinaldo Macias, Sandra Trattnigg, and Martin Zysset. Leipzig: Arthaus Musik, 2006. 101 283. $45.98.

The medieval astrologer and alchemist Johann Faust was an icon of nineteenth-century Europe. In the century between the publication of Goethe's Faust: der Tragödiein 1808 and 1910, the year Ferruccio Busoni began to work on the libretto for his opera [End Page 555] Doktor Faust, Faust came to embody a growing discomfort with the scientific revelations of the Industrial Revolution. In its nineteenth-century version, Faust came to represent the belief that, as pagan thinker John Yohalem has observed, "too much knowledge is still too much" (John Yohalem, "Beating the Devil: What Meaning Does the Faust Legend Have for Us Today?" Opera News69, no. 10 [1 April 2005]: 37). Busoni's fragmentary Doktor Faust, completed posthumously by his student Philipp Jarnach in 1925, masterfully interrogates the psychological impact of the quest for knowledge and presents Faust not as an awesome figure in command of unholy power but as a fragile and fearful man on a futile quest.

Busoni differentiated his Faust from Goethe's more familiar version by drawing upon earlier versions of the Faust legend, omitting Gretchen, and casting Wagner as an insubstantial character. The structure of the opera is unconventional; its two prologues (Vorspiele), an intermezzo, and three acts (Hauptspiele) present a series of tableaux that highlight portions of the Faust legend but that offer little in terms of plot. In the opening Vorspiel, Faust broods in his study, where three students from Krakow present him with magical talismans. At midnight, Faust invokes the gift's power and enters into a pact with Mephisto pheles. Faust exploits his powers for the first time in a romantic chapel where he and Mephisto pheles encounter a soldier who is plotting to avenge the death of his sister (an allusion to the Gretchen tragedy). To save himself, Faust commands Mephistopheles to murder the soldier. Faust and Mephistopheles then travel to a wedding celebration for the Duke of Parma. Faust conjures the images of several biblical lovers and seduces the new Duchess. Leaving the court, Faust is next in Wittenberg, where, in the middle of a debate with students, he is reminded of his affair with the Duchess. Mephistopheles appears immediately, bringing news of his lover's death and the corpse of Faust's child, which he turns to straw and sets ablaze. In the flames, the image of Helen of Troy appears. Faust reaches out to embrace it but fails, causing him to realize that "man is no equal for absolute perfection." The students from Krakow reappear to reclaim their gift, signifying that Faust's end is nigh. The final scene finds Faust outside a church, where he encounters the Duchess (disguised as a beggar), who offers him the body of their child. Faust accepts the child, breathes his spirit into it, and dies.

The 2006 Zurich Opera production of the Jarnach version of Doktor Faustis an important contribution to the growing corpus of recordings of both twentieth- and twenty-first-century opera and Busoni's own compositions. Although the opera's extensive instrumental music has been treated more extensively on recordings, this DVD release increases the number of complete recordings by fifty percent, joining the acclaimed 2000 Opera National de Lyon compact disc (which features the ending composed by Antony Beaumont in 1984) and Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau's classic 1969 performance with the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra and Chorus (now outof print). The performances offered by Thomas Hampson (Faust), Günther Groissböck (Mephistopheles), and Sandra Trattnigg (Duchess of Parma) are spectacular, capturing the intensity of the work's psychological drama and humanizing characters that, because of the opera's fragmentary structure, have little opportunity to develop. Moreover, while the orchestration, offstage chorus, and live setting certainly must have posed numerous challenges for the disc's recording engineers, the audio quality is generally superb and, with few exceptions, allows the viewer to appreciate the...

pdf

Share