{"id":94435,"date":"2024-12-05T00:00:45","date_gmt":"2024-12-05T05:00:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/operawire.com\/?p=94435"},"modified":"2024-12-14T04:26:29","modified_gmt":"2024-12-14T09:26:29","slug":"sydney-symphony-orchestra-2024-review-die-walkure","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/operawire.com\/sydney-symphony-orchestra-2024-review-die-walkure\/","title":{"rendered":"Sydney Symphony Orchestra 2024-25 Review: Die Walk\u00fcre"},"content":{"rendered":"<h6 style=\"text-align: right;\"><em>Image courtesy of Sydney Symphony Orchestra. Photo by\u00a0Jay Patel.<\/em><\/h6>\n<p>With <a href=\"https:\/\/operawire.com\/opera-profile-wagners-die-walkure\/\">\u201cDie Walk\u00fcre,\u201d<\/a> the second opera of <a href=\"https:\/\/operawire.com\/composer-profile-richard-wagner-operas-great-revolutionary\/\">Richard Wagner\u2019s<\/a> four-opera <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Der_Ring_des_Nibelungen\">&#8220;Ring&#8221; cycle,<\/a> the epic plot comes down to the human level, having begun in the first opera, <a href=\"https:\/\/operawire.com\/opera-profile-wagners-das-rheingold\/\">\u201cDas Rheingold,\u201d<\/a> in the realm of gods (albeit flawed), Rhinemaidens, giants, and other immortals.<\/p>\n<p>This November 15 and 17\u2019s performances of \u201cDie Walk\u00fcre\u201d in the Sydney Opera House Concert Hall saw the Sydney Symphony Orchestra present the second instalment of their four-year concert presentation of Wagner\u2019s epic drama under the baton of Chief Conductor <a href=\"https:\/\/www.simoneyoung.com\/english\/biography\/\">Simone Young,<\/a> the Australian conductor of this year\u2019s Bayreuth &#8220;Ring&#8221; in the German summer. It was a promising intensification of the Sydney orchestra\u2019s impressive presentation last year of \u201cDas Rheingold.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>This was a beautifully-conceived interpretation. \u2018Luminous\u2019 is a word that has been used to describe it. Yes, the story was exceptionally clear, even in concert format, but there was abundant evidence of Young\u2019s desire to &#8216;keep the symphonic colors without overpowering the voices,&#8217; as she has said elsewhere.<\/p>\n<p>The general public\u2019s perception of Wagner may be one of bombast. But Act One of \u201cDie Walkure\u201d\u2013at least the first half-hour\u2013is intimate. Instrumental solos provide chamber textures to savor. The orchestra\u2019s cellos led by <a href=\"http:\/\/kaoriyamagami.com\/\">Kaori Yamagami<\/a> aptly underscored the love developing between Siegmund (sung here by Australian heldentenor <a href=\"https:\/\/www.stuartskelton.com\/\">Stuart Skelton<\/a> in one of his signature roles) and Sieglinde (Lithuanian soprano <a href=\"http:\/\/www.vidamikneviciute.com\/bio\/\">Vida Miknevi\u010di\u016bt\u0117<\/a> repeating a role she performed with Young at Bayreuth).<\/p>\n<p>Young\u2019s attention to detail was apparent, down to the specific voicing of occasional singly-placed orchestral chords. In this opera, which illustrated Wagner\u2019s burgeoning conception of the continually-unfolding music drama, these chords were a hangover of traditional opera\u2019s sparse recitative accompaniment. At times it sounded as if the volume and tone color of each constituent note in specific chords had been specifically attended to. Throughout the performance, other moments\u2013for example, the cellos, bassoons, and double basses\u2019 vigorous emphasis of a contradictory duple feel as a section-marker in Act Three\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Ride_of_the_Valkyries\">&#8220;Ride of the Valkyries&#8221;<\/a>\u2013testified to the orchestra\u2019s relishing of a traditional punctuating role as well as the greater narrative responsibility that Wagner entrusted to the orchestra at this stage in his career. The orchestral transitions between scenes were thrilling.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/operawire.com\/composer-profile-gioachino-rossini-an-italian-master\/\">Gioachino Rossini,<\/a> the composer of traditional comic opera, is supposed to have quipped that Wagner\u2019s operas contain some wonderful moments but boring quarters of an hour. There were enlivening details in second after second of this performance, as also with the characterizations of the singers.<\/p>\n<p>Untainted by the god-king Wotan\u2019s corrupt dealings with the giants Fasolt and Fafner, the hero Siegmund is supposed to retrieve the cursed ring whose continued elusiveness threatens the gods\u2019 existence. The only problem is that Siegmund and his love-interest, Sieglinde, are too few generations removed to avoid incest, and Wotan\u2019s plan to be rescued by uncompromised humans comes unstuck against his goddess-wife Fricka\u2019s guardianship of traditional marriage protocol. Brother and sister are not meant to be together\u2013at least in the marriage bed!<\/p>\n<p>The first part of \u201cDie Walk\u00fcre\u201d is, therefore, almost a domestic drama, played out by an ensemble of characters (Siegmund, Sieglinde, Sieglinde\u2019s unloved husband Hunding, and Wotan and Fricka). Although Acts Two and Three lead back to a cosmic level as Wotan condemns to an eternal punishment the valkyrie-daughter, Br\u00fcnnhilde, who has usurped his role as arbiter of contests and disobediently sided with Siegmund in his fight with Hunding, we need the tension of two- and three-hander drama in the first several scenes of the performance. In Act One, Skelton, Miknevi\u010di\u016bt\u0117, and <a href=\"https:\/\/www.operabase.com\/peter-rose-a14012\/en\">Peter Rose\u2019s<\/a> Hunding succeeded in focusing the audience&#8217;s attention on an intense, three-way, close-packed dynamic.<\/p>\n<p>Skelton revealed a stoic understanding of his predicament as the much-hounded Siegmund who finds himself in his enemy Hunding\u2019s lair, face-to-face with a woman who is strangely familiar to him. Skelton\u2019s utterances were clear and decisive, effortless in the imparting of his history to the curious Sieglinde but rising to a brave nobility in his summation: now you know why my name isn\u2019t &#8216;Peaceful!&#8217; There was almost actorly detail in his monologues, but changing to lyrical persuasiveness. This was in keeping with the change in nature of the music after he has called for his father\u2019s help in finding the sword: a weapon that was meant to have been hidden for his use in his hour of need. Skelton\u2019s prolonged calling for &#8216;W\u00e4lse,&#8217; lengthened as is common in Wagnerian tradition in such a way that it can vocally impress, denoted anguished need.<\/p>\n<p>As Miknevi\u010di\u016bt\u0117 aptly revealed a physical and vocal attractiveness as Sieglinde, there was the quiet desperation in her voice of a woman trapped in a loveless marriage. Once again actorly detail abounded in her account of the curious event that interrupted her wedding feast, \u2018Der M\u00e4nner Sippe sass hier im Saal\u2019\/&#8217;My husband\u2019s kinsmen sat here in this hall&#8217; (arguably Wagner\u2019s ideal of a musically- and dramatically-balanced monologue). There was a hushed significance in her account of how a stranger entered during the proceedings, a tone of triumph finally in her account of how the visitor (who is of course Wotan, Siegmund\u2019s father whom he knows as &#8216;W\u00e4lse,&#8217; in disguise) drove a sword into the tree around which Hunding\u2019s hut is built.<\/p>\n<p>Though bass-baritone Peter Rose&#8217;s Hunding was smooth and even sympathetic, with almost a glow to his sound, there was a menacing stillness to his performance. He had gripping diction, for example, when Hunding noted the suspicious physical similarity between his wife and this unwelcome guest, the enemy who has accidentally ended up in his home.<\/p>\n<p>Young launched into the rhapsodic prelude to Act Two without waiting for the audience\u2019s applause to die down\u2013theatrical bravado well-suited to one of Wagner\u2019s most ebullient orchestral frescoes.<\/p>\n<p>In Act Two Wotan\u2019s plans come unstuck. In the brief scene where Wagner establishes the father-daughter relationship between Wotan and the valkyrie Br\u00fcnnhilde, Finnish bass-baritone <a href=\"https:\/\/www.operabase.com\/tommi-hakala-a17110\/en\">Tommi Hakala<\/a> and German-Italian soprano <a href=\"https:\/\/www.operabase.com\/anja-kampe-a1221\/de\">Anja Kampe<\/a> neatly established the bond between father and daughter: a bond that shall eventually break. Her valkyrie-cry presaged the excitement that would culminate in Act Three\u2019s valkyrie &#8220;Ride,&#8221; where her eight sisters bring their collection of fallen warriors home to Valhalla in fulfilment of their <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Valkyrie\">mythological role.<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The emotional specificity and even humor of Wotan and Fricka\u2019s disagreement over protecting Siegmund in his fight with Hunding the following day testified to the dramatic integrity of this performance. Moldova-born Berlin-native mezzo-soprano <a href=\"https:\/\/www.operabase.com\/alexandra-ionis-a32800\/en\">Alexandra Ionis<\/a> was a stately Fricka, defender of marriage, though not above a snide remark as the scene ends in her triumph. Hakala was a convincingly <em>unconvincing<\/em> denier of any wrongdoing in his charmingly insinuating defense of the incestuous pair, Siegmund and Sieglinde. A good sign of the dramatic effectiveness of this scene was the engaged audience&#8217;s reaction. Fricka asks when Wotan has heard that brother and sister ever were lovers. Hakala\u2019s reply as Wotan, \u201cIt happened today\u201d (surtitler Fiona Elizabeth Mizani\u2019s translation of &#8216;Heut\u2013hast du\u2019s erlebt!&#8217;) elicited chuckles. It was not the only time a sung line got that reaction. When Kampe&#8217;s Br\u00fcnnhilde observed that the meeting cannot have gone well for Wotan because Fricka is smiling at last, the audience chuckled again. Ionis convincingly portrayed Fricka as implacable. In the almost-spoken contempt with which Wotan conceded that Siegmund would not be protected in the coming showdown with Hunding\u2013&#8217;Ich sch\u00fctze ihn nicht&#8217;\u2013we could feel Fricka\u2019s pressure.<\/p>\n<p>Act Two, Scene Two, in which Wotan recounts to Br\u00fcnnhilde the story of the \u201cRing\u201d cycle so far, and as understanding dawns upon him that he is ripe for punishment, may qualify as one of the boring quarters of an hour Rossini referred to. There is sparse musical interest here in a series of monologues that, after all, are not many steps above speech. However, the balance between Kampe and four French horns accompanying her interjection, when she assured Wotan that he might air his inmost thoughts in her presence without loss of power as she <em>is<\/em> his will, was beautifully moving. In Hakala\u2019s presentation we could hear every word of Wotan\u2019s pondering as he spoke to himself. We could actually see the vision he fears of elf-king Alberich and his horde gaining control of the cursed ring, and were moved by an increasing lyricism as he admitted what he cannot avoid: that he was heading towards the end of the gods. &#8216;Das Ende,&#8217; Hakala sang, extracting all meaning out of this devastating conclusion, deciding now that he must will it.<\/p>\n<p>Though only reluctantly agreeing to withhold her support from Siegmund in the coming fight, Br\u00fcnnhilde must inform Siegmund of his impending death, and the so-called Annunciation of Death scene is one of the Cycle\u2019s most effective scenes (in a dramatic sense). There was still much to appreciate musically in the brass\u2019s ever-enriching presentation of the \u2018annunciation motif.\u2019 But it was really the chill stillness of Kampe and Skelton\u2019s stand-off before Br\u00fcnnhilde\u2019s ultimate caving-in to Siegmund that more likely explains the way audience-members leaned forward, attentive to this scene.<\/p>\n<p>Wotan prevents Br\u00fcnnhilde from relenting and helping Siegmund, interposing his shield against Siegmund\u2019s sword, which shatters. But, almost as an afterthought, he also kills Hunding. Hakala\u2019s precisely enunciated consonants\u2013&#8217;Geh hin, Knecht! Knie vor Fricka\u2026&#8217;\u2013as he suggested Hunding \u2018kneel\u2019 before his patron, Fricka, conveyed much bitterness. &#8216;Geh! Geh!,&#8217; repeated Hakala, the last direction not even being hissed, a mere puff. In Hakala\u2019s reading it was clearly beneath Wotan\u2019s effort to waste breath on Hunding.<\/p>\n<p>Concert presentation though this was, there was effective use of the stage to convey such movement as we needed to see. This was as simple as placing Rose and Skelton in the circle for Hunding and Siegmund\u2019s Act Two duel, bringing their confrontational voices closer to the audience. But the blocking raised a question. Given some directors\u2019 overlays in certain fully-staged performances\u2013settings in caravan parks or hospitals or similar interpretive impositions\u2013how much movement and visuals does the music impel? There was occasionally a sense in this concert production that performers were champing toward greater movement\u2013that the music commanded it. Does the music also prescribe limits?<\/p>\n<p>Act Three began with a thrilling &#8216;Ride of the Valkyries.&#8217; It was here that we enjoyed the satisfaction of seeing the stage filled\u2013a fulfilment of theatrical space\u2013as eight valkyries joined Br\u00fcnnhilde and Sieglinde, pregnant now with Siegfried and who must be spirited away. In much of the rest of the Act, concerning Wotan\u2019s punishment of Br\u00fcnnhilde for disobeying him, Hakala convincingly portrayed Wotan\u2019s grief as he proposed to strip Br\u00fcnnhilde of her divinity and put her into a magic sleep (&#8216;I\u2019ll no longer kiss your childish mouth,&#8217; a covered tone revealing a sympathetic softening). Kampe revealed Br\u00fcnnhilde\u2019s terror at being stripped of immortality and her desperate need to impose a condition\u2013that she be woken by none but the bravest of men.<\/p>\n<p>As Wotan calls on the demigod of fire, Loge, to place a ring of fire around the sleeping Br\u00fcnnhilde, he accedes to this request, having the last line of this instalment of the Cycle, &#8216;Wer meines Speeres Spitze f\u00fcrchtet, durchschreite das Feuer nie!&#8217;\/&#8217;Whoever fears the point of my spear, will never breach these flames.&#8217; Interestingly, Hakala\u2019s pronouncement of this warning was almost mellow, and the trumpets and trombones\u2019 echoing off its melody lacked the harsh hortatory tone this ending often has. It was as if Wotan has unlearned his severity and reached a point of resigned, compassionate acceptance.<\/p>\n<p>It remains to mention that Young\u2019s tempi were often swift in places that surprised me, though pleasantly. A case in point was Siegmund\u2019s Act One song of spring (love) banishing wintertime (privation), \u2018Winterst\u00fcrme wichen dem Wonnemond.&#8217; This was another example of the character of the situation, a kind of importuning, prioritized over dwelling on purely musical conditions. This was a performance to make us curious about next year\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/operawire.com\/opera-profile-wagners-siegfried\/\">\u201cSiegfried,\u201d<\/a> and a work that is both an outgrowth of German rough theater while also a further development of Wagner\u2019s music drama.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Image courtesy of Sydney Symphony Orchestra. Photo by\u00a0Jay Patel. With \u201cDie Walk\u00fcre,\u201d the second opera of Richard Wagner\u2019s four-opera &#8220;Ring&#8221; cycle, the epic plot comes down to the human level, having begun in the first opera, \u201cDas Rheingold,\u201d in the realm of gods (albeit flawed), Rhinemaidens, giants, and other immortals. This November 15 and 17\u2019s performances of \u201cDie Walk\u00fcre\u201d in&nbsp;{&hellip;}<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":74,"featured_media":94436,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[8,73],"tags":[1021,8328],"class_list":["post-94435","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-in-review","category-stage-reviews","tag-die-walkure","tag-sydney-symphony-orchestra"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v22.1 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Sydney Symphony Orchestra 2024-25 Review: Die Walk\u00fcre - OperaWire<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"With \u201cDie Walk\u00fcre,\u201d the second opera of Richard Wagner\u2019s four-opera &quot;Ring&quot; cycle, the epic plot comes down to the human level, having begun in the first opera, \u201cDas Rheingold,\u201d in the realm of gods (albeit flawed), Rhinemaidens, giants, and other immortals.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/operawire.com\/sydney-symphony-orchestra-2024-review-die-walkure\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Sydney Symphony Orchestra 2024-25 Review: Die Walk\u00fcre - 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