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Showing posts with label Bayreuth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bayreuth. Show all posts

The Bluffers Guide To: Frank Castorf

Written By The Wagnerian on Thursday, 27 October 2011 | 9:30:00 pm


Frank Castorf
UPDATE: Never say you didn't hear it here first - unless you didn't. As discussed back in July 2011, 2013's Bayreuth Ring will be in the hands of Frank Castorf (see here). Once again, I present the bluffers guide to all things Castorf. You'll be in demand at your next Wagner Society meeting - maybe


Yes that Frank Castorf. Nearly as well known as Wim Wenders of course and needs no introduction we are sure.

What? You have never heard of him? The man whos best productions have been called "illogical", "rejecting a linear narrative"? The man who describes himself as an “quarrelsome” individual" - a sort of German version of the UK's  "angry young man" - but not that young? The Director keen to use multimidia in his stage productions; in a manner reminiscent of "reality TV shows? The man who adopted Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire and had his actors sing songs by Britney Spears. You know, that Frank Castof. The man who's Meistersinger production involved him interpenetrating it with readings from Ernst Toller, a Jewish writer who escaped Nazi Germany and hanged himself in a New York; and wherein he replaced the orchestra with two pianos and a chorus made up of untrained stage hands? What? You have never heard of him? Surely not? Very well then, just for you:

The Wagnerian's Guide To Bluffing Your Way Through A Conversation About Frank Castorf

"WHEN the director Frank Castorf was being considered to head Berlin’s second largest state-owned theater in 1991, the cultural powerbroker Ivan Nagel urged the German Senate to take a risk on him and his politically minded troupe, saying, “In three years they will either be dead or famous". SALLY McGRANE - New York Times

"Under his direction, actors ignored huge portions of the classical texts they performed, stripped naked, screamed their lines for the duration of five-hour productions, got drunk onstage, dropped out of character, conducted private fights, tossed paint at their public, saw a third of the audience walk out as they spoke two lines at an excruciatingly slow pace, may or may not have induced a theatergoer to drink urine, threw potato salad, immersed themselves in water, recited newspaper reports of Hitler’s last peacetime birthday party, told bad jokes, called the audience East German sellouts and appeared to but did not kill a mouse" SALLY McGRANE - New York Times

“In the last years he’s had less success,” said Barbara Burckhardt, an editor at Theaterheute. “His method is exhausted".

"Greed" - A film by Frank Castorf (complete. German with Eng subs)


Biography from The Geothe Institut

Frank Castorf’s best theatre evenings are demanding, long, complex, loud, exalted and illogical. They reject a linear narrative and conclusive interpretations. Psychological interpretation of characters is anathema to the manager of the Berliner Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz and undisturbed acting is right next to the trivialisation of reality by art as an object of hate. For almost fifteen years now, this concentrated “anti” position has resulted in the most important contemporary theatre in Germany.

The tremendous energy that characterises Castorf’s productions comes from the confrontation of harmony and violence. When he was a young director in the GDR, bureaucratic socialism provided the first opposition for Castorf’s anger. Banished to Anklam in the provinces, he continued to offend against the tolerated canon of hidden criticism of the system that was established in East German theatre until he was allowed to produce in the West. After Unification his revulsion at false common features, and especially of the “all’s well” politics of victorious capitalism, exploded. Nowhere in the art of the years immediately following the fall of the Berlin Wall was the smile of the state power so fiercely confronted with the depressing reality of the system take-over as in Castorf’s theatre.

For example, in 1990 he produced Schiller’s “The Robbers” as a requiem to the GDR that both expressed uproar about the take-over and anger about the “creeping depression” of the East Germans. Ranging from pubescent, naked rebellion and offending the audience right up to montages of Schiller, Hegel and de Sade, the aggressive spectacle already unpacked the whole toolbox of Castorf's discontent. He made violating rules into a principle and developed it into a theatre that is permitted to do everything and ought to do nothing. And he transferred this principle to other social situations when the merger of the GDR into the consumer society faded historically as a subject.

Thanks to his tremendous creative energy and an ensemble of exceptional actors who could fulfil intellectual provocations as shrill satire, Castorf subjected Shakespeare and Hauptmann, Dostoyevsky and Tennessee Williams to radical reworkings. Flying potato salad and inserted theoretical texts, urinating in zinc buckets and the trials of hysterical family life were followed by improvised speeches to the audience or enacted subconscious with plenty of slapstick. Booming music and inserted films, tedious waiting that ends with the landing of a toy helicopter or nude madness with a boa around the actor’s neck – Castorf uses elements like this to assemble his snotty view of the world as theatre. Only the following agenda in the director’s words applied: “To do away with unambiguities, to cut the ground from under the feet of meanings – that’s what I always wanted to do!”

The many failed echoes of his method showed that this devaluing of harmony and meaning only works thanks to Castorf's constructive exceptional spirit. The deconstruction fashions, that were declared the trend of the nineties in his name, only led to a dissolution of the form among many emulators. But with Castorf the permanent, often cynical commenting on what is happening on the stage as part of the production resulted in a genuine challenge to intellect and humour. Even marathon evenings lasting many hours, such as “The Idiot” or “The Demons”, which transferred the Russian melancholy to a charged metropolitan atmosphere in the shabby bungalow aesthetics of his sympathetic set designer Bert Neumann, created an exciting enjoyment of excessive demands.

In recent years, the principle of “effort as purification” has been intensified by Castorf once again doubling the image and narrative levels on the stage with film teams. However, his work seems to have increasingly run out of control, with the range of venues where it is performed growing ever more diverse and the floods of images that flow through it becoming ever less coherent. Productions such as “Cocaine” (2004), which was based on the novel by Pitigrilli and had a stage set designed by the artist Jonathan Meese, or “My Snow Queen” (2005), which was based on the work of Hans Christian Andersen, dissipated their initial impetus in their incoherent deployment of provocative theatrical techniques. By 2006, when Castorf turned to Brecht and obscured “In the Jungle of the Cities” behind a chaotic jumble of contemporary slapstick and political finger-wagging, it had become evident that he was facing an artistic crisis. Maybe the world has moved on and Frank Castorf has run out of ideas. Or maybe the years of repetition have made the way he breaks the rules in his productions an example of exactly the kind of thing Castorf always wanted to struggle against: something harmonious and thoroughly predictable.

Till Briegleb


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Bayreuth Ticket Sales: Criminal investigation launched

Written By The Wagnerian on Saturday, 3 September 2011 | 5:26:00 am

Bayreuth Ticket allocation has been in the news of late - as regular readers will be aware - but it seems that to now add further woes to those on the "Green Hill" a criminal investigation is to take place.

According to Sueddeutsche.de Public Prosecutor Gerhard Schmitt has stated that he is launching an official criminal investigation into matters related to Bayreuth Ticket sales. This is following two criminal complaints received from as yet unidentified sources.

As yet, there is no mention of who is to be investigated in association with any alleged improprieties
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Missed A Bayreuth Live Broadcast? Then Listen to them here - while you can

Written By The Wagnerian on Sunday, 31 July 2011 | 7:47:00 am

Bayreuth has now completed its first cycle this year and every opera has been broadcast. But wait. What if you missed one? Don't worry, you can still listen to them for a little bit longer and on demand. How? By going to Bartok Radio clicking the date of the opera you want, then clicking play at the program starting at 15:55. Simples!

What? Can't be bothered to go and find out the date of the opera you want? What? Can't be bothered to navigate the Bartok site? Ok. Ok. I'll tell you what:. go to the opera you want below, click Listen Now and it will take you to the correct Bartok page. You will still have to click play at the item at 15:55 though.


Monday 25. July,                               Tannhäuser                                       Listen Now


Tuesday 26. July,                              Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg        Listen Now


Wednesday 27. July,                          Lohengrin                                         Listen Now


Thursday 28. July,                              Parsifal                                             Listen Now


Friday 29. July,                                  Tristan und Isolde                             Listen Now

For cast details click the opera concerned




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Bayreuth: Why would anyone go for the music?

Written By The Wagnerian on Friday, 29 July 2011 | 4:12:00 am

Kate Brown goes to Bayreuth on behalf of DW and finds much more than opera - or giant penises for that matter


Bottoms up, Wagner
The Bayreuth Festival means sore bottoms and fashion faux-pas - so why do so many bother going? DW's Kate Bowen went to the Wagner capital to find out.

"Wagner isn't really my thing," said the waitress at the small café, which serves lattes in pink mugs across from Bayreuth's main train station. As a Bayreuth native she had grown up in the shadow of the maestro.

I'm not sure I've ever actually heard anyone admit that Wagner is their thing. So, given that the 30-day opera marathon is celebrating its 100th edition this year, there must be plenty of other draws to the tiny Franconian village of Bayreuth.

Saddle-sore

However, as I discovered on my first visit during premiere week, there are actually plenty of reasons not to enjoy the Bayreuth Festival.
Firstly, there is the theater. Or, more specifically, the seats in the theater. Try to imagine how your rear end would feel after taking a train from Madrid to Siberia. That's how mine felt - after the first act. And there are three.

Not only would the wooden folding chairs give your chiropractor nightmares, the fact that your cliché opera diva wouldn't even fit in one means you get to know your neighbor frighteningly well during the six-to-seven-hour affair.
While I don't doubt that this may have led to a romance or two since the first Bayreuth Festival in 1876, any chance of that was scratched when my long-legged, broad-elbowed neighbor asked before the overture whether I was a Democrat or a Republican. Indeed, Wagner is no stranger to political statements (his politics having sullied his reputation as a composer), but the immediate personal intrusion was a bad omen for the long evening.

Before the third act I found out that my neighbor, a repeat Bayreuth-goer, preferred Queen Elizabeth to the pope and had once sent a bouquet of roses to his favorite soprano. But apart from pretending to focus his non-existent opera glasses throughout the entire performance, I was grateful that the annoyances remained at a minimum.

Bring your own

Then there is the food. After a long day of traveling to Bayreuth, I became hungry. Bad idea.

Admittedly, Bavaria (where Bayreuth is located) is better known for Weisswurst sausages and soft pretzels than for anything containing vitamins. By the first intermission on the warm July evening, I was dying for something both refreshing and filling and would have gladly paid the exorbitant Bayreuth prices for a chicken salad, especially considering I had nearly five more hours to go.

When I spotted a few people unpacking picnic baskets on the lawn in the front of the theater - while wearing elegant evening gowns and tuxedos and sprawled out on the grass as if out of a Renoir painting -, it dawned on me that no one had groped through my bag at the door like they do at the movie theater. Clever Bayreuth veterans! Whether they might share a bit of their chicken salad?

The catwalk


What world economic collapse?
Two lengthy intermissions allow for plenty of opportunity to extensively observe the third downside of the Bayreuth Festival: the fashion faux-pas. As one of the largest see-and-be-seen events in the music world, there is, well, plenty to see - but a good 80 percent of it you'd probably rather not.

There are those who must have been so eager for a chance to put on the Ritz that they dove off the deep-end, with hideous flower and gem-studded bodices, and big-bellied middle-aged women in stretchy fluorescent tops three sizes too small.
At the other end of the spectrum were those who never intended to make a conspicuous fashion statement, but did so nevertheless by means of major no-goes like reinforced-toe stockings with sandals or Teva's with a sport coat.

Don't fool yourself: There is no hiding at Bayreuth.


Bottoms up, Wagner

Despite all the reasons not to go to the Green Hill, people still do. Sure, they want to be scandalized yet again by naked penises on stage and they think booing at a production by Wagner's great-granddaughter Katharina makes them look like opera experts.


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Bayreuth 2011: 27/07/11 - Lohengrin - Listen Live and on demand there after.

Written By The Wagnerian on Wednesday, 27 July 2011 | 2:16:00 pm

I have been trying to keep only to Bayreuth Broadcasts from BR-Klassik. The reasons for this are as follows:

  • The broadcasts are in a high bit-rate
  • The introductions are multilingual
  • The website is easy to negotiate for none German speakers.
The downside, of course, is that they do not broadcast all of the operas live - but sometimes leave a few days in between.

So, as people are keen to hear these as they are performed I believe I have selected the best places to hear each one as it broadcast. The selection criteria used were:
  • A good bit-rate
  • Ease of navigation for none native language speakers
  • Archive if available

Based on these criteria I would suggest:

Bartok Radio Click here to go directly to the relevant page. Bartok archives it's programs after they are broadcast (indeed, if you click on "calendar" in the top right hand corner and chose July 26th you can listen to yesterdays broadcast of Meistersinger or click the 25th for Mondays Tannhauser) so click play against Lohengrin at the correct time (15:55 CET) Alternatively, there are many other places to hear this - chose the one best for you

To clarify:  Click here




Cast
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Baumgarten blames lack of rehearsal time on Tannhäuser Boos? Bayreuth 2011


Tannhäuser fights for his "morals" - in his pants
Really? It takes Baumgarten, according to an interview today, years to rehearse and prepare his productions? He might be in the wrong business. But of course, that explains the reason this production is getting such a bad press - doesn't it?.

DW - World looks at the opening of that festival.


Bayreuth Festival opens among mixed reactions

The 100th Bayreuth Festival opened on Monday evening with a new staging of Richard Wagner's romantic opera "Tannhäuser." But many audience members were shocked at its modern and unusual interpretation.


Boos from the audience are almost a standard occurrence with every new production that kicks off at the Bayreuth Festival. This year's opening on July 25, featuring the new production of "Tannhäuser" directed by Sebastian Baumgarten and conducted by Thomas Hengelbrock, was no exception. Still, the reaction in the audience - which included German Chancellor Angela Merkel, some of her cabinet members and an array of celebrities - must have been hard to swallow, even for the most experienced in the director's team.

A pregnant Venus, an Elisabeth who enters a recycling center and allows herself to be disintegrated, main character Tannhäuser in his underwear, video projections displaying digestion processes and the fertilization of an egg, copulating animals in a cage - and in the midst of it all, members of the audience sitting on the stage. All that can be found in the production and has little to do with romanticism.

An art installation by stage designer Joep van Lieshout reveals a world unto itself: an industrial plant which takes care of various human needs, from eating and drinking to sexual satisfaction. In a perfect cycle of sustainability, even human excrement is collected here and used to generate energy.

Thought-provoking?

"I'm used to doing Brecht theater," director Sebastian Baumgarten told Deutsche Welle in an interview. "I'm interested in systems that are intricately connected and how various figures act within them. We are trying to implement this form of performance here."

However, according to Baumgarten, there was not much time for rehearsals. He explained that it usually takes years to create the right level of intensity in a piece of this sort and to direct the cast as effectively as possible.

"If you only rehearse for seven, eight weeks, you're not at the level that you're used to reaching as a director," said Baumgarten.

That is perhaps a way of explaining or excusing any directing glitches. Singer Michael Nagy also seems to feel a need to explain things.

"This production poses many questions and gives few answers," said Nagy. "A lot of the work is left to the viewer. I find that this is exactly the right process on the path of authenticity."
In any case, "Tannhäuser" provides the audience with a lot of drama. It tells of a singing contest in the Middle Ages, in which the main character violates societal values with his profane songs.

A trend for the new and different

Despite its 100th anniversary, the Bayreuth Festival - which runs through Aug. 28 - will not celebrate in any special way this year. But a new feature this time is a performance by the Israeli Chamber Orchestra in Bayreuth's town hall on July 26. It is the first performance of this kind, as Wagner's music is frowned upon in the Jewish community due to the fact that he was admired by Hitler and other Nazi officials.

At the press conference preceding the festival, Katharina Wagner - the event's co-director and Wagner's great-granddaughter - announced that the director of the 2013 staging of the epic "The Ring of the Nibelung" operas would be Hans Castorf. Known for his provocative productions with embedded political critique, it will be no surprise if Castorf also manages to fan the flames of controversy. However, one thing is certain: the plot of the operas will not be changed, as official regulations prohibit this.

Author: Rick Fulker / ew
Editor: Louisa Schaefer
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Where and when to listen to: Bayreuth 2011: Tristan und Isolde

Written By The Wagnerian on Tuesday, 26 July 2011 | 4:43:00 pm

"After a time, you may find that having is not so pleasing a thing, after all, as wanting. It is not logical, but it is often true. --Spock in 'Amok Time'

Following yesterdays Tannhauser, next-up (well to be broadcasted anyway): another revival of Christoph Marthaler's Tristan und Isolde for Vulcans (I.E. Tristan without emotion - you see there was a reason for the Spock quote). By the way, the next new production of Tristan at Bayreuth (they do so love a revival after all) will not be until 2015's Katharina Wagner's production - papier-mâché mask makers; get your tenders in now.


Of course, this production is now available on DVD so at least you need not struggle to find out what is happening on stage as you listen. There is a good  overview (at least it is balanced) of the production over at Musical Criticism - click here to read. Obviously, there are a lot of snippets on youtube and I include some here for your consideration.

So without fiurther ado, where, when and who:

When to Listen:

Friday, 29 July, from 15.57 (CET)


Where to Listen:

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Why Nike Wagner feels closer to Liszt than her Great Grandfather

Written By The Wagnerian on Sunday, 24 July 2011 | 5:22:00 pm

Nike Wagner: Still in the hot seat?
I was half way through translating this when SPIEGEL ONLINE have just gone and done it for free - story of my life really. Nothing that most of you would not already know - especially if you have read her book (looks over at bookshelf to confirm title) "The Wagners: the dramas of a musical dynasty" (Which surprisingly fewer people have read than one would imagine and thus I add a link for an overview).  Although less known perhaps would be the Nike Wagner's request to open Bayreuth In October in memory of Lizt - and the response. Also of interest: why she believes Chancellor Angela Merkel is taking a risk being so closely associated with Bayreuth,  more of Bayreuth's 2013 missing Ring Cycle director and of course Weimar

SPIEGEL: Ms. Wagner, you are descended from two important composers. Are you closer to your great-great-grandfather, Franz Liszt, whose 200th birthday is this October, or his son-in-law, Richard Wagner?


Wagner: Definitely Liszt, even though I discovered him late in life -- and then only through the praise of composer and conductor Pierre Boulez. What a multifaceted, fantastic and experimental body of work he created! I have therefore put Liszt at the center of my art festival in Weimar for years now. I like his spirit: Noble, eccentric, European.

SPIEGEL: Many people consider his work to be second-class.

Wagner: His works may not all be of the same quality, but Liszt is underestimated and underrepresented in our concert halls. His contemporaries loved his virtuosity. He made them ecstatic in a way matched only by Paganini. The musicians he promoted -- Wagner, Schumann and Berlioz -- did nothing for him, and his revolutionary late works were decried as the product of a senile old man. What's more, two world wars changed musical tastes. Eventually Liszt was seen as too emphatic, too loud, too pious. It's also quite possible that the heavyweight Wagner deliberately tried to overshadow Liszt.

SPIEGEL: How did Liszt meet Wagner?

Wagner: He had heard his opera 'Rienzi,' whereupon he considered Wagner a genius. And Liszt stood by this assessment, no matter how badly Wagner behaved. Liszt kept his friend above water both financially and emotionally, especially in the ten years of Wagner's political exile. During that time, Liszt performed his friend's works in Germany, and defended him. In fact Liszt -- the most famous of the two composers -- stood by Wagner's side right up until the Bayreuth Festival was founded. But from Bayreuth's point of view, Liszt only ever gave Wagner a leg up, and that's the image that has persisted and been passed down, an injustice that Liszt's daughter Cosima -- Wagner's wife -- also helped to perpetuate.

SPIEGEL: She put down her father for her husband's benefit?

Wagner: Perhaps she felt the need to prove that she had married the greater composer.

SPIEGEL: What did people say about Liszt in your home, the Villa Wahnfried?

Wagner: He never counted for anything in the Wagner household. In fact, people would poke fun at him now and again, calling him 'the abbot' or dismissing him as a mere drawing-room performer. Richard Wagner despised that kind of musician and considered them to be nothing more than a showman. He also despised Liszt because he composed symphonies and religious works [which he did not consider to be serious enough]. Wagner thought Liszt was crazy in his later years. And yet his late works and their emerging atonality were far more modern than Wagner's. But it's true that Richard loved and always respected Franz. Liszt's music wasn't buried until after his death.

SPIEGEL: In July 1886, Cosima refused to halt the festival even though her father was dying in Bayreuth. His death was kept secret.

Lizst: Photo
Wagner: He died in the house next door, poorly looked after, and in great pain. Suddenly, the loneliness that the restless Liszt had presumably always carried around became visible. Maybe the somewhat formal way he addressed people, which was seen as coldness on his part, was simply a form of escape. Indeed Liszt appears far more mysterious today than the ever-exuberant Wagner, who externalized everything. Liszt was discreet. His ego was delicate, and he never forced himself center stage, an interesting contrast to his skillfully executed public performances.

SPIEGEL: He supported his son-in-law unreservedly.

Wagner: Wagner felt guilty about Liszt all his life. He knew he was indebted to him. He also said so in public time and again, especially after he had made the breakthrough in Bayreuth.

SPIEGEL: Although it's the 200th anniversary of Liszt's birth in October, the festival isn't marking the occasion.

Wagner: That's incomprehensible, embarrassing and scandalous. The city of Bayreuth does this and that, but it doesn't owe Franz Liszt anything. That's the exclusive responsibility of the Wagner family. The Wagners are deeply indebted to Liszt. It would be historically irresponsible to deny that. I was deeply hurt that my cousins were deaf to my appeals to open up the concert hall for a major festival and birthday concert on October 22. It would have been a wonderful event, as well as a way to start repaying that debt.

SPIEGEL: Liszt was Catholic and had received his minor orders in Rome. Wagner was Protestant. What was your childhood like from a religious point of view?

Wagner: Traditionally Protestant. But probably only because of Johann Sebastian Bach.

SPIEGEL: So you believe in the spirit of music?

Wagner: My siblings and I were given a kind of mass christening at the Villa Wahnfried when we were aged between five and 10, together with a house concert. But our father saved us from having to go through confirmation. Our household was completely liberal. Religion was treated as a part of our culture that was merely required to understand masterpieces.

SPIEGEL: But God existed in your household?

Wagner: In the form of annoying religious services. Wagner's religious period was long gone. Bach and Beethoven's music lay all around. Our upbringing was typical of the educated middle class. At Christmas we had to perform at the piano, and the presents remained unopened until we were done.

SPIEGEL: And was Grandma Winifried, Hitler's loyal friend, with you?

Wagner: Of course. After all, she lived next door. And Christmas isn't Christmas without grandparents. My father had a wall built to divide our joint garden the rest of the year.

SPIEGEL: Was she warmhearted?

Wagner: No, she was pragmatic. We were never close.

SPIEGEL: When did you first discover that Winifried was extremely friendly with the Nazis?

Wagner: Families don't really try to expose relatives, but my father's comments told me quite a lot. 'She still thinks we could win the war!' he joked about his mother in the 1960s. That's why he never went next door, and avoided her afternoon teas with her fellow Nazi sympathizers. As teenagers we were shown Erwin Leiser's documentary about the Third Reich at school, and I remember being shocked by the footage of the piles of corpses at the concentration camps. That prompted some questions for this friend of Hitler's.

SPIEGEL: Did you challenge her?

Wagner: We asked her if she had seen the film or whether we could take her to see it some time because she might be able to learn something from it. 'It's all American propaganda,' she said dismissively. She closed up. If she hadn't, she would probably have had to question her own life and her beliefs.

SPIEGEL: Did you speak to your father, who was also close to Hitler?
Wagner: My father was very introverted, and didn't speak that explicitly. We never asked him directly like we'd asked grandma. Maybe because we thought we were on the good side as Wieland's children. The 'old Nazi,' as my father called his mother, sat next door in the other house. We also saw how terribly conflicted my father was about his mother. So the basic structure of things seemed to be alright. We also understood that he publicly demonstrated his growing realization and guilt about the Nazi atrocities by working with formerly ostracized left-wingers, Jews and modern people and in the medium of aesthetics.

SPIEGEL: Do you mean that your father's much-praised modernization of Bayreuth, in which he cleared everything folksy off the stage, was a case of pure de-Nazification?

Wagner: It's very complicated because the aesthetic aspects also developed their own dynamic. But Wieland was only able to find his own artistic niche and free himself by resisting everything that came before. I know he didn't like the post-war Germany of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer because former Nazis were filling posts all over the place.

SPIEGEL: Hold on. He was involved too. He was 28 at the end of World War II, and he and his brother Wolfgang were also close to Hitler.

Wagner: Correct. He was mixed up in his mother's dealings with Hitler, and was pleased by Hitler's praise. That's something he couldn't talk about after the war. Instead he cleaned up the Wagnerian stage. Incidentally, the new Bayreuth and Liszt are similar.

SPIEGEL: How so?

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Bayreuth 2011 Preview 2: Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg

Written By The Wagnerian on Saturday, 9 July 2011 | 5:52:00 pm

Yes, it's a revival and yes it's Katharina Wagner's "infamous" production - don't expect a Glydebourne here. Oddly, first time this premièred in 2007, the Bayreuth regulars gave the odd hearty clap and whistle after acts one and two - it was only after the Meistersingers with giant penises (yes I did say Meistersingers with giant penises, although "oversized" might be more accurate) went a romping on the hallowed ground of the Festspielhaus  that they became somewhat upset. Perhaps it was a Mesitersinger with a papier-mâché head of Richard Wagner (with accompanying purple beret) doing the "can-can" that was simply to much?


2008

What the reviewers said (this is a mix of reviews from the premier in 2007 and last year, where it was "tidied-up"a little - as it has been each year since 2007)


"One boo for the first act, several for the second. Then the curtain fell on the third act and the storm broke. Katharina Wagner's new staging of her great- grandfather's ``Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg'' unfolded amid passion at the Bayreuth opera festival in Germany."
Bayreuth needs change, and in its convoluted way, this production was a plea for that. The problems lay less with the concept than with its execution"
This incoherent production tries to do far too many things at once. There are abundant clever references to German art, culture and architecture. Statues of Goethe, Schiller, Bach, Wagner, Kleist and others come to life and dance, in grotesquely oversized masks and their underwear, for the third-act meadow festivities. A little nudity and some simulated sex are thrown in for good measure.
Katharina's calculated subversion of the plot could have been brilliant if it had been more sparingly realized. In her frenetic struggle to prove herself clever enough, presumably aided by intellectual dramaturge Robert Sollich, a few good ideas and strong images are lost in the dross. Bloomberg - 2007 
"Meistersinger," an opera about tension between tradition and innovation in art, stands as a glorious affirmation of the human spirit but also has its dark side. Katharina Wagner homes in on the opera's two most troublesome aspects. One is the peroration by the cobbler-poet Hans Sachs urging the populace to keep "holy German art" free from foreign influences. The other is Richard Wagner's mean spirited treatment of the town clerk Sixtus Beckmesser, narrow-minded guardian of the rules of song.
Fascinating though the ideas of Wagner and her collaborator Robert Sollich may be, the result is more a critique of "Meistersinger" - and a negative one - than a production. Nor did she achieve the kind of absorbing interaction between characters typical of the best concept-oriented directors. Of the opera's warmly expansive spirit there was little trace. You left thinking you hadn't really seen the opera." New York Times - 2007
"Katharina Wagner and her set designer Tilo Steffens locate the first two acts in a spacious school auditorium. Peter Konwitschny's Hamburg production of "Lohengrin" comes to mind, and the hunch is proved right again and again that Wagner's great granddaughter - how could it be otherwise - must have seen a good many Wagner productions by now. The school - with galeries on the side and rooms at the back - is clearly an academy for music, theatre and dance: a sombre, ugly building
After the second intermission everything is simply different. Sachs meditates in an elegant salon wearing shoes, a white shirt and a suit, while behind him appear the old German masters - Richard Wagner among them, of course - as huge masks. They then get down from where they're stationed, chain Sachs and whirl in a grotesque satyr's dance. A rather mysterious scene in which only so much is clear: Sachs resigns, and with him a stage crew very much like that of the production, who takes their bows in pantomime.

Sachs resigns, Stolzing conforms, Beckmesser becomes an action artist giving a new twist to the art scene - a commentary on today’s opera in general and the Bayreuth Festival in particular? Perhaps. Yet it all remains too intellectual, on the one hand filled to overflowing with ideas and props, on the other hand a void - the entire history of the ideological reception of the “Mastersingers” as “Nazi opera” is blended out, for example, while Katharina Wagner remains focussed on the performance aesthetic. Sign and Sight - 2007
Her interpretation, which turned the original plot on its head - Richard Wagner danced in his underpants and topless dancers took to the stage - proved too much for the traditionalists, who made up the bulk of the audience, at the same time as irritating the iconoclasts. The Guardian - 2007
This is the opera production singled out as the scandal among those currently presented at the Bayreuth Festival. After thunderous applause at the curtain calls for the singers, a young woman darkly and elegantly dressed comes from behind the curtain to a cacophony of boos … and increasingly a few ‘bravos’. She greets this volley of abuse with a beaming smile, a wave, and an extravagant flick forward of her - equally extravagant - blonde hair. This is the director whose staging goes largely unappreciated mainly because she has had the misfortune to be born into the Wagner family and so some opinion has it that she is there birth right rather than talent. This person is… of course you know already…. - Katharina Wagner, who also now joint director of the Festival. For Die Meistersinger, hers is clearly a Konzept from the school of Regietheater and if it was by Marthaler, Neuenfels or Herheim - all of whom currently have ‘shows’ running at Bayreuth - then the applause would undoubtedly have outscored the catcalls" Seen and Heard International - 2010

Even if the action in the first two acts logically builds towards the final scene this is simply not good “Handwerk”. It is a "Schreibtisch" concept which hasn’t translated into interesting music theatre. When I first saw this production in 2008, I summoned all the goodwill I could manage in a conscious effort to take a stand against the conservative and reactionary elements attending the Bayreuth Festival. Having now seen the production live for the second time, I have to acknowledge that the flaws cannot be outweighed by the ingenious finale of Act 3.
The Bayreuth audiences showed no mercy when Katharina Wagner came out before the curtain. She must have some nerves, enduring such negative reactions year after year. Wagneroperanet - 2010




2008

See Also (as there certainly is some relationship): Nuremberg Used and Abused: The true and imagined Nuremberg of Wagner and others


Cast 2011

Stage design Tilo Steffens

Choral Conducting Eberhard Friedrich

Hans Sachs, Schuster James Rutherford
Veit Pogner, Goldschmied Georg Zeppenfeld
Kunz Vogelgesang, Kürschner Charles Reid
Konrad Nachtigal, Spengler Rainer Zaun
Sixtus Beckmesser, Stadtschreiber Adrian Eröd
Fritz Kothner, Bäcker Markus Eiche
Balthasar Zorn, Zinngießer Edward Randall
Ulrich Eisslinger, Würzkrämer Florian Hoffmann
Augustin Moser, Schneider Stefan Heibach
Hermann Ortel, Seifensieder Martin Snell
Hans Schwarz, Strumpfwirker Mario Klein
Hans Foltz, Kupferschmied Diógenes Randes
Walther von Stolzing Burkhard Fritz
David, Sachsens Lehrbube Norbert Ernst
Eva, Pogners Tochter Michaela Kaune
Magdalene, Evas Amme Carola Guber
Ein Nachtwächter Friedemann Röhlig

Dates

Tuesday 26th July -        The Meistersinger of Nuremberg I
Saturday 30th July -       Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg II
Saturday 06th August -  Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg III
Friday 12th August -      Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg IV
Thursday 18th August  - Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg V
Wednesday 24th August Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg VI
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Where to listen to: Bayreuth 2011. Tannhauser (New Production)

Written By The Wagnerian on Wednesday, 6 July 2011 | 12:10:00 am

ConductorThomas Hengelbrock,
making his Bayreuth debut
It seems a little early but as some people wish to know. The truth of course is that performances from Bayreuth will be available from a number of sources - and I will try and include more nearer the time. However, for now:

Sebastian Baumgarten's new production can be heard on the opening night of the festival  at BR-Classic online here

The program will start at 15:57 CET live.(25 July) 

I will give the place and dates for Tristan, Meistersinger, etc as we get closer to the time.


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Sebastian Baumgarten: Tannhäuser in red pants? Bayreuth 2011

Written By The Wagnerian on Tuesday, 5 July 2011 | 11:23:00 pm

A little more about Sebastian Baumgarten, making his Bayreuth debut this year with his new production of Tannhauser. And do they look a little like giant white mice?

Sebastian Baumgarten was born on 31 January 1969 in East Berlin. His mother was a singer, his father a doctor, his grandfather artistic director of the Staatsoper unter den Linden. Three years after starting school, he transferred to the Georg Friedrich Händel Grammar School, which specialised in musical education. In 1989, after completing hisAbitur (school-leaving certificate giving right of entry to university) and military service in the National People’s Army, he began a course in directing at the Hanns Eisler Academy of Music. 



From 1990 on, Baumgarten was employed as an assistant to Ruth Berghaus, Einar Schleef and Robert Wilson. He worked at theatres in various cities, including Hamburg, Vienna, Berlin and Zurich, and started directing plays on his own account in 1992. From 1999 to 2002, he was senior director of drama and deputy director of opera at the Staatstheater Kassel. From 2003 to 2005, he was director-in-chief of the opera and theatre companies at Theater Meiningen. In 2002, Sebastian Baumgarten was awarded the Götz Friedrich Prize for his production of Puccini’s Tosca at the Staatstheater Kassel. In 2006, he was named Opera Director of the Year.

Portrait: Sebastian Baumgarten: from the Goethe Institut

Anyone who has worked as an assistant director to Ruth Berghaus, Einar Schleef and Robert Wilson is going to be either an opera director or theatre director. Sebastian Baumgarten has become both, but the early stages of his career were very different from those of colleagues like Jossi Wieler or Sebastian Nübling. Baumgarten began by directing operas, which was an obvious step given that his whole training was concerned with musical theatre and he seemed destined to be an avowed opera director. However, his attitude to opera is just as unusual as his route into the theatre. To the present, Baumgarten questions the traditional aesthetic of the opera and looks to drama for the freedoms that opera denies. This too is an obvious move from his current standpoint. After all, Baumgarten is one of the intellectuals among German directors and has a strong interest in discussing political and historical conditions when he translates his directorial ideas into reality.


For example, when he directed Goethe's Egmont in Mannheim, he cut the historical epic down to its plotline and explained historical contexts by inserting new passages of text that set out the background to the play in the calm diction of an encyclopaedia, which gave Goethe's text a tighter focus. Baumgarten brought this tale of the 16th-century Dutch wars of religion into the modern world by interspersing it with quotations from Giorgio Agamben and highlighting the disturbing condition of our democratic political systems. Baumgarten advocates an advanced concept of directing, but does not stand for a theatre of deconstruction. He seeks to foster historical and political reflection on the stage and relies on his audience allowing itself to be seduced into thought. By taking this approach, he is letting himself in for some pretty harsh criticism. When he adapted Lars von Trier's Europa for the stage at the Düsseldorf Schauspielhaus in late 2007, he was accused of not having exploited the full dramatic potential of the original and merely creating "a theatre of critical political footnotes".

His directing career shows that he looks for materials that give a director freedom. At the same time, he likes to adapt films that are based on moral and philosophical issues and, as he says, deal with "the dark sides of the enlightenment". Apart from Lars von Trier'sepidemic and Europa, he has tackled the third part of Kristof Kieslowski's Decalogue sequence, Thou Shalt Honour Thy Father and Mother. It is also remarkable that Sebastian Baumgarten avoids premieres of contemporary theatrical texts, preferring to devote himself all the more intensively to the classics. He has engaged with Goethe again and again - for instance at the beginning of the 2007/2008 season, when he directed Faust at the Schauspiel Hannover. He assumed his audience were familiar with the text and turned it into a cabaret-style research seminar. The result was a "freely associative Faust discourse", which nevertheless held a "powerful sensuous attraction" (Süddeutsche Zeitung).

Sebastian Baumgarten once said in an interview that he is only satisfied once the stage material has emancipated itself from the text on which it is based. In his words, one could hear the theatre director who occasionally rails against the narrow limits of the opera and brought the two streams of his work together in one of his recent productions when he staged a musical spoken theatre version of Tosca at the Berlin Volksbühne. He not only drew on the libretto of Puccini's opera, but also on Victorien Sardou's play La Tosca, while simultaneously blurring the borderline between drama and opera. He will carry on experimenting in this direction. However, it remains to be seen whether he will some day take on senior managerial duties again as he has in the past at Kassel and Meiningen, where he was responsible for both theatre and opera as senior director of drama and director-in-chief.
Jürgen Berger

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Bayreuth 2011 Preview: Tannhauser.

Sebastian Baumgarten: The man to rescue
 Tannhauser from its text?
Yes, it's nearly that time again - Bayreuth! You may not be there - unless you have: lined up for the last 10 years, bought a ticket on an immensely overpriced tour, are a member of the press, a member of a Wagner Society, a member of the "Friends of Bayreuth" a German politician, Steven Fry making a documentary about Stephen Fry...sorry, I mean Richard Wagner or acquired a ticket by some other means - but it's likely you will catch a radio broadcast somewhere or catch Lohengrin on ARTE. Love it or hate it,  this has to be done. So, in the first part of an ongoing series, right up to the first performance on the 25 July, I present a preview of this years opener:


TANNHÄUSER.


It's a new production! (Bayreuth loves a revival) What will it look like? Giant Mice? Tiny Mice? No mice at all? The mind boggles, but it should be interesting - at the very least.

Conductor:Thomas Hengelbrock - First time at Bayreuth. Want to know what the press have said about him? Go to his website here

Director: Sebastian Baumgarten - This is going to be interesting: What someone else has said about him:"Sebastian Baumgarten once said in an interview that he is only satisfied once the stage material has emancipated itself from the text on which it is based". So, what do his productions look like? Really? You want to see? Well, you asked for it:





Stage design: Joep van Lieshout
Costumes: Nina von Mechow
Dramaturgy: Carl Hegemann
Lighting: Franck Evin
Video: Christopher Kondek
Choral Conducting: Eberhard Friedrich
Landgraf Herrmann: Günther Groissböck
Tannhäuser: Lars Cleveman

Wolfram von Eschenbach: Michael Nagy
Walther von der Vogelweide: Lothar Odinius
Biterolf: Diógenes Randes
Heinrich der Schreiber: Arnold Bezuyen
Reinmar von Zweter: Martin Snell
Elisabeth, Nichte des Landgrafen: Camilla Nylund

Venus: Stephanie Friede
Ein junger Hirt:Katja Stuber

When?

Monday 25. July  Tannhäuser I
Monday 01. August Tannhäuser II
Sunday 07. August Tannhäuser III
Saturday 13. August Tannhäuser IV
Friday 19. August Tannhäuser V
Thursday 25. August Tannhäuser VI


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ARTE to begin to broadcast Bayreuth Festival live on TV

Written By The Wagnerian on Tuesday, 28 June 2011 | 4:11:00 am

Of Mice and Knights


The Bayreuth Festival will be screened live on television for the first time during the 2011 season, in an agreement signed between the arts broadcaster ARTE and general director,  Katharina Wagner

The cultural/arts channel ARTE will transmit one show each year from the Bayreuth Festival

The agreement was signed with the event's general director Katharina Wagner. The first screening will be Wagner's "Lohengrin" directed by Hans Neuenfels on 14 August 2011 (See below for cast)

Lohengrin will be hosted on ARTE by Annette Gerlach in the afternoon and evening along with, as yet, unannounced  guests.

Edit: I have checked the ARTE website and elsewhere but as yet no confirmation as to whether this will also be included in ARTE's webcasts. 

Lohengrin cast 2011

Lohengrin - Klaus Florian Vogt
Heinrich der Vogler  -Georg Zeppenfeld
Elsa von Brabant - Annette Dasch
Friedrich von Telramund - Tómas Tómasson
Ortrud - Petra Lang
Der Heerrufer des Königs - Samuel Youn
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Bayreuth Festival Tickets: Make more available - or else?

Written By The Wagnerian on Wednesday, 22 June 2011 | 4:23:00 am

This is a fascinating article from the Economist. Of course we are all aware of the "peculiarities" - and shear difficulties -  of getting a ticket to performances at the home of Herr Wagner and clan. And who hasn't felt sympathies for those poor devils holding-up a sign like that pictured below:


For years of course we have been told that this is because the festival is just so over-subscribed, with to many people chasing to few tickets. While this might be true, this article suggests the reason there are so few tickets available may not only be for the factors that we would assume (Only 16 percent of tickets sold to the public for premiers! 40 percent for everything else?). However, it seems that the Wagners maybe forced to make changes. Never under-estimate the power of the "bean-counter" - or $7.2 million public funding for that matter.


FRUSTRATED Wagner fans may see some good cheer approaching from a strange quarter. It is notoriously difficult to get tickets for the annual Bayreuth Festival in Germany, which runs through the entire canon of Richard Wagner’s operas: the average waiting time for a seat is nine years, if you stick out persistent disappointment in the yearly ballot.

But things may change. On June 15th bean-counters at the Bundesrechnungshof, the federal audit office, recommended to parliament that the festival, which gets more than €5m ($7.2m) a year of public money, should change the way it allocates tickets. Only 40% are sold directly to the public; a mere 16% if it is a premiere. Ill-explained “quotas” take care of the rest: the Society of Friends of Bayreuth gets 23% for its members. Around 30% go to travel agents, who wrap them into hugely expensive tours, or to corporate sponsors, for entertaining those they want to impress. The Federation of German Trades Unions has one closed performance for its own big night out (at a reduced rate); until 2009 it had two. The city of Bayreuth gets an allocation to lavish on regional and other guests. Chancellor Angela Merkel and spouse are regular visitors, though their tickets may not be free.

Some are, however. Although ticket sales cover less than half the running costs, the Bayreuth Festival gives away 2,650 tickets a year to students, its own staff, artists, journalists, and “special cases”. That reduces even further the tickets available to Joe Public.

Hardened Bayreuth-goers do find ways to beat the system. They have a friend, perhaps a theatre producer, who gets a special allocation. They pay through the nose for a hotel package which includes a performance. They join the Friends of Bayreuth, which costs €200-odd a year but doesn’t always guarantee a ticket. Or they go to the rehearsals before the festival proper. One lady, who had done this all her life, wrote a letter begging for a ticket so that she could see the real thing before she died. Her wish was granted.

According to the audit office’s report, assigning tickets is largely handled by five women, some of whom have done the job for more than 20 years. The best way to get around them, suggests a helpful website, is to join a Wagner society outside Europe, or even better start one.

More
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New remastering of Keilberth's stereo Flying Dutchman 1955, Bayreuth

Written By The Wagnerian on Friday, 17 June 2011 | 9:20:00 pm

This is a "press release" and thus I cannot vouch for it's accuracy. However, I will say that I have the Testament release and have played that against the sample given here just a few minutes ago: The new remastered Pristine Classical certainly - to my dull old none audiophile ears (I heard my first ring cycle on Medium Wave and I still enjoy mono recordings) - sounds much "brighter" and "cleaner" than the Testament release,  but download the sample and check for yourself. And if you are naturally suspicious of downloading,  you can go to the website and listen to the sample there. It is certainly cheaper than the Testament and if you have not taken the plunge and bought this yet perhaps now is the time.  Anyway, if nothing else,  it's an excuse to revisit this performance.



New release today:

Keilberth's magnificent stereo Flying Dutchman

Brilliant, dramatic new stereo remastering of this 1955 Bayreuth classic

"Keilberth seemed on high in 1955 ... his reading moves with
electrifying concentration from scene to scene. Keilberth achieves a
greater unanimity of approach from his players and absolutely superb
singing from the chorus"  (The Gramophone, 2006)

WAGNER Der Fliegende Holl nder
Recorded 1955
Producer and Audio Restoration Engineer: Andrew Rose



Astrid Varnay - Senta
Hermann Uhde - The Dutchman
Rudolf Lustig - Erik
Ludwig Weber - Daland
Elisabeth Sch rtel - Mary
Josef Traxel - The Steersman
Bayreuth Festival Chorus and Orchestra
Wilhelm Pitz - chorus master

Joseph Keilberth - conductor


Score and libretto included in all downloads

Web page:
http://www.pristineclassical.com/LargeWorks/Vocal/PACO062.php

Short Notes
Surely it was Keilberth's year at Bayreuth in 1955. Not only did he
produce one of the great Ring Cycles of all time, but also this classic
stereo recording of The Flying Dutchman.


We preferred the relatively rare 1970s stereo Decca LPs to the more
recent stereo CD issue, so took them as the starting point for this
dramatic and thrilling 32-bit XR remastering of Keilberth's live
triumph. The result is essential for any Wagner fan!


Notes on the transfers:


I came to transfer this recording almost by accident - I had taken
delivery of a new stereo LP replay cartridge and, having fitted it to my
tonearm, picked up the nearest stereo record to hand, which happened to
be the first disc of the three issued by Decca in the mid-1970s which
make up this recording. Having been duly astonished by the sound quality
I was hearing from the LP, I decided to record a short section for
comparison to the existing CD issue of the same recording, and found the
Decca LPs to be far more to my liking, with much more life to them than
the rather dead and flat (by comparison) 2006 CD transfer.


As a result I ended up transferring the entire opera from my near-mint
pressings and set about the minimal work required to remove occasional
clicks, before applying 32-bit XR remastering technology to the
transfer. This served to further enhance the already fabulous sound of
the LPs. Meanwhile a US correspondent and Wagner aficionado contacted me
to point out that the original mono LP issue of the recording had
included fanfares and theatre bells which were omitted from later
releases but added wonderfully to the atmosphere of a Bayreuth Festival
production. As a result these were provided by him, and have now been
added to the recording as it was originally released (this first track
now presented in Ambient Stereo), prior to the start of the full stereo
recording.


Andrew Rose


Review from 2006 CD reissue review
"Keilberth's 1955 Ring has received rave reviews - can his Dutchman be
as good? This enthralling performance has always been a highly
recommended version. Its stereo incarnation was available only briefly
on LP: when it was issued on CD by Teldec it appeared only in mono...
As with the Ring, Keilberth seemed on high in 1955; once again his
reading moves with electrifying concentration from scene to scene.
Keilberth had rehearsed Wolfgang Wagner's new production but
Knappertsbuch conducted the first three performances (you can hear how
different, more pawky his approach is from Keilberth's in various
reissues, none in stereo, taken from a Bavarian Radio broadcast).
Keilberth achieves a greater unanimity of approach from his players and
absolutely superb singing from the chorus (trained by the remarkable
Wilhelm Pitz). The orchestra, perhaps because they knew they were being
recorded, play their hearts out to create a fusion of notes and rhythm
that is really thrilling from start to finish.
The singers are no less inspired. Uhde gives a supreme interpretation of
the tortured, yearning Dutchman, on a par with that of Hans Hotter and
more evenly sung. His firm, compact, grainy tone is used with his
customary artistry to convey the character's longing for salvation,
total elation in the love duet, and desperation when he thinks Senta has
betrayed him. Phrase after phrase etches itself in the mind in this
unmissable portrayal. Incredibly Vamay, who was also Br nnhilde in 1955,
brings to Senta a tireless dedication and vision to match Uhde's hero.
She fines her large voice down to the more intimate needs of Senta, and
only once or twice do the most taxing passages, as her final outburst,
slightly strain her resources.
Ludwig Weber's earthy, experienced Daland is another rewarding
interpretation. Lustig, who took over Erik from Wmdgassen, makes rather
a throaty sound in the manner of earlier German Reldentenors, but he has
all the notes and conveys the character's understandable frustrations.
The Mary is admirable. All seem under the spell of the work and the
conductor in a reading that now has the stereo sound it so richly deserves."
Printed in Gramophone, October 2006 (slightly cut - read full review at 

www.gramophone.net)


MP3 Sample Act 3 - Opening section: http://tinyurl.com/PACO062
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