Prom 14. Wagner:
Das Rheingold (concert
performance, sung in German)
Iain Paterson Wotan
Stephan Rügamer Loge
Jan Buchwald,Donner
Marius Vlad Froh
Ekaterina Gubanova Fricka
Anna Samuil: Freia
Anna Larsson, Erda
Johannes Martin Kränzle Alberich
Peter Bronder Mime
Stephen Milling Fasolt
Eric Halfvarson Fafner
Aga Mikolaj Woglinde
Maria Gortsevskaya Wellgunde
Anna Lapkovskaja Flosshilde
Staatskapelle Berlin, Daniel Barenboim
Jan Buchwald,Donner
Marius Vlad Froh
Ekaterina Gubanova Fricka
Anna Samuil: Freia
Anna Larsson, Erda
Johannes Martin Kränzle Alberich
Peter Bronder Mime
Stephen Milling Fasolt
Eric Halfvarson Fafner
Aga Mikolaj Woglinde
Maria Gortsevskaya Wellgunde
Anna Lapkovskaja Flosshilde
Staatskapelle Berlin, Daniel Barenboim
Daniel
Barenboim’s much anticipated Ring cycle got off to a great start with this
evening’s Rheingold. He’s just
finished a Ring staging with his company in Berlin, and these Proms
performances are essentially concert versions of those. So there is plenty of
musical coherency here, with the soloists attuned to Barneboim’s vision for the
score. The whole thing has been reduced to a barely dramatized—let’s call it
quarter-staged—concert version for the Proms by Australian stage director Justin Way. He just gives us the bare bones,
so that you can work out what is going on from the minimal interactions on the
stage (the Albert Hall acoustic, so-called, prevents any words from being
audible), letting Barenboim present the music without undue distraction. We came
for Barenboim’s Rheingold, and that’s
exactly what we got.
But
Barenboim is an unpredictable Wagnerian. It is easy to get frustrated by his
readings that stick rigidly to unyielding tempos with little sense of breadth
in the climaxes. But then he can take the same work to a different company and
present it completely differently, full of sensitivity and expressive detail.
This evening’s Rheingold had a bit of
both. There were occasional passages where he seemed to be on autopilot, but he
gave the set pieces plenty of weight. I love the way he makes each of the
thematic expositions into real events. The first time we hear the Valhalla
motif for example, or the giants’ theme, it is as if the continuum of the music
has been temporarily suspended for this major announcement.
The
Berlin Staatskapelle fielded a band this evening that almost filled the stage.
The throaty German brass instruments were a real treat, and completely
different from anything you will hear from a British orchestra. The six harps
were predictably inaudible in the Albert Hall, but it was nice to see them
anyway. No anvils for some reason. All we got were some pre-recorded anvil
sounds, and very feeble they sounded too. I’ve no idea why: this is one of the
few effects in Wagner’s orchestra that could be guaranteed to project to the
upper tier.
Justin
Way had some interesting ideas about the placement and interaction of the
singers, although for the most part they were lined up along the front of the
stage, but then, given the number of characters he had to deal with in Scene
Four, what else could he do? Curiously, the cast, even though they were all in
concert dress, all seemed to resemble the characters they sang. Johannes Martin
Kränzle, who sang Alberich, is a born actor, and there is no stopping him from
immediately transforming into the part he plays. Then there is Stephen Milling
as Fasolt, who really is a giant, and Peter Bronder as Mime who really is
a…well, maybe he’s not literally a dwarf, but he was by far the shortest singer
on the stage.
As
a whole, the cast that Barenboim assembled was strong. No singer stood out as
particularly weak, and some of the main leads gave real world class
performances. It was a very international cast too, with many names we in the
UK have only heard so far from recordings, but who, with any luck, will be
visiting us again in the near future.
The
first scene took place at the back right of the stage, a risky strategy, given
that it meant the singers were even further from the audience. But both Kränzle
as Alberich and the three Rhinemaidens had the projection to bring it off. Kränzle
was last seen in the UK as Beckmesser at Glyndebourne. That too was and
excellent performance, but his acting is so convincing that any memories of the
Nuremburg stooge were distant indeed as he presented instead the reptilian Alberich.
From Scene Two the action moved to the front of the stage, introducing Iain
Paterson as Wotan and Ekaterina Gubanova as Fricka. Paterson is a likable and
very human Wotan, with good diction and a very discursive approach to the part.
He has a rich tone in store too, but reserves it for the more emphatic and
dramatic passages. Gubanova is more lyrical in tone, and her every line was a
musical delight. She has a rich and complex alto, elegant rather than pretty,
but able to convey the drama of every phrase just through her timbre. I read
from her bio that she also sings Brangäne, and I can imagine that she has few
serious rivals for that role. Stephen Milling, I’m guessing, is one of the few
singers here unfamiliar with Barenboim’s reading, as he and the conductor were
out of synch on a few entries. But both he and Eric Halfvarson as Fafner have
the deep, bassy voices required to make the giants sound convincing. Stephan Rügamer
is light of tone as Loge, but still manages to project well. Anna Samuil is a
bit Italianate for the role of Freia, but she’s there more to be seen than
heard anyway. And Jan Buchwald and Marius Vlad are both convincing as Donner
and Froh, and both are singers who could potentially shine in more demanding
Wagner roles.
The
Nibelheim scene sans anvils (or transformations of course) was a bit of a weak
spot dramatically, although Way did a good job of the scene changes, with Wotan
and Loge descending from their mountain top into the arena, and then arriving
in the netherworld via one of the high staircases to the side of the stage. There
were a few neat tricks in the final scene too, not least the appearance of Erda
(Anna Larsson) up behind the bust of Henry Wood, who would no doubt have
heartily approved of the whole enterprise. Larsson’s intonation was a little
unstable at the start of her “Weiche, Wotan, weiche”, but she soon found her
form. And the conclusion to the opera was a proper climax. It turned out that
Iain Paterson had been saving the best for last, and his final exclamations
were given with real power and gravitas. Jan Buchwald also upped his game for
Donner’s final thundery invocations. The orchestral conclusion as the gods
enter Valhalla was just thrilling, and gave no suggestion that either Barenboim
or his brass players were holding anything back. An impressive Rheingold then, and one that augers well
for the following instalments later on this week.
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