Tag: Das Rheingold

  • Donner Summons the Mists

    donner

    Dwayne Croft as Donner summons the mists as Wagner’s DAS RHEINGOLD draws to its finish. I vividly recall how thrilling this was in the House as the baritone strode up the inclined stage and deployed his powerful voice into the great cavern of The Met.

    The performance dates from 2010 and is conducted by James Levine.

    Watch and listen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBETnbgm6sE

  • RHEINGOLD @ THE MET ~ 25 YEARS AGO

    langridge loge

    Reading thru some of my hand-written diaries from a quarter-century ago, this entry about a tremendous performance of DAS RHEINGOLD brought back vivid memories.

    “Wonderful to see this opera again, and the cast of (mainly) RING veterans gave a superbly confident and nuanced performance. Levine had the huge orchestra under finger-tip control…there were passages of great beauty and lyricism, along with the unleashing of massive sound at times.  Although the lighting seems less evocative now, the production is still quite effective, though the first scene could use some freshening: the Rhinemaidens don’t always remember that they are underwater, and the rock pinnacle holding the gold wavered as Alberich clambered up.

    To start from the beginning: lovely lyricism from the Rhnemaidens: Joyce Guyer, Kristine Jepson, and Jane Bunnell each sang well in their solo lines, and their voices blended beautifully.

    Ekkehard Wlaschiha remains a powerful, vivid Alberich…his voice is now sketched indelibly on this music: magnificent in defeat, and in his vibrant, chilling curse. Hanna Schwarz brought her personal allure and great vocal authority to her interpretation of Fricka. She spun out some lovely soft phrases, creating a sensuous appeal that is not always heard in this music.  James Morris shows some vocal wear and tear as Wotan, but he is still able to hurl out vocal thunderbolts (especially at the end) as well as many pages of wonderfully musing soft singing. Very much a god to be reckoned with…bravo!

    Hei-Kyung Hong’s vocal radiance and sheer physical beauty made Freia a major role. She’s at her peak now, and I’m so lucky to be living here in NYC to witness it!  Mark Baker brought wafting lyricism as well as power to Froh’s music, and Alan Held’s darkish baritone produced a steady stream of well-inflected singing as Donner – his “Heda! Hedo!!“was a vocal high-point. 

    Splendid giants: the flowing depths of tone from Eric Halvarson perfectly complimented the more gritty, malevolent sound of Sergei Koptchak…bravissimi, gentlemen!! Graham Clark has a perfect role in Mime, where he is able to bring some “real” singing to a part that doesn’t always get it. His incisive diction was crystal clear. Brigitta Svendén  sounded simply gorgeous, and she makes Erda the alluring, mysterious icon she must be. 

     Dominating the stage and the music, Philip Langridge as Loge  (photo at the top) used his multi-coloured “big lyric” voice with the finesse of a poet. Langridge created the enigmatic character in purely musical terms whilst the added physical dimension of his portrayal (the grace of a ballet dancer, the gestures of a skilled magician) simply clinched the evening for this great singing-actor. He was greeted with a massive ovation at his bows.

    The entire cast was deservedly hailed by the Houseful of avid Wagnerites, and Levine and his orchestra were given a rousing ovation. A very stimulating evening!

    2000 rheingold-1jpg

  • Zubin Mehta ~ RHEINGOLD @ Valencia

    Snapshot mehta

    Zubin Mehta conducts DAS RHEINGOLD at Valencia, 2007. Strange production, especially the costumes…but musically fine.

    Watch and listen here.

    Donner: Ilya Bannik; Erda: Christa Mayer; Fafner: Stephen Milling; Fasolt: Matti Salminen; Flosshilde: Hannah Ester Minutillo; Freia: Sabina von Walther; Fricka: Anna Larsson; Froh: German Villar; Loge: John Dasza;  Mime: Gerhard Siegel; Wellgunde: Ann-Katrin Naidu; Woglinde: Silvia Vasquez; Wotan: Juha Uusitalo; Alberich: Franz-Josef Kapellmann

    Conductor: Zubin Mehta

  • Sir Simon Rattle conducts RHEINGOLD – 2004

    Snapshot anna l - Copy

    Above: Anna Larsson (Erda) gives a wonderfully subtle interpretation in this concert performance of Wagner’s DAS RHEINGOLD at Baden-Baden, 2004. Sir Simon Rattle conducts a very impressive cast.

    Watch and listen here.

    You’ll want to block the annoying ads.

    CAST:
    Sir Willard White – Wotan
    Oleg Bryjak – Alberich
    Kim Begley – Loge
    Yvonne Naef – Fricka
    Robbin Leggate – Mime
    Geraldine McGreevy – Freia
    Anna Larsson – Erda
    James Rutherford – Donner
    Timothy Robinson – Froh
    Peter Rose – Fasolt
    Robert Lloyd – Fafner
    Kate Royal – Woglinde
    Karen England – Wellgunde
    Christine Rice – Flosshilde

    Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment
    Sir Simon Rattle

    Baden-Baden, 2004

  • Sir Simon Rattle conducts RHEINGOLD – 2004

    Snapshot anna l - Copy

    Above: Anna Larsson (Erda) gives a wonderfully subtle interpretation in this concert performance of Wagner’s DAS RHEINGOLD at Baden-Baden, 2004. Sir Simon Rattle conducts a very impressive cast.

    Watch and listen here.

    You’ll want to block the annoying ads.

    CAST:
    Sir Willard White – Wotan
    Oleg Bryjak – Alberich
    Kim Begley – Loge
    Yvonne Naef – Fricka
    Robbin Leggate – Mime
    Geraldine McGreevy – Freia
    Anna Larsson – Erda
    James Rutherford – Donner
    Timothy Robinson – Froh
    Peter Rose – Fasolt
    Robert Lloyd – Fafner
    Kate Royal – Woglinde
    Karen England – Wellgunde
    Christine Rice – Flosshilde

    Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment
    Sir Simon Rattle

    Baden-Baden, 2004

  • Erda’s Warning

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    Anne Gjevang (above) as Erda and Hans Sotin as Wotan in this fascinatingly mysterious scene from DAS RHEINGOLD:

    Weiche Wotan! – RHEINGOLD – Anne Gjevang and Hans Sotin – Met bcast 1~16~88

    “Yield it, Wotan, yield it!
    Flee the ring’s dread curse!
    To dark destruction –
    irredeemably –
    its possession dooms you.”

  • Erda’s Warning

    A-1294348-1272717344.jpeg

    Anne Gjevang (above) as Erda and Hans Sotin as Wotan in this fascinatingly mysterious scene from DAS RHEINGOLD:

    Weiche Wotan! – RHEINGOLD – Anne Gjevang and Hans Sotin – Met bcast 1~16~88

    “Yield it, Wotan, yield it!
    Flee the ring’s dread curse!
    To dark destruction –
    irredeemably –
    its possession dooms you.”

  • The Rhinemaidens

    Heidi krall

    Soprano Heidi Krall (above) leads a distinctive trio of Rhinemaidens in this excerpt from a 1957 Met RHEINGOLD:

    The Rhinemaidens ~ Das Rheingold – Heidi Krall – Rosalind Elias – Sandra Warfield – with Lawrence Davidson – Met bcast 1957 – Steidry cond

    Ms. Krall sang nearly 300 performances with the Metropolitan Opera Company, both at the Old Met and on tour. While usually heard in roles like Frasquita or The Priestess in AIDA, she did sing several Musettas, as well as appearing as Micaela, Donna Elvira, Nedda, and the 1st Lady in ZAUBERFLOETE.

  • My First RING Cycle: RHEINGOLD

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    Above: A scene from DAS RHEINGOLD, in the Met’s classic Otto Schenk production; photo by Ken Howard

    A quarter-century has passed since I first experienced a complete performance of Wagner’s RING DES NIBELUNGEN as the composer intended it to be seen: over the course of a single week. In fact, though I had seen all the RING operas previously and would see them many times again since, this 1989 Cycle has been the only time to date that I attended a “RING Week”.

    I was living in Hartford, Connecticut at that point in time, frequently spending long weekends in NYC to attend opera and ballet performances. My friend Paul Reid and I had decided to attended a Met RING Cycle at the end of the 1988-1989 season. There would be a Saturday matinee Cycle plus two week-long Cycles; we were determined to do a RING Week. So when the casting came out, we quickly decided on the ‘second cast’: we had seen the Hildegard Behrens/James Morris combination in previous performances of the individual operas and they were slated for the first weekly Cycle (as well as the Saturday matinee broadcast Cycle). The second weekly Cycle boasted not only a different Brunnhilde (Eva Marton) and Wotan (Hans Sotin) but ‘new’ and different casting of several prominent roles: William Johns (Siegfried), Franz Mazura (Alberich), Helga Dernesch (Fricka/Waltraute), Mechthild Gessendorf (Sieglinde), and Gweneth Bean (Erda). James Levine of course was conducting every Cycle.

    We ordered our tickets, and then a cast change was announced: Eva Marton had withdrawn and would be replaced by Deborah Polaski. This gave us pause, since at the time neither of us were admirers of Ms. Polaski. We fretted a bit, but it was too late to switch to another Cycle (they had all sold out very quickly). Then came another announcement: Ms. Polaski had withdrawn and the Brunnhilde would now be Dame Gwyneth Jones. We were not thrilled with this announcement either, since Dame Gwyneth had at that time something of a reputation for wobbling vocally. It wasn’t until she appeared onstage for Act II of WALKURE that our concerns were allayed: she was magnificent in every regard.

    In the days leading up to our Cycle, anticipation built and built. Concerns about leaving my young lover Kenny on his own for a week were swept aside as the idea of seeing the RING in toto was about to become reality. Paul and I had booked (separate) rooms at the Colonial House on West 22nd. I had stayed there several times in recent seasons: a very comfortable and affordable gay guest house. I was leading a promiscuous life then (despite being in a relationship) and the wonderful thing about the Colonial House was: it was hook-up heaven. There was no need to go to a bar or club: there were always men who were ready, willing and able staying at the House. The roof deck, which offered nude sun-bathing, was especially conducive to socializing.

    May 1st finally arrived; Paul and I checked in at the Colonial and geared up for our big operatic adventure.

    Here’s what I wrote about the RHEINGOLD in my diary:

    “I am finally seeing the complete RING Cycle in the course of a single week which fulfills a long-held operatic desire. The opening RHEINGOLD was a wonderful evening and set forth high expectations for the evenings to come. Levine’s skillful conducting and the excellent playing of the Met orchestra were a major factor in this magnificent Wagnerian evening. The production is visually engrossing, especially the opening scene in the murky depths of the Rhine. Casting was strong all down the line, with a very fine trio of Rhinemaidens (Diane Kesling stood out, and Kaaren Erickson and Meredith Parsons were both very good…though I did feel they gave a bit too much vibrato at times).

    Franz_Mazura

    Franz Mazura (above) as Alberich arrived on the scene and seized our imagination with his huge, thrustingly creepy voice, full of darkest intent. He was a fabulous Alberich, tireless in his vocal and dramatic commitment. Could this bizarre creature be more powerfully portrayed? Mazura’s generous artistry assured his huge success in the role: he made the character seem so real.

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    Above: the Lord of This RING: Hans Sotin. He was in top form for a really impressive Wotan, immediately showing his vocal authority in his opening conversation with Fricka. His voice – large and steady and even from top notes down to the depths – created a real sense of majesty. [Sotin, as it turns out, sang his final Met Wotans in these performances].

    Dernesch_Isolde1Sa72PG

    Helga Dernesch (above): her fascinating voice and truly intense emotional involvement brought Fricka to life – incredibly powerful, with her deep lower voice and somewhat insecure top which curiously adds to her appeal.

    Her siblings were Gary Bachlund as Froh, revealing an embryonic heldentenor of some warmth; James Courtney as a sturdy Donner; and Mari-Anne Häggander, who made a great deal out of Freia’s brief role with her vulnerable appearance and full, clear lyric soprano.

    The giants were especially good: John Macurdy’s voice (Fasolt) sounded huge, and Matti Salminen (Fafner) let his oily tones roll out with great dramatic force – super!  Horst Hiestermann was a vivid Mime, but I found Graham Clark’s Loge did a bit too much prancing physically; and I guess I prefer more heldentenorish sound in the role, though Clark surely did sing musically and with clarity and good carrying power. Gweneth Bean’s large, rich voice created a really glorious impression as Erda – she just poured the tone out!

    At the end, a very enthusiastic reception for everyone – especially Bean, Dernesch, and Levine. Very exciting inaugural night of my RING! There were many moments when chills passed thru me: a sensation that is not often experienced at the opera these days. Mazura in particular thrilled me in this way with his theft of the gold and again as he placed his curse on the Ring. So exciting!”

    Metropolitan Opera House
    May 1, 1989

    DAS RHEINGOLD

    Wotan...................Hans Sotin
    Fricka..................Helga Dernesch
    Alberich................Franz Mazura
    Loge....................Graham Clark
    Erda....................Gweneth Bean
    Fasolt..................John Macurdy
    Fafner..................Matti Salminen
    Freia...................Mari-Anne Häggander
    Froh....................Gary Bachlund
    Donner..................James Courtney
    Mime....................Horst Hiestermann
    Woglinde................Kaaren Erickson
    Wellgunde...............Diane Kesling
    Flosshilde..............Meredith Parsons

    Conductor...............James Levine

  • Wotan’s Farewell: John Wegner

    Wegner

    After listening to John Wegner’s very impressive performance as Alberich in the State Opera of South Australia’s recording of DAS RHEINGOLD, I was thinking he’d probably be an equally good Wotan. And sure enough, I found this highly enjoyable version of the final scene of DIE WALKURE with Mr. Wegner (photo above) as the king of the gods and conducted by Gunther Neubold.