Richard Strauss’ Capriccio is really an opera for opera-lovers. Not only is it an opera about opera, full of musical imagery, references to other works, and miniature stylistic pastiches, but it debates the very nature of opera itself, with its unique balance of poetry, music and drama. Possibly because of its unusual structure, being set in just one mammoth two-and-a-half hour long act, it has never achieved much popularity, so its presence on Met Opera on Demand is really a godsend, especially with its star-studded cast. The ability to pause and go for a cup of tea makes it somewhat more digestible than in the opera house!
At the head of this cast is one of the world’s foremost Strauss sopranos, Renée Fleming. Her warm lyric soprano voice is perfect here, but her versatility, moving from richness in the soaring melodies to agility and lightness, is what really impresses. Strauss called this opera “a conversation piece for music” and the musical lines often reflect this conversational structure, with few extended aria-like passages and many more short exchanges between characters. Fleming’s immense dramatic aptitude, and how she uses this musically, contributes just as much to her captivating performance as her wonderful voice.
Attempting to win Fleming’s affections is the silky smooth baritone Russell Braun, playing the poet Oliver and fighting logically for the prominence of words over music. But his velvet tones are all too well matched by those of tenor Joseph Kaiser, as the composer Flamand, whose affections naturally lie closer to music than text, and who is just as keen to charm the Countess into his arms.