Thursday, December 28, 2023

Brisbane Ring thoughts...

 I finally got to see a live Ring cycle this year, having initially booked for it for 2020 (and it getting rescheduled multiple times. Thanks COVID) 

I'm out of practice of writing posts about the things I have seen, but I did take some notes while I was up there, to try and ensure that I remembered what I saw, and how I felt at the time. What I present to you, is my thoughts, based on the things that I saw, updated, but essentially still in notes, rather than written up like I would normally.



First of all, if you have not seen this trailer, it is worth watching. You get a sense of how, for all the modern visuals, it is still in many ways, a very traditional Ring. We are telling the story as intended by Wagner, we are not adding someone else's interpretation or new story over the top, we are allowing it to be told, and in ways that 21st century eyes can understand. There are references to Scifi and fantasy, to Asian imagery, as well as Norse mythology. It was designed to be a feast of modern visual references, even as it told an old story.

It was one where the director clearly wanted to tell the story as written, using the modern technology available . When something was mentioned by a character on stage, that item was there. The ring, was indeed a ring. There was a tree with a sword in it. Brunhilde ended up on a rock, there was fire on stage surrounding her. The ring was visibly returned to the rheinmaidens at the end. The traditional parts of the story were all there, represented on stage.

These things may not have been the traditional versions as imagined, but they were all there as required. The rheinmaidens were duplicated, with singers crawling over the rocks, and aerialists swimming through the Rhine, convincing many they were the same people, it was done that well. (I had to explain this to someone amazed at how they managed as we left the theatre) The wood bird too was an aerialist, while sung from offstage.

It also should be said that, no one on stage was a bad singer, the cast was uniformly impressive. The fact that there were only 4 non Australians in the full cast was an impressive achievement. Even more so, when you realise that they very much held their own against the star power of our imported Brunhilde and Siegfried. Also, from what I could tell, the German was very clear. Obviously, I do not speak German, (I have sung some in the past) but I was hearing random words that I recognised, scattered amongst the German sounds. Others have commented that the German was quite impressive for non-German singers (Our Erda was also credited as German language coach) 

Creatives:

Artists
CONDUCTOR
Philippe Auguin
DIRECTOR & PRODUCTION DESIGNER
Chen Shi-Zheng
ASSOCIATE SET DESIGNER
Maruti Evans
DIGITAL CONTENT DESIGNER
Leigh Sachwitz
flora&faunavisions
DIGITAL CONTENT DESIGNER ASSOCIATES
Sebastian Grebing
Milena Mayer
Antonia Böhme
/ flora&faunavisions
COSTUME DESIGNER
Anita Yavich
LIGHTING DESIGNER
Matthew Marshall
ASSOCIATE LIGHTING DESIGNER
Lucy Birkinshaw
CHOREOGRAPHER
Akasia Ruth Inchaustegui
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
Matthew Barclay
Miranda Summers


DAS RHEINGOLD
WOTAN / WANDERER
Daniel Sumegi
DONNER
Andrew Moran (the night I saw, he replaced the scheduled performer due to illness) 
FROH
Dean Bassett
LOGE
Hubert Francis
FRICKA
Deborah Humble
FREIA
Mariana Hong
ERDA
Liane Keegan
WOGLINDE
Lorina Gore
WELLGUNDE
Jane Ede
FLOSSHILDE
Dominica Matthews
ALBERICH
Warwick Fyfe
MIME
Andreas Conrad
FASOLT
David Parkin
FAFNER
Andrea Silvestrelli



 Gosh these Rheinmaidens are good, excellent ensemble work, and each a good clear voice in their own right.

Alberich is that sort of luxury casting in the role, is he doubling as Wotan’s understudy? (he has sung it for other companies) 

Wotan is singing the best I have heard him live, clearly German suits him.

We need to hear Loge more in Australia

Weakest voices on stage were the “spare gods” and they were not bad, just not amazing.

 The rainbow bridge was a choice, but having the full rainbow effect appear after the gods have all crossed, suggests a lack of coordination that should have been sorted before 


DIE WALKÜRE

WOTAN

Daniel Sumegi

FRICKA

Deborah Humble

SIEGMUND

Rosario La Spina

SIEGLINDE

Anna-Louise Cole (Cycle 1-2)

Olivia Cranwell (Cycle 3)

HUNDING

Andrea Silvestrelli

BRÜNNHILDE

Lise Lindstrom (Cycle 1-2)

Anna-Louise Cole (Cycle 3)

GERHILDE

Jane Ede

ORTLINDE

Jennifer Black

WALTRAUTE

Deborah Humble

SCHWERTLEITE

Dominica Matthews

HELMWIGE

Mariana Hong

SIEGRUNE

Agnes Sarkis

GRIMGERDE

Angela Hogan

ROSSWEISSE

Ruth Strutt


Siegmund and Sieglinde well matched-big secure voices. Her Brunhilde in the next cycle will be… something impressive 

Hunding was suitably nasty (And well directed with it)

The sword in the tree was a bit too “we know it’s there, Siegmund must be able to see it too” the twins duet was loud and glorious with an eager Siegmund and a Sieglinde thrilled to find someone actually not treating her like dirt (we saw her mistreated by Hunding)

Fricka was presented as human and not pure harridan, and desperate at her situation, not just determined to see her ideal of morality upheld. She was affronted by what has happened and how it reflected on her own marriage 

Brunhilde was suitably playful and willful at the start. She was almost the spoilt brat, but also definitely her father’s daughter. She was also plenty loud.

The fight needed to be more in semidarkness. We need to believe that Siegmund and Hunding are fierce warriors, not peacocks more concerned with showing off… A dark stage where you can not see clearly would help to cover up for people who are not natural fighters and the mismatch of weapons (Hunding had a spear thing with a long blade on the end, Siegmund had a big broadsword type Nothung) 

The Valkyries sounded great. However, while all arriving on the one phoenix, looked spectacular, but it  messes up the scene, calling offstage to characters who have clearly arrived with you is…. Odd. Also for those of us on the balcony we could hear them before we could see them, which did sort of spoil the effect a bit.

The desperation of Brunhilde in act 3 was clearly evident.

The relationship with Wotan was clear. Loved but also feared. The effort to convince him to ensure not just anyone can claim her was definitely felt and presented well. The dragon as the ring of fire, was both a clever solution to the problem of the fire requirement, and a distraction. It seemed somehow to distract from the mood when it was brought in.. how you handle the fire is always a challenge. It looked good, but the displays of fire on the screens needed to match the flame colours from the dragon rather than the more red colours in their flames on the screens. I’m tempted to say maybe if the dragon had started with flames from its mouth first, it might have worked better… or maybe if the dragon was brought in when Wotan called for Loge to bring the fire, rather than earlier, when there was a break in the singing. It was a clever touch, but something about it misfired somehow. That said, the scene was convincing, and did leave many in the audience feeling genuinely sad.


SIEGFRIED

SIEGFRIED

Stefan Vinke

BRÜNNHILDE

Lise Lindstrom (Cycle 1-2)

Anna-Louise Cole (Cycle 3)

ERDA

Liane Keegan

MIME

Andreas Conrad

WANDERER

Daniel Sumegi

ALBERICH

Warwick Fyfe

FAFNER

Andrea Silvestrelli

WOODBIRD

Celeste Lazarenko

Siegfried impressive teenager from a not young singer, he is convincing as the playful rebellious kid… forging scene worked well… indeed the whole act worked well… Mime every bit as aggravating as needed. Wanderer showing why a beautiful fresh sounding voice is not desirable, as a somewhat weathered voice, carries the sense of the weariness for everything to be over in a way that is intensely real.

I was expecting more of a real dragon, possibly with fight off screen, instead dragon was all on screen… Arrival of wood bird was a welcome break to the all male voices, all the time… her flying through the trees was almost overdone, but not quite.

Erda’s return was handled well, as the desperate to return to sleep, to dream, to never wake up

 Wotan and Siegfried seem to have a different idea of where love on the rocks is when they have their discussion/altercation. (the spear did break)

Brunhilde and Siegfried duet … loud, yet never not musical. Brunhilde convincing as someone waking up from a long sleep… There was also the inevitable giggle in the audience at THAT line from Siegfried.

GÖTTERDÄMMERUNG

SIEGFRIED

Stefan Vinke

GUNTHER

Luke Gabbedy

ALBERICH

Warwick Fyfe

HAGEN

Andrea Silvestrelli

BRÜNNHILDE

Lise Lindstrom (Cycle 1-2)

Anna-Louise Cole (Cycle 3)

GUTRUNE

Maija Kovalevska

WALTRAUTE

Deborah Humble

WOGLINDE

Lorina Gore

WELLGUNDE

Jane Ede

FLOSSHILDE

Dominica Matthews

1ST NORN

Celeste Haworth

2ND NORN

Angela Hogan

3RD NORN

Olivia Cranwell


The Norns with costumes that clearly connected them to Erda, also arose from under the stage like Erda, and sang their retelling clearly, their costumes becoming the rope they kept referring to, but only demonstrated towards the end. Their horror as the rope became entangled then broke was well established.

 The multiple act one duets were all suitably impassioned, either excited, impassioned or confused. Sending Siegfried off made sense, even if he almost left without Nothung. Waltraute’s desperation for the ring to be returned to the Rheinmaidens, to stop the end of the gods and the old order was tangible, as was Brunhilde’s willful refusal to, because of its connection to Siegfried.

The Gibichung scenes had suggestions of Superman’s castle of solitude, seemingly made of huge chunks of ice. But also with suggestions of Star Wars. If you have seen it, you understand, but do not ask me to explain it, just accept it was referenced. It was clearly not summer by the Rhine in the Gibichung lands.

Then add in the Gibichungs , with Luke Gabeddy an almost too good Gunther (isn’t he normally cast a bit less heroic?) and Mr Villain returning as Hagen. The potion of forgetting was present and used

The switcheroo to claim Brunhilde for Gunther was almost believable, the differing outfits were convincing from a distance, which was all that was needed as this was not recorded sadly

Then of course the chorus finally arrives and are led astray by Hagen.

The forest scene was played out straight, Hagen killed Siegfried then watched everyone begin to turn on him. I did wonder about the Rheinmaidens. Was Seigfried in the water with them? It did appear that way, rather than on the edge of the river. A rare moment when clarity was lost.

The orchestra sounded amazing with the funeral music.

Brunhilde sang her immolation scene with feeling and power aplenty. She set everything afire and returned the ring to the rheinmaidens then disappeared from sight as the orchestra swelled up and the Rhine returned.


So...

Over all? Quite frankly, it was hard to imagine a better sung production. No one stood out as singing a role that was wrong for them. All high notes were secure and sung out gloriously, none sounded a struggle, every note felt secure (which when you are singing for several hours at a time is an achievement) Every singer was carrying well over the orchestra for me in the balcony. There was one that some people felt was underpowered, to which my response would have been "I have experienced singers much worse on stage" It is possible her voice did not carry as well downstairs, but I certainly heard her clearly, unlike some singers I can think of I have heard regularly in other Opera Australia productions.

Staging? Apart from a couple of minor quibbles about a few things, the staging was fantastic. The digital screens were used in ways that enhanced the telling, rather than distracted. At other times, they were not afraid to just fade them out to dark or to a general mood colour, rather than representations of a physical place or thing. Some made the comment that at times they took on the abstract look of a Wieland Wagner production, having faded out to plain colours, rather than the constant busywork of some other productions. 

Big disappointments? Why was this not recorded, or videoed? This was an astonishingly successful production, with great performances. It should have been recorded, for posterity as well as to be made available for others. I can only hope they plan to rerun this production a few years into the future, and record it then