Siegfried Lance Ryan
Mime Peter
Marsh
Der Wanderer Terje Stensvold
Alberich Jochen Schmeckenbecher
Erda Meredith
Arwady
Brunnhilde Susan Bullock
Stimme des Waldvogels Robin Johannsen
Waldvogel Alan Barnes
Frankfurter Opern-
und Museumsorchester
Conducted by Sebastian Weigle
Conducted by Sebastian Weigle
Directed by Vera
Nemirova
Recorded live June/July
2012 at Frankfurt Opera
DVD OEHMS Classics OC997
(4 hours and 3 minutes)
With this issue Oehms
has now released in DVD three of the four dramas in the 2012 Frankfurt Ring
cycle conducted by Sebastian Weigle and directed by Vera Nemirova. This new set
follows on from an earlier (2010) CD issue of the same production with a very
similar cast. I was very impressed by Das
Rheingold and positive also about Die Walküre, although the overall impact
of the latter was marred by some shaky singing.
I had some trepidation
about Siegfried, both because Susan
Bullock’s Brunnhilde was one of the low points of Die Walküre and because I have never really warmed to Lance Ryan as
a heldentenor. In the event, though,
I was happier than I expected to be. Bullock was much more impressive than in Die Walküre and Ryan rose to the
occasion. To my ear the finest singing came from Terje Stensvold as Wotan/Die
Wanderer and Jochen Schmeckenbecher as Alberich. But the real star was
Sebastian Weigle in the orchestra pit, who shaped a performance that ends up
much greater than the sum of its parts.
The signature device
of Nemirova’s staging (a large rotating disc, itself made up of concentric
rings that can move independently in three dimensions) continues to govern the
production. The disc rises to create space for Mime’s hut and Fafner’s cave and
a clever use of lighting keeps the sets visually interesting and relevant (the
red lighting for Fafner’s cave is particularly effective). The only addition to
the rings comes in the scene with Erda, who appears to have been enjoying her
primeval sleep sitting upright in a large aquarium. It does look better than it
sounds, however.
The aspect of the
production that seemed least successful to me was the costumes (designed by
Ingeborg Bernerth). I can just about live with Fafner bedecked in red paint and
beads, since it’s pretty tough to do dragons. But Erda looked for all the world
like an enormous hairy Afghan dog (lacking the characteristic elegance of the
breed), which didn’t do her any favors and distracted from some rather good
singing, particularly in the lower register. Siegfried and Brunnhilde were both
rather traditionally attired in pseudo-medieval outfits. Not so the wild bird,
sung off-stage by Robin Johannsen (rather well, as it happens) and represented
on-stage by a ballet dancer in a dark skin suit with feathered extensions
instead of fingers. That didn’t work for me, I’m afraid.
Terje Stensvold was a
longterm regular at the Norwegian National Opera from 1972 to 1999 before
launching an international career that has seen him singing Wotan in Stockholm,
Frankfurt, and Melbourne. He is the real find of this production and has
developed the role very convincingly over the first three dramas – from the
braggart empire-builder in Das Rheingold
to the weary but wiser Wanderer who has learnt to accept the inevitable demise
of the Gods. The complexity of the character comes out particularly well in the
encounter with Alberich (Jochen Schmeckenbecher) at the beginning of Act 2.
Schmeckenbecher also develops his character with depth and insight. The same
cannot quite be said for his brother Mime (sung by Peter Marsh), who manages
successfully to capture on occasion Mime’s simultaneous ingratiatingness and
malevolence, but who also lapses on more than one occasion into caricature.
Brunnhilde (Susan
Bullock) has fewer problems projecting than she had in Die Walküre, where she sounded painfully strained on occasion. But
she still appeared to be having difficulties keeping up with Lance Ryan, even
though he has been singing for several hours before she wakes up in Act 3. Her
strengths are in the more thoughtful and reflective parts of the role (the
dialogs with Siegmund and Wotan, for example) and the long duet with Siegfried
does not fall into that category – certainly not when large parts of it are
sung, as they are here, by the two protagonists standing side by side to
address the audience. Ryan sings very naturally in his confrontation with Wotan.
He occasionally over-sings in the first two acts, but overall he is a more than
credible Siegfried.
Sebastian Weigle’s
conducting is becoming more impressive with each part of the Ring. He has a
very fine sense of pacing, both within the individual scenes and across the
entire drama – as well as the ability to articulate the vertical structure of
the music clearly and to integrate it with the voices. Under his direction the
Frankfurt Opera is revealing itself to be in the front rank of Wagner
orchestras. I am looking forward to Die
Götterdämmerung.
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