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Richard WAGNER (1813–1883)
Das Rheingold (1869) [194:00]
Wotan - Juha Uusitalo (bass–baritone)
Fricka - Anna Larsson (mezzo)
Alberich - Franz-Josef Kapelmann (bass)
Loge - John Daszak (tenor)
Fasolt - Matti Salminen (bass)
Fafner - Stephen Milling (bass)
Erda - Daniela Denschlag (mezzo)
Freia - Sabine Von Walter (soprano)
Mime - Niklas Björling Rygert (tenor)
Donner - Charles Taylor (baritone)
Froh - Germán Villa (tenor)
Woglinde - Silvia Vázquez (soprano)
Wellgunde - Ann-Katrin Naidu (mezzo)
Flosshilde - Marina Prudenskay (contralto)
Orquestra de la Comunitat Valenciana/Zubin Mehta
rec. live, Palau de les Arts Reina Sofia, Valencia, April/May
2007
Staged by La Fura dels Baus/Carlus Padrissa. Stage Director: Carlus
Padrissa. Video Creator: Franc Aleu. Staging and Acting Coordinator:
Valentina Carrasco. Stage Design: Roland Olbeter. Lighting: Peter
van Praet. Costumes: Chu Uroz. Video Director: Tiziano Mancini
Region Code: Universal. Sound Formats. PCM Stereo. DD 5.1 Bonus
Track DD 2.0. Subtitles: German, French, English, Spanish: Booklet,
English, French and German.
Bonus Film - The Making of Rheingold [27:00]
UNITEL CLASSICA 700508
[221:00]
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DVD OF THE MONTH
Move over Copenhagen! A new Ring is appearing to challenge
your position among recent stagings on DVD. This is a production
to cherish, brilliantly realised for DVD, which should be in
the collections of all serious Wagnerians. While fully conscious
that not all of my colleagues agree with me (see alternative
reviews of the Blu-ray), I suspect the Valencia Ring
may well turn out to be the classical DVD event of the year.
Housed in the ultra-modern (and staggeringly impressive) Palau
de Les Arts “Reina Sofia” and staged by the hugely exciting
Catalan theatre company La Fura dels Baus – who were also responsible
for bringing Ligeti’s Grand Macabre to ENO – Valencia’s
intentions of creating a proudly Spanish realisation
of Wagner’s masterpiece could hardly be clearer. They succeed
in creating a musically exciting, visually stunning and, for
me, viscerally involving Rheingold that drew me further
into the action than any other staging, live or on film, that
I’ve seen.
La Fura dels Baus is a thumpingly physical company and they
make full use of the facilities of the Palau de Les Arts to
wrench the viewer into the action through some awesome visual
effects. Their main tool is a vast video screen that stretches
across the back of the stage and whose shifting projections
are operated, interestingly, by a pianist who follows the conductor
at the same time as the orchestra. The vast images often illustrate
the action and sometimes comment upon it. During the transition
to the third scene, for example, we are plunged all the way
from outer space to the surface of the earth, through the sulphurous
cleft and down the vast shaft into Nibelheim, a really startling
effect. We see the earth’s destruction as a backdrop to Erda’s
warning and Donner’s hammer-blow shatters a swirling vortex
into thousands of shards which give way to the entrance to Valhalla.
Most interestingly, the Rhinegold itself is projected as a living,
foetal form which is transformed into a blackened corpse upon
Alberich’s theft, and this then becomes a visual leitmotif to
go alongside Wagner’s musical ones. Indeed one of the themes
of the production is the humanising of objects in the opera,
not just the Rhinegold. The Nibelung hoard is “acted” by a troupe
of gold-clad dancers who writhe onto the stage as if drawn by
the Ring’s demonic power. Likewise there is no rainbow bridge,
but a nexus of performers suspended as a grid in the air forming
what looks like a celestial elevator to propel the gods into
their new home. The visual impact of these images is stunning,
helped by their high-definition origins and their startling
use of contrasting colours.
There is very little physical set in this production: instead,
as illustrated above, performers tend to create and remove the
staging as necessary. The major exception to this is the jaw-dropping
opening scene where the Rhinemaidens actually swim
in individual pods – what incredible breath control they must
have had! – which are then suspended above the stage as they
salute the gold. Alberich steals the gold by draining the pods,
symbolically and physically ending the Rhinemaidens’ party.
The Nibelheim scene resembles a horrific mechanical factory
producing clones to fight in Alberich’s army, each of which
bears a more than accidental resemblance to the original Rhinegold
figure. The giants appear in huge metal exoskeletons, while
the gods are mostly manipulated in devices that look like cherry
pickers, emphasising their distance from the real world and
their ultimate powerlessness. Loge whizzing around on a scooter
provides a pertinent contrast.
So what impact does all of this have? Well, for this reviewer
at any rate, I found it a tremendously exciting, repeatedly
exciting ride which never flagged throughout the work’s whole
duration. I kept on wondering what was going to come next, which
is no mean feat for a score I know so well. It is far from traditional,
and the Gods’ costumes look like leftovers from Blake’s 7,
but in terms of insight and involvement I found it offered far
more than Schenk’s view for the Met or Chéreau’s now somewhat
dated Bayreuth staging. In fact I found it probably comes closest
to Kupfer’s Bayreuth production of the 1990s because they share
a sense of a whole world raped and corrupted beyond full repair.
Importantly, though, the scale of La Fura’s perception retains
an element of the spectacular as well as the myth so important
to Wagner’s vision, something that many modern productions have
lost in recent decades. In a fun though not especially informative
accompanying “Making of” film, Carlos Padrissa claimed while
his production was not naturalistic he was going back to the
mythical spirit of Wagner: this surely is far more important.
All of this would count for little were it not for the truly
outstanding musical performances. Juha Uusitalo’s Wotan is commanding
and imperious, the role carrying no terrors for him. He shows
supreme self-confidence in the opening scene, changing to desperate
self-doubt after Fasolt’s murder, before recovering himself
(or does he?) for the entry into Valhalla. John Daszak’s Loge
is bright, quirky and clear and he has a marvellous way with
the words. Franz-Joseph Kapellmann’s Alberich is only occasionally
unsteady, but he captures the malice of the role in a thoroughly
musical way, as does the nasty Mime of Gerhard Siegel. Anna
Larsson’s Fricka is somewhat shrill, but this is not out of
place for this character, while Sabina von Walther’s Freia is
much sweeter and more sympathetic, as is Germán Villar’s Froh.
Ilya Bannik has a luxuriously big voice for the role of Donner,
characterful and sizeable, though in a completely different
way to Uusitalo. The giants are marvellous too: Matti Salminen’s
voice has weakened since he recorded Fafner for both Janowski
and Levine, but his Fasolt shows that he can still dominate
a stage. Stephen Milling’s Fafner is just as dark but with a
telling bent towards cunning which his brother lacks. The Erda
of Christa Mayer is powerful but surprisingly light, though
no less effective. For their musicality as well as their swimming
ability, the three Rhinemaidens are beyond praise.
Presiding over all is the experienced baton of Zubin Mehta.
In an accompanying “Making of” film Mehta assures us that he
has been preparing The Ring since 1954 and the years
of experience show in a reading that emphasises the seamless.
Some may find his reading contains too much legato, but he doesn’t
lack energy in the great transformations, especially the tricky
transition to scene two. He presides over an orchestra that
was hand-picked by regular music director Lorin Maazel. They
seem, from this performance, to be a crack Wagner team, playing
every bar with energy, insight and sensitivity. The brass, in
particular, are fantastic and Mehta brings every one of them
on stage for a well deserved bow at the end.
The whole project is helped by first-rate filming and technical
support. During the prelude the intelligent camera-work alternates
between the swirling images on the stage curtain and a birds’
eye view of the orchestra pit, so we are brought up close to
the horns and the undulating bows of the cellos. During the
opening scene, when there is so much to look at, we often get
merged pictures which I found very satisfying, and elsewhere
in the piece we always feel that the eye is being placed where
the ear says it should be, the only possible section being the
moment after the toad Alberich’s capture where the camera rather
bizarrely focuses on Mehta in the pit. The sound balance is
spectacular in Dolby 5.1, though note that there is no DTS.
The balance of singers to orchestra is just right and the off-stage
Rhinemaidens in the final scene are captured to perfection.
In short, I found this a remarkably compelling, wonderfully
entertaining DVD which I will return to more often than
Schenk, Chéreau or Kupfer. In fact I think that Rheingold
at least has the edge even on Copenhagen because where Holten
focused on the human and down-to-earth, Valencia’s use of effects
means that there is still a sense of the powerful, supernatural
and indeed god-like about this production.
Simon Thompson
This production and recording is controversial. See other
opinions
here
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